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Showing posts with label classic paintings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label classic paintings. Show all posts
My Valentine To You: The Evolution Of The Kiss In Art.
Ah, the kiss. The most romantic expression of love and tenderness. You may think that kissing as a subject in fine art is trite or cliche, but that doesn't mean it hasn't been depicted beautifully by many of the world's most well-known and respected artists. As my Valentine to you, I have rounded up some of the most interesting and iconic expressions of "The Kiss" (Le Baiser, Der Kuss) by established artists over the past 150 years.
THE KISS:
The Kiss has long been a favorite subject for painters but no one has captured it quite like the pieces shown below, many of which have been reproduced over and over again. Here are some very famous - and not so famous - versions in chronological order starting with one of the most well-known examples that inspired many of the others, Francesco Hayez' The Kiss.
Francesco Hayez, The Kiss, 1859:
Auguste Rodin, The Kiss, marble sculpture. The piece was initially commissioned by the French State in 1888 and carved between 1888 and 1898. It was cast in bronze by Rodin as well:
William-Adolphe Bouguereau's most famous painting, Cupid and Psyche as Infants, is often incorrectly labeled as Le Premier Baiser (The First Kiss, 1873), 1890:
One of the earliest known paintings of a same sex kiss is that by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. He actually painted two works of the female couple in a lip lock in the same year and the two are often confused.
The Kiss, 1892:
In Bed, The Kiss (1892):
Edvard Munch also created multiple versions of his own interpretation of The Kiss in oil paint, lithography and woodcut as shown below.
The Kiss painting, 1897:
The Kiss lithograph, 1897:
The Kiss woodcut, 1897:
Easily the most well-known of Austrian painter Gustave Klimt's work is his The Kiss, painted between 1908 and 1909:
Romanian sculptor Constantin Brancusi's modern interpretation in stone as well as plaster. He created many versions of The Kiss, further simplifying geometric forms and sparse objects in each version, tending each time further toward abstraction.
The Kiss, stone, 1907-1910:
The Kiss, plaster, 1907-1910:
Rene Magritte's surrealist Interpretation of The Kiss, 1951:
Pablo Picasso actually created many pieces (at least 10) named The Kiss (or Le Baiser) during the years of his life.
First, his figurative version of The Kiss (also known as The Embrace), approx 1905:
His abstracted version of The Kiss in 1925:
His surrealist version of The Kiss (also known as Figures By The Seaside) in 1931:
In 1969, Picasso painted a series of three pictures on the theme of 'The Kiss' (artist Jeff Koons owns one the momochromatic version on the left of the second photo) a day before his 88th birthday at his home at Mougins along the Côte d'Azur, where he lived the last fifteen years of his life:
And yet another painting of The Kiss by Picasso in 1969:
Joël Peter Witkin, an American photographer whose work often involves corpses, created this grotesque version of The Kiss in 1982:
South African artist Tracey Rose, who works with photography, video installations and performance art, created this live installation of The Kiss in 2001 of which 6 editions of Lamba prints were made:
William Cobbing further contemporized The Kiss by adding yet another medium, video, in 2004:
Inspired by a journalist's photo of then Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev and East German leader Erich Honecker sharing a kiss, Russian artist Dmitry Vrubel, painted his version of it on a surviving portion of the Berlin Wall in 2009:
And lastly, The Kiss, 2013 as seen by contemporary artist Erwin Wurm:
Interested in an even greater art selection of kisses? Check out The Kiss: A Celebration of Love in Art
And there you have it. I hope you enjoyed my selections and I wish all of you a very Happy Valentine's Day with lots of kisses.
Classic Romantic Paintings Get Subtly Animated in BEAUTY Video by Rino Stefano Tagliafierro
In this 10 minute video, BEAUTY, director Rino Stefano Tagliafierro takes 116 classic romantic paintings (all of which are listed at the end of this post) and slowly and subtly animates them, bringing the beauty in them to life. A slight tilt of the head, a dress raising ever so gently, petals falling from flowers - tiny, almost imperceptible movements, are expertly executed without changing the general composition or color of the original painting.
William Adolphe Bouguereau's original painting of The Nut Gatherers compared to a screen grab of the subtle animation. Note the arms, hands and grapes on the figure on the right:
The Manifesto: The Enigma of Beauty
«Devouring Time, blunt thou the lion’s paws,
And make the earth devour her own sweet brood;
Pluck the keen teeth from the fierce tiger’s jaws,
And burn the long-lived phoenix in her blood;»
(W. Shakespeare, Sonnet no. 19)
Over Beauty, there has always hung the cloud of destiny and all-devouring time.
Beauty has been invoked, re-figured and described since antiquity as a fleeting moment of happiness and the inexhaustible fullness of life, doomed from the start to a redemptive yet tragic end.
In this interpretation by Rino Stefano Tagliafierro, this beauty is brought back to the expressive force of gestures that he springs from the immobility of canvas, animating a sentiment lost to the fixedness masterpieces.
Its as though these images which the history of art has consigned to us as frozen movement can today come back to life thanks to the fire of digital invention.
A series of well selected images from the tradition of pictorial beauty are appropriated, (from the renaissance to the symbolism of the late 1800s, through Mannerism, Pastoralism, Romanticism and Neo-classicism) with the intention of retracing the sentiment beneath the veil of appearance.
An inspiration that returns to us the sense of one fallen, and the existential brevity that the author interprets as tragic dignity, with an unenchanted eye able to capture the profoundest sense of the image.
Beauty in this interpretation is the silent companion of Life , inexorably leading from the smile of the baby, through erotic ecstasies to the grimaces of pain that close a cycle destined to repeat ad infinitum.
They are, from the inception of a romantic sunrise in which big black birds fly to the final sunset beyond gothic ruins that complete the piece, a work of fleeting time. - Giuliano Corti (english translation: Thomas McEvoy)
The short film:
The paintings, in order of appearance:
Asher Brown Durand - The Catskill Valley
Thomas Hill - Emerald Bay, Lake Tahoe
Albert Bierstadt - Among the Sierra Nevada Mountains
Ivan Shishkin - Forest edge
James Sant - Frau und Tochter
William Adolphe Bouguereau - L'Innocence
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Song of the Angels
Ivan Shishkin - Bach im Birkenwald
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Le Baiser
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Nature's Fan- Girl with a Child
William Adolphe Bouguereau - The Motherland
Ivan Shishkin - Morning in a Pine Forest
William Adolphe Bouguereau - The Nut Gatherers
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Two Sisters
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Not too Much to Carry
Thomas Cole - The Course of Empire: Desolation
Martinus Rørbye - Entrance to an Inn in the Praestegarden at Hillested
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Sewing
William Adolphe Bouguereau - The Difficult Lesson
William Adolphe Bouguereau - The Curtsey
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Little Girl with a Bouquet
Claude Lorrain - Pastoral Landscape
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Cupidon
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Admiration
William Adolphe Bouguereau - A Young Girl Defending Herself Against Eros
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Dawn
William Adolphe Bouguereau - L'Amour et Psych
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Spring Breeze
William Adolphe Bouguereau - The Invation
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Nymphs and Satyr
William Adolphe Bouguereau - The Youth of Bacchus
William Adolphe Bouguereau - The Birth of Venus
William Adolphe Bouguereau - The Nymphaeum
Gioacchino Pagliei - Le Naiadi
Luis Ricardo Falero - Faust's Dream
Luis Ricardo Falero - Reclining Nude
Jules Joseph Lefebvre - La Cigale
John William Godward - Tarot of Delphi
Jan van Huysum - Bouquet of Flowers in an Urn
Adrien Henri Tanoux - Salammbo
Guillaume Seignac - Reclining Nude
Tiziano - Venere di Urbino
Louis Jean François Lagrenée - Amor and Psyche
Correggio - Giove e Io
François Gérard - Psyché et l'Amour
John William Godward - Contemplatio
John William Godward - Far Away Thought
John William Godward - An Auburn Beauty
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Flora And Zephy
Louis Jean François Lagrenée - Amor and Psyche
Fritz Zuber-Bühle - A Reclining Beauty
Paul Peel - The Rest
Guillaume Seignac - L'Abandon
Victor Karlovich Shtemberg - Nu à la peau de bete
Pierre Auguste Cot - Portrait Of Young Woman
Ivan Shishkin - Mast Tree Grove
Ivan Shishkin - Rain in an oak forest
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Biblis
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Elegy
Marcus Stone - Loves Daydream End
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Head Of A Young Girl
Hugues Merle - Mary Magdalene in the Cave
Andrea Vaccaro - Sant'Agata
Jacques-Luois David - Accademia (o Patroclo)
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - San Giovanni Battista
Roberto Ferri - In Nomine Deus
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Cristo alla colonna
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Incoronazione di spine
Paul Delaroche - L'Exécution de lady Jane Grey en la tour de Londres, l'an 1554
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Decollazione di San Giovanni Battista
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Sacrificio di Isacco
Guido Reni - Davide e Golia
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Giuditta e Oloferne
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Davide e Golia
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Salomè con la testa del Battista
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Davide con la testa di Golia
Jakub Schikaneder - All Soul's Day
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - San Gerolamo scrivente
Guido Reni - San Gerolamo
Pieter Claesz - Vanitas
Gabriel von Max - The Ecstatic Virgin Anna Katharina Emmerich
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Portrait of Miss Elizabeth Gardner
Jan Lievens - A young girl
Johannes Vermeer - Portrait of a Young Girl
Luis Ricardo Falero - Moonlit Beauties
Joseph Rebell - Burrasca al chiaro di luna nel golfo di Napoli
Luis Ricardo Falero - Witches going to their Sabbath
William Adolphe Bouguereau - Dante And Virgil In Hell
Théodore Géricault - Cheval arabe gris-blanc
Peter Paul Rubens - Satiro
Felice Boselli - Skinned Head of a Young Bull
Gabriel Cornelius von Max - Monkeys as Judges of Art
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Medusa
Luca Giordano - San Michele
Théodore Géricault - Study of Feet and Hands
Peter Paul Rubens - Saturn Devouring His Son
Ilya Repin - Ivan il Terribile e suo figlio Ivan
Franz von Stuck - Lucifero Moderno
Gustave Doré - Enigma
Arnold Böcklin - Die Toteninsel (III)
Sophie Gengembre Anderson - Elaine
John Everett Millais - Ophelia
Paul Delaroche - Jeune Martyre
Herbert Draper - The Lament for Icarus
Martin Johnson Heade - Twilight on the St. Johns River
Gabriel Cornelius von Max - Der Anatom
Enrique Simonet - Anatomía del corazón
Thomas Eakins - Portrait of Dr. Samuel D. Gross (The Gross Clinic)
Rembrandt - Lezione di anatomia del dottor Tulp
Peter Paul Rubens - Die Beweinung Christi
Paul Hippolyte Delaroche - Die Frau des Künstlers Louise Vernet auf ihrem Totenbett
Elizabeth Jane Gardner Bouguereau - Too Imprudent
William-Adolphe Bouguereau - The Prayer
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - Amorino dormiente
Augustin Théodule Ribot - St. Vincent (of Saragossa)
Caspar David Friedrich - Abtei im eichwald
CREDITS
DIRECTOR: RINO STEFANO TAGLIAFIERRO
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR: LAILA SONSINO
2ND ASSISTANT DIRECTOR: CARLOTTA BALESTRIERI
EDITING - COMPOSITING - ANIMATION: RINO STEFANO TAGLIAFIERRO
MUSIC & SOUND DESIGN: ENRICO ASCOLI
ART DIRECTION: RINO STEFANO TAGLIAFIERRO
HISTORIOGRAPHER: GIULIANO CORTI
Food Art So Impressive, You'll Feel Full. The Art Toast Project by Ida Skivenes (IdaFrosk).
above: Frida Kahlo's famous self-portrait created with food on toast
Oslo, Norway based Instagram food artist and enthusiast Ida Skivenes (aka IdaFrosk) uses a dinner plate as a canvas to create original and reproductions of classic art with food. Her Art Toast Project features the classic works of masters from Magritte to Munch recreated on, you guessed it, toast.
Lady Gaga Morphs Into Classic Paintings Via Video - A Comparative Look.
A video installation by artist Robert Wilson inserts Pop music phenom Lady Gaga into such classic pieces of art as Andrew Solari’s The Head of John the Baptist on a Charger (1507), Jacques-Louis David’s The Death of Marat (1793) and Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres' famous portrait of Mademoiselle Caroline Rivière (1793-1807).
above: a view of the installation at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
Mademoiselle Caroline Rivière
Lady Gaga as the Portrait of Mademoiselle Caroline Rivière by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1793-1807):
The original painting:
Side by side:
The Death of Marat
Lady Gaga as the murdered Marat in Jacques-Louis David’s The Death of Marat (1793):
The original painting:
A still of the video:
Side by side:
The Head of John the Baptist
Lady Gaga as Andrew Solari’s The Head of John the Baptist on a Charger (1507):
Video stills showing the morphing of Gaga into the original painting:
The original painting:
Side by side:
The artist at work on the video portraits of Lady Gaga:
The video portraits are one part of a two part exhibit from artist Robert Wilson presently showing at The Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac. In the second part, he and Lady Gaga are seen in action during the shooting of the video "Flying" (a sort of "making of") , in which the musician can be seen hanging upside down naked while a rope cuts into her skin, bending her left leg, pinning her arms behind her back and deforming her breasts.
Flying:
The artist and Lady Gaga on the set of Flying:
The press release:
The Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is pleased to present an exhibition of video portraits that Robert Wilson made in London in November 2013: Video Portraits of Lady Gaga.
American artist and stage director Wilson has based this series of slowly shifting video portraits on old masters like Ingres and Solario. Lady Gaga's face and body metamorphose into the features of Mademoiselle Rivière, for example, in a video inspired by the famous portrait of Mademoiselle Caroline Rivière by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1793-1807). Wilson also gives us a variation in eleven steps based on Andrea Solario's Head of John the Baptist on a charger (1507) in which the 16th century model and the transformed face of the pop star merge in and out of each other.
The second room is devoted to the making-of of the two artists' joint production. Robert Wilson and Lady Gaga are seen in action during the shooting of the video Flying. Robert Wilson dictates every movement, every item of scenery and every shade of lighting. His artistry as a stage director finds its highest fulfilment in Lady Gaga’s sheer power and determination. "She is capable of changing character at an alarming speed", says Wilson.
Video Portraits of Lady Gaga is Robert Wilson's fourth exhibition at the Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac. In 1993 the gallery presented drawings from his adaptation of Mozart's Magic Flute at the Opéra Bastille, and in 1996 the designs for the opera Erwartung at the Théâtre du Châtelet. In 2006 there was an exhibition at the gallery of his series of portraits, Faces of Mozart, in graphite, coloured inks and watercolour.
Check out Wallpaper Magazine's article on the exhibit here
About the artist:
Robert Wilson was born in Waco, Texas. He studied at the University of Texas and at the Pratt Institute, New York City. In the 1960s he was recognized as one of the leading lights of avant-garde theatre in Manhattan. With the performance company, the Byrd Hoffman School of Byrds, he created Deafman Glance (1970) and in 1976 his opera Einstein on the Beach with music by Philip Glass brought him worldwide renown and changed conventional perceptions of opera.
Since then, Robert Wilson has staged both original works and works from the traditional repertoire, notably: The CIVIL warS (1983-1985), Salome at la Scala, Milan (1987), Black Rider at the Théâtre du Châtelet (1990), Orlando with Isabelle Huppert at the Théâtre de l’Odéon (1993), Wagner's Ring at the Zurich Opera (2002), Lulu by Frank Wedekind with music by Lou Reed at the Théâtre de la Ville (2011), The Life and Death of Marina Abramovic in Manchester (2011) and at the Teatro Real, Madrid (2012). In November 2013, he presented The Old Woman by Daniils Kharms, with Willem Dafoe and Mikhaïl Barynchnikov at the Théâtre de la Ville and in December, at the same venue, Peter Pan with the Berliner Ensemble and music by CocoRosie. He will be staging another production of Einstein on the Beach in January 2014 at the Théâtre du Châtelet. Robert Wilson is currently featured in the Festival d’Automne à Paris, 2013 and he is guest artist at the Louvre.
images courtesy of the artist and the gallery - their official sites, facebook pages and twitter feeds
Paintings Of Mom by 33 Famous Artists For Mother's Day.
In honor of Mother's Day, I wanted to re-run one of my favorite original posts. "Famous Artists Paint Their Mothers" are thirty-three portraits of the female forebearers of various respected and well-known painters. The portraits range from the 15th century to the present* - excluding paintings of The Madonna, arguably the most famous of all mothers.
Most artists, at one time or another, have painted a portrait of the woman from whose womb they sprang. Some are flattering, some are not and others are very personal or intimate -- yet all are an homage to the parent whose role we celebrate today, Sunday, May 13th.
There are so many, I'd originally broken this up into two posts, but today I am featuring all of them in one post - paintings of artists' mothers prior to the 20th century by the likes of Whistler, Van Gogh, Cezanne and Picasso as well as more recent homages to Mom by such artists as Rockwell, Wood, Hopper, Dali, Hockney, and Warhol.
A good place to start would be with the world's most well-known "Mother" artwork, that of by James McNeill Whistler, painted in 1871:
above: James McNeill Whistler, Whistler's Mother 1871, Musée d'Orsay, Paris
The following portraits are presented in chronological order from the earliest to the most recent. While it's true that many of these artists painted multiple sittings of their mothers (e.g. Lautrec, Cassat, and Cezanne), I chose to share those I found to be the most compelling.
Albrecht Durer, portrait of Barbara Durere, the artist's mother, 1490:
Guido Reni, Portrait of the Artist's Mother, 1612:
Rembrandt, Portrait of the Artist's Mother, 1630:
Sir Thomas Lawrence, Portrait (sketch) of Lucy Lawrence, the Artist's mother, 1797:
Alfred Rethel, portrait of the Artist's Mother, 1836:
Camille Corot, Madame Corot, the Artist's Mother, Born Marie-Francoise Oberson, 1838:
Pierre Renoir, Portrait of the Artist's Mother, 1860:
Paul Cezanne, Portrait of the Artist's Mother, 1866-67:
Mary Cassat, the Artist's Mother reading Le Figaro, 1878:
Edouard Manet, Mother in the garden at Bellevue, 1880:
Georges Seurat, Aquatint of the artist's mother, 1883:
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Countess Adele Zoe de Toulouse Lautrec, The Artist's Mother, 1883:
Vincent Van Gogh, Portrait of the Artist's Mother, October, 1888:
Paul Gauguin, Portrait of Aline Gauguin, 1890:
Pablo Picasso, Portrait of the Artist's Mother, 1896:
Edvard Much, The Dead Mother (the artist's mother died when he was five from tuberculosis), 1899:
Franz Marc, portrait of his mother, 1902:
Georgio di Chirico, portrait of the artist's mother, 1911:
Egon Shiele, Mother Sleeping, 1911:
Juan Gris, portrait of the artist's mother, 1912:
Edward Hopper, Elizabeth Griffiths Smith Hopper, the artist's mother, 1916:
Salvador Dali, portrait of the artist's mother, 1920:
Norman Rockwell's Mother Tucking Children Into Bed (for which his mother Irene was the model), 1921:
Grant Wood, Woman With Plants (his mother), 1929:
Arshile Gorky, portrait of the artist's mother, 1936:
William H. Johnson, Mom Alice, 1944:
Alice Neel, My Mother, 1952:
Lucian Freud, The Painter's Mother, 1973:
Andy Warhol, silkscreen of his mother, Julia Warhola, 1974 :
David Hockney, Mum, 1985:
Daphne Todd, Last Portrait Of Mother, 2009:
David Kassan, portrait of the artist's mother, 2010:
*You will note there are very few, if any, portraits artist's mothers in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries because so much art at that time was dominated by religious paintings and portraits commissioned by the wealthy.
Happy Mother's Day!
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