Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Europe After Rain II
???
This was in the Dia, down stairs.
The only question I have is WHY?
Though at first it seems innocent and silly, I think there is something more in depth about it; something that is obviously very childish and perverse. Whats most troubling about it ( besides the nuse, and subliminal add for Viagra) is that it seems to have a dark message yet it is made of bright neon lights. I am completely missing the message, and I think I am happier that way. I think this artist needs counseling.
Another Pointillism Technique
Detail showing Pointillism technique
Instead of painting outlines and shapes with brush strokes and areas of colour, pointillism builds up the image from separate coloured dots of paint. From a distance, the dots merge and appear to be areas of shaded tones, but the colours have an extra vibrancy from the juxtaposition of contrasting dots.
We have an Art Collector in our midst
Monday, March 30, 2009
"Hannibal" found; and its "Great"
The Cool Assassin
Afrology
Market Woman & Kids
Flute Lady
Godzilla with F18
Friday, March 27, 2009
The Lonely Life
Thursday, March 26, 2009
photo and spraypainting
Here's an article adding to what Tim was saying about Pollack's fractals.
Jackson's fractals :
As recent articles in PASS Maths have shown, combining the computational powers of modern digital computers with the complex beauty of mathematical fractals has produced some entrancing artwork during the past two decades.
Intriguingly, recent research at the Physics Department of the University of New South Wales, Australia, has suggested that some works by the American artist Jackson Pollock also reflect a fractal structure.
Pollock created many of his works by dripping paint onto enormous canvases, leading to some riotously complex images. While Pollock himself felt that these works reflected "pure harmony", critics have dismissed them as "mere unorganised explosions of random energy". Having examined a number of such paintings produced between 1943 and 1952, the researchers are inclined to agree with Pollock, finding fractal relationships rather than "unorganised explosions" in the paint-drip works.
A feature of fractals is self-similarity on multiple scales: a small chunk of a fractal, scaled up, has similar features to a larger one. The researchers noticed this feature in the paint-splatter works, and analysed a quantity called the fractal dimension of the paintings.
Pollock's drip paintings became more complex over the years. In the early work of 1943, he used single dribbles of paint covering only about 20% of the canvas. By 1952, he was using multiple squiggles covering over 90%. Correspondingly, the researchers found that the fractal dimension of these works increased steadily from a low value close to 1 to a high value of 1.72.
Why is this interesting? Mignon Nixon, a lecturer in American art at London's Courtauld Institute, told the BBC's News Online service: "Mathematical models may be a way of attributing a kind of mastery and order, by shifting from an aesthetic, subjective mode of examination to a more objective, scientific one."
She said that scientific approaches can be useful in the study of art. "If you want to know how was a painting was made or how do we date it, then technical help is crucial. But the information you get that way is also useful for interpretation because you know more about how the thing was made."
Pollock Pic
Albert Einstein and Marilyn Monroe
NY Times Article
By HOLLAND COTTER
BEACON, N.Y. , June 4 - Let's be devils and call Andy Warhol the Rubens of American art. Why not? Everything Rubens did, Warhol did, and more: portraits, religious paintings, history paintings, still lifes, landscapes (well, cityscapes), mythological subjects (Marilyn, Liza, Mao) and scads of drawings. You will find some of all of this, along with films and photographs, in "Dia's Andy: Through the Lens of Patronage," a scrambled, surveyish exhibition here at Dia:Beacon that is more interesting than it probably should be.
Warhol, like Rubens, was an artist-entrepreneur. Chronically overbooked, he did a certain amount of work himself, but farmed out a lot to assistants, adding signature swipes as needed. Both were court painters ever alert for commissions, and statesmen in civic and social spheres. Rubens ran diplomatic missions for the great kings of Europe; Warhol interviewed disco queens at Studio 54.
Of course, there were personal differences. Rubens was a robust jock, very married, very straight; Andy (Dynel wigs; size 30 briefs; nickname: Drella) was not. Both were culturally erudite. Rubens had people read Virgil to him as he worked; Warhol played Maria Callas and the Supremes, nonstop and often simultaneously, in his studio. And both were notable communicators. Rubens spoke several languages fluently. Warhol spoke one, American English, sometimes fluently, sometimes not, depending on the company, and listened like crazy to everyone, gossip radar always on.
Yawning is a way of talking, he once said, and he routinely dropped into comatose mode in the presence of people he didn't know or like. Initially, he did so out of nervousness; there was a candid, clowning side to his personality, which probably got him into trouble as an effeminate kid. As an adult he figured out that silence could be protective camouflage, even a source of power. He developed it as a personal style, though he was verbally as sharp as a tack when he wanted to be.
His art operates the same way. With its apparently random images, stuttering repetitions and production glitches, it can look asleep at the wheel when it is, in fact, scarily wide awake. It is certainly awake enough to bring some bounce and sting to this show, which really has no urgent reason for being except to celebrate two occasions: the second anniversary of the opening of the Dia:Beacon and the 10th anniversary of the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, co-founded by the Dia Art Foundation.
Manhattan has had more than its share of Warhol gallery shows recently, mostly of late work, and some of them looked thin. (An exception is an ambitious gathering of portraits at Tony Shafrazi in Chelsea through Aug. 5.) But any exhibition that brings some of his early silkscreen paintings to the fore, as the Dia show does, is worthy of notice.
They are among about 80 paintings, many commissioned directly from Warhol, that Dia gave to the Pittsburgh museum. And they pretty much represent the foundation's entire Warhol inventory, apart from the extraordinary multipanel "Shadows" (1978-79), which is on permanent view at Dia.
So, mostly, the show is a visit from old friends: 1960's "Disaster" paintings, 1970's celebrity portraits, paintings after Leonardo da Vinci's "Last Supper" done just before Warhol's sudden death in 1987. There are, however, some significant additions. The paintings are supplemented by a group of his Brillo boxes from the Norton Simon Museum in California. The art historian Douglas Crimp has organized a summerlong program of Warhol's paradigm-altering early films. And material from Warhol's "Time Capsules" is making a public debut.
Warhol was a pack rat. (So was Rubens, who hoarded antique sculpture.) He saved letters, invitations, snapshots, magazines, playbills, interview transcriptions, candy wrappers, liquor samples, prescription vials; you name it. He tossed them into cardboard boxes which he periodically sealed and labeled by month and year. More than 600 such boxes - "Time Capsules" - were in storage when he died. The Andy Warhol Museum is gradually examining them, and four have been opened, and their contents displayed, for this show.
In a sense the exhibition itself is a time capsule of Warhol's career. It doesn't offer any huge new angle on it. But as is sometimes the case, a thrown-together mix of his art can bring out what is substantial and deep - subterranean - about it, in ways that seeing individual series may not.
The mixing and layering is straightforward in the light, bright-looking installation on Dia's main floor, where a suite of smallish gallery spaces have been covered with grid-patterned wallpaper designed by Warhol from a single repeated drawing of the Washington Monument.
All the paintings are hung, as the artist preferred, against this visually active ground, beginning with several "Disasters" from 1963-64. They were based on rejected press photographs of car wrecks and suicides, images considered too gruesome or indecorous for print. In one, a man has been thrown from his burning car and impaled on a spike on a telephone pole, a fate weirdly echoed in the sharp point of the obelisk on the wallpaper backdrop.
This all-over image of the Washington Monument - bladelike, phallic, exclamatory - turns the whole show, a quarter-century of art, into an extended "disaster" series, with portraits of yesterday's Beautiful People, now aging, dead or forgotten, and paintings of skulls and Warhol's skull-like self-portrait. Even the Brillo boxes, neatly laid out on the floor, take on a funerary cast; they are like a plot of look-alike sepulchers.
They are also roughly the same size and shape as the "Time Capsule" cartons, whose contents fill vitrines in a dimly lighted, cryptlike basement gallery. The items include 1950's fashion magazines, souvenirs of the early Pop years, and tawdry relics of the glitter-addled pre-AIDS 1970's. Their collective effect is dispiriting: history as a jumble sale of trivia, with everything, including art, pulled downward toward the dirt.
Or is it the other way around? Maybe we should be seeing history raised up. Warhol called the "Time Capsules" art; they were part of what he did, a series like all his other series. Each box is an assemblage, however accidentally or deliberately shaped, of a specific life in a specific culture. Some people saw Warhol as a vampire sucking the vital juices out of that culture. I see him as vitalizing agent who encouraged America to start paying attention to its suicidal tendencies, to start taking its own erratic, racing pulse.
He talked about the things that got that pulse pumping - death, sex, evil, glamour - in a way no one else had, and broke fresh ground for American art and thought. You get a sense of his method in the early films that flicker away in the dark, literally underground at Dia, like the illicit gay-porn movies Warhol knew from the 1950's. The images are mostly of people doing ordinary things like eating, sleeping and kissing. And just by looking - staring and staring - Warhol makes the ordinary look erotic, absurd and endangered.
Not that any of this turns him into a saint, or a hero, or even a likable guy, though a lot of artists like what he did. (Open any Warhol survey catalog and you'll see at a glance where many of today's stars came from, from Gerhard Richter and Andreas Gursky to Elizabeth Peyton and Damien Hirst.) Nor is he at all a "moral" artist in the way Rubens - the classicist, the Roman Catholic humanist - was. Which doesn't mean Warhol's art isn't seriously about morality.
Rubens believed that he lived in a diminished and degenerate age, "decay'd and corrupted" by a succession of "vices and accidents" in his words. He hated it, and constantly looked to an ancient past for a consoling model of virtue. Warhol, who went to Mass every Sunday, was similarly aware that the world was weak and corrupt, but he loved it, because it was there, and he was in it. Corruption, to him, made an endlessly fascinating study. For weakness, he had a soft heart. His Golden Age was his childhood, which he doggedly tried to recreate. In short, he saw decay where Rubens saw decay, but he also saw beauty. Who, in the end, had the truer eye?
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Leonid Afremov
spainsh war
Gas
Gas, 1940, by Edward Hopper
Oil on canvas
I read that this painting is not a portrait of any one site, rather it is a combination of many memorable land features and road stops emerged into one, by the artist.
It gives a sense of the simpler life style in recent American years. I feel it shows the isolationism of back country living while also eloquently portraying the peaceful beauty that comes along with it. I truly like this painting because it reminds me of my childhood and makes me yearn for those long summer nights that were detached from all worries and cares about the future; people then only seemed content with those around them and the situations at hand, making it an easy, burden free escape from the hectic urban life.
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Landscape at Chaponval
The Paddock
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Maurits Cornelis Escher
Maurits Cornelis Escher (1898-1972) is one of the world's most famous graphic artists. He is most famous for his so-called impossible structures, such as Ascending and Descending.
Castrovalva for example, where one already can see Escher's fascination for high and low, close by and far away. The lithograph Atrani, a small town on the Amalfi Coast was made in 1931, but comes back for example, in his masterpiece Metamorphosis I and II.
M.C. Escher, during his lifetime, made 448 lithographs, woodcuts and wood engravings and over 2000 drawings and sketches.
Many of these sketches he would later use for various other lithographs and/or woodcuts and wood engravings, for example the background in the lithograph Waterfall stems from his Italian period, or the trees reflecting in the woodcut Puddle.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1HwyBtneBUM&eurl=http://www.fridakahlo.it/video.html
Frida Kahlo- "Sin Esperanza" (Without Hope)
Van Gogh by Melanie
Monday, March 16, 2009
Bella Donna by John Asaro
Thursday, March 12, 2009
MOMA
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
The Red Vineyard by: Vincent Van Gogh Nov. 1888
Leaning Lovers by energist artist: Julia Watkins
Monday, March 9, 2009
Lost painting
The portrait of William Shakespeare is thought to be the "only" portrait painted during his lifetime.
The image reveals a wealthy Shakespeare of high social status, contradicting the popular view of a struggling playwright of humble status, according to Stanley Wells, a professor who chairs London's Shakespeare Birthplace Trust.
Wells, a distinguished Shakespeare scholar, arranged for three years of research and scientific testing which confirmed it was painted around 1610, when Shakespeare would have been 46 years old.
"A rather young looking 46, it has to be said," Wells said. Shakespeare died in 1616.
The Cobbe portrait -- named after the Irish family that owns the painting -- shows Shakespeare with rosy cheeks, a full head of hair, and a reddish brown beard.
The most common portrait of Shakespeare is a gray image showing a bald Bard with a small mustache and beard, and bags under his eyes.
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Dutch police recover paintings stolen 22 years ago
THE HAGUE, Netherlands – Dutch police have recovered eight valuable paintings, including works by Renoir and Pissaro, 22 years after they were stolen from a gallery.
Prosecutors said in a statement three suspects have been arrested — a 45-year-old German man who lives in Dubai, his 62-year-old mother and a 66-year-old man. All three suspects, whose identities were not released, were due to appear in court on Monday.
Some of the paintings, which were stolen from the Noortman gallery in the southern city of Maastricht in 1987, were badly damaged by being folded, the Dutch National Prosecutor's Office said in a statement posted on its Web site Saturday.
"An expert will establish their value," the statement said.
The gallery could not be reached for comment Sunday.
Prosecutors said police tracked down the works after an attempt was made to sell them to the insurance company that paid out five million guilders (about €2.3 million), for the paintings after the theft.
Prosecutors said they are investigating where the paintings have been since their disappearance. Six were found in the southern town of Valkenburg and two more in the nearby village of Walem, where one of the suspects lives.
The works were by David Teniers, Willem van de Velde, Jan Brueghel the Younger, Eva Gonzales, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro and Paul Desire Trouillebert.
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Man With Hats byTeun Hocks
Man with Hats by Teun Hocks. 2006 Oil on toned gelatin silver prints.
This painting reminds me of Professor Jacketti. We tend to asked him more about the midterm then enjoying modern art. We just drove him crazy like the man in the painting. Just a little humor and something different.
(http://www.ppowgallery.com)