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Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts

Morning Glow (2010)


Morning Glow
Completion Date: 21st December 2010
Dimensions: 80cm W x 40cm H x 1.6cm D

I love of the colours in this one and the layering & weaving effect achieved - subtle but effective.

Click on pictures for a supersized view!

Merry Xmas & Happy New Year! ;o)


Gustav Klimt beyond The Kiss

















I remember when the first search engineer appeared and the few answers we had.
It is amazing that now we are able to find many paintings of an artist, of course still far to have all works of each one, but I believe that in the future we will be able to see all 200 works Gustav Klimt left and much more.
Klimt's most famous oeuvre is The Kiss* and comparing his work having as much as we can would be great.

"Whoever wants to know something about me -- as an artist, the only notable thing -- ought to look carefully at my pictures and try to see in them what I am and what I want to do."
Gustav Klimt
*The Artchive was the first initiative to create a database of paintings on the WWW and I remember when it's founder Mark Harden had to start putting advertisements to continue the project.

The girl and the woman going their way



















I came across with Erik van Elven's blog and I loved the painting he did of this young lady, his daughter. I browsed around the blog and from there I went to visit Vicki Shuck's blog and did chose the "Purple boots" because is depicts a woman from the back going her way just like the girl.
(click at the images to enlarge)

Gabriel Metsu at the National Gallery of Ireland



















Vermeer is the most known of the Dutch painters but there were many others competing against each other.
Gabriel Metsu is one of them and the National Gallery of Ireland is presenting an exhibition of his works since September 4 that will end in December 5.

"The subject of love-letters became popular in Dutch art in the 1650s thanks to Gerard ter Borch. Metsu painted many variations of Ter Borch’s works in which he made the subjects more engaging to the viewer. Whereas Ter Borch painted a woman concentrating on writing her missive, Metsu made her look outside the picture. She smiles seductively at us, presumably to invite us to think that she is writing a message to us."

"Metsu was a particularly gifted painter of dogs, which appear alongside many of his figures. While men are usually escorted by a Dutch partridge dog, women entertain themselves with a papillon, a small type of spaniel."

Go to this page and click to see more details of his works.

Art and reality: Magritte and Ben Heine



















Art and reality has been a theme for many studies, theories and discussions since the Greeks but artists show with their work what it takes ten chapters to be explained.
René Magritte, the famous surrealist painter, did many works about the illusion of art.
This excerpt explains "The Human Condition", 1933 at the right:
"At first, one automatically assumes that the painting on the easel depicts the portion of the landscape outside the window that it hides from view. After a moment's consideration, however, one realizes that this assumption is based upon a false premise: that is, that the imagery of Magritte's painting is real, while the painting on the easel is a representation of that reality. In fact, there is no difference between them. Both are part of the same painting, the same artistic fabrication. It is perhaps to this repeating cycle, in which the viewer, even against his will, sees the one as real and the other as representation, that Magritte's title makes reference." (emphasis mine)
Ben Heine, Belgium like Magritte, has a series Pencil vs Camera, I did this post about it, where he adds some elements to his photographies with drawings and than take a picture of his creation:
"I took this photo near Rochefort in Belgium. I also drew the rough
sketch on the crumpled paper. I wanted to make something very simple and minimalist. We always need a sun!"
Still, it's a photography. Art is about creating, not copying.

Text sources: Magritte.
(Click at the pictures to enlarge)

Whistler's Arrangements in Gray: Portrait of mother and Portrait of Carlyle



















The "Arrangement in Grey and Black No. I", known as Whistler's Mother, is an American icon but he did "Arrangement in Grey and Black No. 2" that portrays the poet Thomas Carlyle that is not that popular.
Whistler did a painting for Edgar Allan Poe's poem Annabel Lee that I will publish tomorrow.

Botticelli: Madonna with Child and Madonna of the Book



















Right: Madonna of the Book: ca 1483

The Madonna del Libro is a design that is extremely gentle and beautiful; it is a small vertical format panel painting. Mary and the Child are sitting in a corner of the room in front of the window, and her hand is resting on an open book. Some words are visible, showing that this is a Book of Hours, the Home beatae Mariae. As a symbol of his future Passion, the Christ Child is holding the three nails of the Cross and the crown of thorns.
Botticelli created the additions to the scene with a great deal of loving detail, and the ensemble of boxes and a lavish fruit bowl is very much like a still-life. The parchment pages of the book, the materials and the transparent veils have an incredibly tangible quality to them. Another refinement of Botticelli's painting is the gold filigree with which he decorated the robes and objects. The use of expensive gold paint was a result of a contractual agreement made with the clients, which laid down the price of the painting.

Left: Madonna and Child, 1478

There is a strict symmetrical structure to the composition with its life- size figures, and the finely toned down colors are very charming.
Surrounded by eight wingless angels, Mary is breastfeeding her Child. There is direct eye contact with the observer, involving him in the intimate scene. The angels are holding lilies, the sign of Mary's purity, and are engaged in antiphonal singing: while some of them are calmly waiting to start, the others are singing and reverently looking at a hymn book.


Happy Halloween TIME: Clocks by Salvador Dali













These are two works by Salvador Dali, a painter I admire for the techniques he masters, that talks about time.
Time is never enough and one of the reasons for stress.
That is why I did chose time as a theme for this Halloween.
Happy Halloween! The next one is just around the corner and it seems it was yesterday I wrote this post, and this one about last year's Halloween.

The Moulin de la Galette by Renoir and Picasso














This is the moulin de la galette where people went to dance instead of watching dancers like in the moulin rouge.
It was depicted by some impressionists like Renoir, right painting, and also by Picasso, left.
"An artist, under pain of oblivion, must have confidence in himself, and listen only to his real master: Nature."
August Renoir
"Painting is a blind man's profession. He paints not what he sees, but what he feels, what he tells himself about what he has seen."
Pablo Picasso
These quotations explain a little the difference of both painters.

Ingres and Goya's works that inspired Robert Ballagh















Left: The Turkish Bath, 1862, by Ingres
Right: The Shootings of May Third 1808, 1814, by Francisco Goya

As I promises yesterday these are the paintings by Ingres and Goya that Robert Ballagh celebrates (post below). If you want to know more about Goya you can read this article by Kenneth Clark.

The Great Odalisque by Jean Dominique Ingres











Left: The Great Odalisque, 1814, by Ingres
Right: Detail

Cézanne's still-life inspiring Gauguin and Maurice Denis

Compotier with Glass, 1879-1822 by Cézanne
















As I pointed in Toulouse-Lautrec's Van Gogh portrait impressionists used to homage their friends by depicting oeuvres of each other.
"Compotier with glass" is at the background of "Portrait of a woman with Cezanne's Still Life" by Gauguin who owned the painting for a period of time, and also at Maurice Denis's "Homage to Cézanne".
In Gauguin's work the painting is part of the structure of the picture, it is the background of the scene but it treated in such a space that it doesn't lose importance.
Maurice Denis put Cezanne's work exposed in an art gallery surrounded by friends and critics.
If you write "still-life" in a search engineering it's almost certain that Cézanne will be on top because his influence is still present in our times.

Paul Gauguin



















Right: When will you marry?, 1892
Left: The day of the God, 1894

"I shut my eyes in order to see."
"It is the eye of ignorance that assigns a fixed and unchangeable color to every object; beware of this stumbling block."
"Art requires philosophy, just as philosophy requires art. Otherwise, what would become of beauty?"

Paul Gauguin

Summer Rock Pool (2010) - Rock Pool Series




Size: 34cm W x 60cm H x 4.2cm D (x 2 Panels)
Completion Date: 21st June 2010
1st of Rock Pool Series
Well, this is the first of a new series on rock pools. Inspired by the life abounding in the rock pools so prevalent on the rocky coasts of Australia. At the height of summer these rock pools explode with life and are seeded by all things brought in on the tides.

Midnight Rockpool (2010) - Coral Reef Series




Size: 34cm W x 60cm H x 4.2cm D


Completion: 30th May 2010


30th of Coral Reef Series


Click on images for a supersized view!


Well this is the last coral reef series painting for a while. I've got a huge waterlily painting to do for a client (1.8m x 1m!) and a painting to get ready for a show....hoping to get some more rainforest and tree blossom painting done in June....please stay tuned....;o)

Floral Bliss - Tree Blossom Series

Size: 60cm W x 42cm H x 4.2cm D
Completed: 24th March 2010
8th of Tree Blossom Series

Ocean Parade (2010)

Size: 60cm W x 33cm H x 4.2cm D

See close-ups below or click on images for a supersized view!

(Completed 22 January 2010)


 
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