Sunday, October 31, 2021

Information for a very Medieval Halloween

 

Information for a very Medieval Halloween


Momento Morti - pointers for a Very Medieval Halloween

http://jessehurlbut.net/wp/mssart/?p=8461


If Halloween has once again caught you unprepared, you may, like many of us, be desperately casting your mind about for a suitable get-up for this evening’s revelries.  Have no fear!  The Medieval and Earlier Manuscripts section would like to offer the following last-minute costume ideas: 



This little bat is trying really hard to be spooky, but it is so cute....  #HebrewProject Harley MS 5699 http://www.bl.uk/manuscripts/Viewer.aspx?ref=harley_ms_5699_f313v 


Witches beware! 'Wizards or sorcerers... are to be zealously driven out, unless they cease and desist.' These laws of King Cnut aren't exactly getting into the #Halloween spirit, but they're the exhibit of the day from Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms http://www.bl.uk/manuscripts/FullDisplay.aspx?index=0&ref=Cotton_MS_Nero_A_I …

Mirror, mirror, who's the scariest of them all? A female skeleton is creeping it real in a warning against vanity in the Office of the Dead from a C15th Book of Hours 




"Draw and wear this" -  #SurviveHalloweenIn4Words

"Bodyguard against demons and ghosts" according to this 1800-year old papyrus @BLMedieval . See more: https://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2018/02/its-a-kind-of-magic.html … …


It's Halloween today - here's a handy flowchart on how to deal with a vampire attack, based on a genuine 11th-c. English case. Print out and keep with you.

Thursday, October 28, 2021

Francis Bacon. English painter of the grotesque & brutal

 





Francis Bacon (1909-1992), arguably the preeminent British painter of the twentieth century, was also for forty years the most controversial. Bacon's art often appears deliberately disturbing. His subject was the human form. Bacon reinterpreted the physical construction of the body with a new and unsettling intensity. To him it was something to be taken apart by the artist's penetrating gaze and then put back together again on canvas. He forces us to see, perhaps for the first time, the separate shapes and stresses hidden in the familiar human figure.

Bacon's treatment of the face could be especially challenging. In his portraits, generally of people the artist knew well, the subjects are sometimes shown screaming. Even in repose the features shift and reshape themselves before our eyes, yet they never become unrecognizable despite the swirling paint.

Often called an Expressionist or even a Surrealist, Bacon himself strongly rejected both labels. He insisted that in its own way his work was close to the world we see every day, remaining true to what he called "the brutality of fact.”


http://www.all-art.org/art_20th_century/bacon1.html


https://mymodernmet.com/francis-bacon-art/


https://fahrenheitmagazine.com/en/modern-art/plastics/the-stormy-story-of-francis-bacon-and-his-paintings#view-1

Friday, October 22, 2021

Celebrations of rain

 

Bamboo bends in the rain. @Nancy Ewart

Rain as a motif in ukiyo-e prints was often shown as a series of black or gray lines to represent swirling gusts, heavy downpours, or gentle drops. It was most beautifully evoked in the prints of Hiroshige, particularly Night Rain on the Karasaki Pine,  in which the dark band of clouds seems to have opened up and released a torrent. 

Dark bands of color in the sky, most often seen at the top of the sheet for a graded effect, were created with a technique called bokashi, in which the printer hand-wiped pigment onto the block. This method is seen again in two of Hiroshige’s famous prints of rainstorms, Evening Squall at Shon and Evening Rain at Atake on the Great Bridge (see below).



Ando Hiroshige. Other names used: Utagawa (Ando), Tokutaro, Jubei, Juemon, Tokubei, Ichiyasai, Ichiryusai, Ryusai, Tokaido, Utashige. This  last major master of the Ukiyo-e School was born in 1797, son of an Edo fire warden. He succeeded to his father hereditary post early but in 1811 entered the studio of the ukiyo-e master Utagawa Toyohiro, soon receiving the artist name Hiroshige. His first published work, in the field of book illustration, dates from 1818; during the following decade H. published capable work in the field of figure prints: actors, warriors and girls. From the year 1831 he began (under the influence of the great Hokusai) the series of landscape prints that were to make his name: Fifty three Stations of the Tokaido, and later, Famous Views of Japan, Famous Views of Kyoto, Eight views of Lake Biwa, Sixtynine Stations of the Kiso-kaido Highway.  Though not the prodigious eccentric that Hokusai was, H. nevertheless made a large contribution to the development of the landscape print, as well as to the field of flower-and-bird prints (these revealing his inclination toward the Kyoto Shijo School more than toward ukiyo-e).   In effect, H. consolidated the landscape form and adapted it to popular taste, thereby diffusing the form to all strata of society. But eventually this also led to overproduction and declining standards of quality. At his best, however, H. was a master of the impressionist, poetic view of nature, and he remains the best-loved of all Japanese artists.  Among his pupils were Hiroshige II, Shigekatsu, Shigekiyo and Hiroshige III.  (Wikipedia)

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Aelbert Jacobsz Cuyp. Born OCT 20 in 1620

 


Aelbert Jacobsz Cuyp (October 20, 1620 - November 15, 1691) was one of the leading Dutch landscape painters of the Dutch Golden Age in the 17th century. The most famous of a family of painters, the pupil of his father Jacob Gerritsz Cuyp (1594?1651/52), he is especially known for his large views of the Dutch countryside in early morning or late afternoon light. 



In this image: A Milkmaid, 
about 1642 - 1646. Black chalk, graphite, gray wash, 
12.1 × 14.8 cm (4 3/4 × 5 13/16 in.) Accession No. 86.GG.672 
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.

Herdsman with 5 cows by the river
Orpheus with animals




Sunday, October 17, 2021

Today's artists birthdays : Childe Hassam, Bandinelli, Giovanni Canaletto, Christofano Allori

 


Quite a line up of artists for today's birthday celebration:  Childe Hassam, Bandinelli, Giovanni Canaletto,  Christofano Allori




Childe Hassam, in full Frederick Childe Hassam, (born Oct. 17, 1859, Boston, Mass., U.S.—died Aug. 27, 1935, East Hampton, N.Y.), painter and printmaker, one of the foremost exponents of French Impressionism in American art.
Hassam studied in Boston and Paris (1886–89), where he fell under the influence of the Impressionists and took to painting in brilliant colour with touches of pure pigment. On his return from Paris he settled in New York City, where he became a member of the group known as The Ten.
His works are distinctive for their freshness and clear luminous atmosphere. Scenes of New York life remained his favorite subject matter—e.g., Washington Arch, Spring (1890). He also painted landscapes of New England and rural New York that, with their intense blue skies, lush foliage, and shimmering white light, became especially popular.





Bartolommeo Bandinelli.  Bartolommeo (or Baccio) Bandinelli, actually Bartolommeo Brandini (17 October 1493 – shortly before 7 February 1560), was a Renaissance Italian sculptor, draughtsman and painter.





Canaletto, byname of Giovanni Antonio Canal, (born Oct. 18, 1697, Venice—died April 20, 1768, Venice), Italian topographical painter whose masterful expression of atmosphere in his detailed views (vedute) of Venice and London and of English country homes influenced succeeding generations of landscape artists.



Cristofano Allori (17 October 1577 – 1 April 1621) was an Italian portrait painter of the late Florentine Mannerist school. Allori was born at Florence and received his first lessons in painting from his father, Alessandro Allori, but becoming dissatisfied with the hard anatomical drawing and cold coloring of the latter, he entered the studio of Gregorio Pagani, who was one of the leaders of the late Florentine school, which sought to unite the rich coloring of the Venetians with the Florentine attention to drawing. Allori also appears to have worked under Cigoli.

His most famous work, in his own day and now, is Judith with the Head of Holofernes. It exists in at least two versions by Allori, of which the prime version is perhaps that in the British Royal Collection, dated 1613, with various pentimenti. A version of 1620 in the Palazzo Pitti in Florence is the best known and there are several copies by studio and other hands. According to the near-contemporary biography by Filippo Baldinucci, the model for the Judith was his former mistress, the beautiful "La Mazzafirra", who is also represented in his Magdalene, the head of Holofernes is a self-portrait, and the maid is "La Mazzafirra"'s mother. 

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Alice Neel. Coming to the de Young in 2022

 


Following its run at the Met, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco will present the first comprehensive museum survey of work by American artist Alice Neel (1900-1984) on the West Coast. This retrospective positions Neel as one of the 20th century’s most radical painters–one who championed social justice, and held a longstanding commitment to humanist principles that inspired both her art and her life. Featuring a multitude of Neel’s paintings, drawings, and watercolors, as well as a rarely seen film—unique to the de Young’s presentation—the de Young museum will be the only West Coast venue for this revolutionary exhibition and will include works associated with the artist's visits to the Bay Area.

“Though Alice Neel called New York City her home, much of her persona and art, overflowing with uncompromising humanism and regard for all people, aligns deeply with the spirit of San Francisco,” stated Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. “Neel visited the city a few times in her lifetime, creating a number of works which will be on view in our presentation at the de Young. It is with much delight that we welcome Neel back to the Bay through her resounding paintings.”

This exhibition spans the entirety of Neel’s career, from her professional debut in Cuba in the 1920s and her work as part of the W.P.A in the 1930s; through her commitment to centering the figure at a time when abstraction was ascendant, in the 1940s and 1950s; her resurgence in the 1960s and 1970s; and the emergence of her “late style” in the 1980s. Besides foregrounding her often under-recognized artistic accomplishments, Alice Neel: People Come First showcases Neel as an artist who engaged with progressive politics throughout her lifetime.

Neel spent the majority of her life in New York City, where she painted countless portraits of the diverse, resilient, and passionate people she encountered there. The exhibition includes portraits of Feminist, Civil Rights, and political leaders, activists, queer cultural figures, mothers, visibly pregnant women, musicians, nude figures, and many others, all of which illuminate Neel’s profound humanist principles.


“Alice Neel dedicated her practice to portraying both people and moments in life that have often been erased or forgotten through time,” says Lauren Palmor, Assistant Curator of American Art at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. “Whether portraying the strength and struggles of her neighbors in Spanish Harlem, the labors of pregnancy and motherhood, or a generation of creatives devastated by the AIDS crisis, her works are unflinching in their honesty and radical in their interpretation.”

The exhibition’s presentation at the de Young is divided into nine sections, drawing upon seven decades of Neel’s output. Working in a range of genres, she considered her “pictures of people” to be historical records of the time in which they were made. The exhibition will also include her accomplishments in other styles, specifically still lifes, landscapes, and cityscapes.

The de Young’s presentation will also include a section dedicated to Neel and San Francisco. Neel made two trips to the city to visit her son Hartley in 1967 and 1969. Hartley was then living with his future wife Ginny, who assisted Neel with stretching canvases during her visits. It was during this time that Neel produced a piece entitled Ginny in Blue Shirt (1969). In dialogue with the finished work will be a rarely seen silent film showing Neel in the process of painting Ginny in Blue Shirt, captured by her son Hartley.

Also distinct to the de Young’s presentation are select works by Neel juxtaposed with selected works drawn from the collections of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, including those by artists that Neel herself admired. This gallery will shine a light on the myriad of ways the artist intersected with, and also diverged from, art historical precedent.

Alice Neel: People Come First will be on view from March 12 through July 10, 2022, at the de Young museum in San Francisco. The exhibition was co-curated by Kelly Baum, the Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon Polsky Curator of Contemporary Art, and Randall Griffey, Curator, Modern & Contemporary Art, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The de Young’s presentation is coordinated by Lauren Palmor, Assistant Curator of American Art, at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Neel

Sunday, October 10, 2021

Wattteau. One of the most brilliant and original artists of the eighteenth century

 


One of the most brilliant and original artists of the eighteenth century, Antoine Watteau (1684–1721) had an impact on the development of Rococo art in France and throughout Europe lasting well beyond his lifetime. Living only thirty-six years, and plagued by frequent illness, Watteau nonetheless rose from an obscure provincial background to achieve fame in the French capital during the Regency of the duc d’Orléans. 

His paintings feature figures in aristocratic and theatrical dress in lush imaginary landscapes. Their amorous and wistful encounters create a mood but do not employ narrative in the traditional sense. During Watteau’s lifetime, a new term, fête galante, was coined to describe them. Watteau was also a gifted draftsman whose sparkling chalk sheets capture subtle nuances of deportment and expression.




The son of a roofer, Watteau was born in 1684 in Valenciennes, a small city in the north that had only been ceded to France from the Spanish Netherlands six years earlier. Details of his initial training remain obscure, but early biographers concur that shortly upon arriving in the French capital, Watteau was employed in the mass production of crude copies of devotional paintings. Sometime around 1705, he began working for Claude Gillot (1673–1722), who specialized in comic scenes inspired by the commedia dell’arte and who, in turn, introduced him to Claude Audran III (1658–1734), a designer of ornament and interior decoration. Working under these two influential masters, Watteau developed his mature style, increasingly incorporating theatrical subject matter and designs based on the airy arabesques that had begun to dominate interior design.

Despite his unconventional training, Watteau was permitted to compete for the Prix de Rome at the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture. He won a second-place prize in 1709, but to his great disappointment was never sent to study in Italy. With the backing of Charles de la Fosse (1636–1716), a fellow admirer of Rubens and Venetian painting, Watteau was accepted into the Academy in 1712. His innovative subject matter did not fit into any established category in the academic hierarchy, and he was ultimately accepted with the unprecedented title “painter of fêtes galantes.” 

His reception piece, Pilgrimage to the Isle of Cythera (Musée du Louvre, Paris), was finally submitted to the Academy in 1717. It depicted amorous couples on the mythical island of Cythera, in various stages of their metaphoric “journey” of love.

With ingenuity and determination, Watteau continued his artistic education by copying works by Rubens and sixteenth-century Italian artists in the collection of Pierre Crozat (1665–1740), a wealthy banker and art collector. 

Landscape with an Old Woman Holding a Spindle is an example where Watteau carefully transcribed in red chalk the rustic, hilly Italian countryside, adding to his repertoire of motifs that would inspire the backgrounds of his imaginary landscapes. Around the same time Watteau was assiduously making copies from his renowned collection of drawings, Crozat commissioned from him a series of large oval paintings depicting the Four Seasons for his dining room in Paris. Study of a Nude Man Holding Bottles  is one of a series of studies Watteau made for Autumn, now lost and known only through an engraving .

Another of Watteau’s dedicated patrons and friends was Jean de Jullienne (1686–1766), who wrote an early biography of the artist and sponsored an unprecedented campaign to record his drawings as etchings, contributing immeasurably to his fame and influence as a draftsman.

 His collection included the Mezzetin , a bittersweet depiction of the commedia dell’arte character. He is shown seated and playing music in a garden, his pose evocative of the anguish of unrequited love. In a study for the head , Watteau focused on the figure’s plaintive expression. Jullienne also owned The French Comedians , a late canvas likewise inspired by the popular commedia dell’arte theater troupes, although it is unclear whether Watteau meant to portray a specific scene or specific actors.


Admiration for the drawings of Watteau has always been equal to that of his paintings. He drew few compositional studies; for the most part, his graphic oeuvre is made up of chalk studies of heads or figures. In contrast to prevailing practice, Watteau seems usually not to have made figure studies in preparation for predetermined compositions, but apparently filled sketchbooks with incisive renderings of figures drawn from life, which he would later mine for his painted compositions. A drawing of a Seated Woman , for example, has captured all the spontaneity and grace of a young woman’s natural movements, yet does not seem to have been used in a painted composition.

Although he limited himself to chalk, there is a clear evolution in the technique of Watteau’s drawings. His earliest studies are in red chalk alone, with black chalk eventually added to the red, as in Savoyarde . Around 1715, he added white chalk to the mix. Although Watteau did not invent the technique of trois crayons, or three chalks (Rubens and la Fosse, among others, had used it before him), his name is always linked to the technique for his intuitive mastery of it, melding red, black, and white to great painterly and coloristic effect. In Study of a Nude Man Holding Bottles , the three colors of chalk, in combination with the tone of the paper reserve, create a convincing rendering of flesh tones.

Watteau’s artistic legacy pervades French art up to the emergence of Neoclassicism. The sweetness of his palette, an homage to Rubens and the colorism of sixteenth-century Venetian painting recast in delicate pastels to suit the scale and aesthetic of Rococo décor, was widely followed, as was his preference for erotic genre subjects adapted from seventeenth-century Dutch and Flemish sources. Jean-Baptiste Joseph Pater (1695–1736) was Watteau’s only student, and his closest follower, but virtually every artist working in eighteenth-century France, from François Le Moyne (1688–1737) to François Boucher (1703–1770), to Jean Honoré Fragonard (1732–1806), owes a major debt to Watteau’s enigmatic fêtes galantes and elegant trois crayons drawings.

https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/watt/hd_watt.htm

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antoine_Watteau