Wednesday, December 26, 2012

painting of the month

The White Veil -- Willard Leroy Metcalf, 1909 (Detroit Institute of the Arts)

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

RIP to one cool cat

Jazz great Dave Brubeck died this morning, just a day short of turning 92.  I know that this is generally an art blog, but I grew up seeing the cover of The Dave Brubeck Quartet's classic Take Five among my mother's pretty extensive record/CD collection and it was one of my first perceptions of modern art.  The cover was done by graphic designer  Sadamitsu "S. Neil" Fujita (1921-2010) for the original 1959 album, and Brubeck and his quartet also used a work by Joan Miró for their follow-up Time Further Out.   Here's a YouTube video of Take Five the composition featuring Fujita's cover, if you literally want to take five in memory of all the talent involved -- musically and visually.    

Monday, December 3, 2012

pablo and georges

"Two figures stand out among the creators of Cubism--Picasso and Braque...Picasso represents the adventurous and chimerical exaggeration of Spain.  His genius is informed by an insatiable creative power.  He is full of vagaries and fantastic imaginings, but he has always been a self-critic even in his most brilliant phases of negation.  Braque, on the other hand, brought to Cubism a constructive, positive and logical element that is typically French.  Picasso denies, Braque accepts...."

From The Holiday Painter -- J. Martin-Barbaz (Emerson Books, 1961)

Pictured:  The Accordionist, Pablo Picasso (Wikimedia Commons) and Aria de Bach, Georges Braque (National Gallery of Art)

Sunday, November 25, 2012

painting of the month

Still Life Composition -- Maria Blanchard, 1916/17 (Wikimedia Commons)

Friday, November 2, 2012

the queen's many faces







From its very beginning on November 2, 1755, the life of Queen Marie Antoinette was destined to become the stuff of history and legend, novel and film.  She grew up in the center of royalty, was married at age fourteen as part of a royal alliance, produced royal heirs and went about living as she had been raised -- as a royal entity.  Her 1793 execution by guillotine came as the result of revolutionary fervor, a people's rebellion fueled by contempt for monarchies and social injustice.  She was reportedly not as indifferent to the plight of her subjects as rumor would have it, and it's unlikely that she ever made any glib suggestions that peasants go eat cake or even brioche.

Still, she was high-spirited and undeniably caught up in court society, her style and beauty at first delighting the French people, then turning against her amid accusations of adultery and extravagance.  And along the way there were numerous portraits painted of Marie Antoinette as Dauphine and then Queen, notably by artist Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun as the official royal portrait painter until 1789.  Lebrun went into exile after the royal family was put under house arrest by the Garde Nationale, and Polish-born Alexandre Kucharski became the official portraitist instead.  One might think that by that point there would be no more royal portraits, but Kucharski did produce some paintings of Marie Antoinette in her last years, works rather different from Lebrun's sumptuous depictions.  The Widow Capet's final days and death came with as much dignity as she could muster, though she was said to be also quite ill with other physical ailments -- a state suggested by the Sophie Prieur portrait modeled from a Kucharski painting.  Though some were bayoneted by protestors in the heat of violence, most portraits of Queen Marie Antoinette survived the Revolution; Marie Antoinette herself, of course, did not. 


Pictured:
Queen Marie Antoinette of France -- Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun,1778
Marie Antoinette in a Muslin Dress --  Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun, 1783
Marie Antoinette with Her Children -- Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun, 1787
Marie Antoinette -- Alexandre Kucharski, ca. 1791
Queen Marie Antoinette of France in the Prison Temple, ca. 1793 -- Sophie Prieur (after Kucharski)

Saturday, October 27, 2012

painting of the month



Waterfall -- Arthur Dove, 1925 (The Phillips Collection)

Monday, October 15, 2012

the lost eye

It seems that the large blue mystery eye that recently washed up on a Florida beach belonged to a swordfish, pretty callously cut from the fish itself and tossed aside but maybe that's just how the fisherman's world goes.  Still, the first thing I thought of when I saw the news item was Odilon Redon's Eye Balloon, and then Redon's Cyclops as well.  One eye alone can look so reproachful, even if it belongs to a Cyclops or a balloon or a once mighty fish.

Pictured: Swordfish eye; Eye Balloon and Cyclops (Odilon Redon, 1840-1916)