Many people say Les Demoiselles D'Avignon is the greatest masterpiece of the twentieth century. It was created in 1907 by the young Picasso and started a revolution in the Visual Arts. Even now the picture looks violent and shocking, but at the time it must have been quite an experience to see it. The painting is so radically different from what went before and was so important to what came after that more than any other work it can be seen as pivotal in the development of Modern Art.
You don't look at this picture and think "How beautiful". It seems determined to be ugly, in fact by standards of the time it must have seemed slapdash, though apparently Picasso made around 800 studies for it. The figures are unrealistic and the whole space of the picture looks broken. The painting seems to have gone through several stages and the way some figures are painted is very different from others. Famously, some of the figures are inspired by Iberian sculptures, but the more brutally painted ones resemble African masks. It looks as if it was painted in a reckless manner, even after so long; Picasso obviously disregarded any requirement for the painting to be attractive and instead created a breakthrough painting, one that broke up the imaginary picture plane that most other painters used. The picture was only later understood to be crucial in the development of Modern Art, and when you look at it, it is a very forceful and compelling painting, both because it has an immediacy and because of how Picasso's art and the History of Art changed after this painting.
There's an interesting article on the Financial Times site which reminds us a little of the context of the Demoiselles. The writer, Jakie Wullschlager, says that other artists were also searching to reinvent the old outmoded methods of representation and they were also looking to art from other cultures to inspire them, as Picasso had looked to iberian and african art. The same article mentions the El Greco painting "The Opening of The Fifth Seal (The Vision of St. John)" as a major influence on Picasso at this point. I wasn't entirely convinced by that, but it's an interesting idea.
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Friday, January 26, 2007
Tuesday, January 23, 2007
Nerdy Cartoon Nice Design Work
xkcd is a cartoon website that occasionally comes up with gems like this one. Lovely. Nice design work on Misprinted Typ e
Sunday, January 21, 2007
Giorgio de Chirico
One of the greatest Surrealist painters, de Chirico produced eerie masterpieces like these (strangely hosted at the Maths and Computer Science Department of California State University; somebody there knows a good thing) and these at the de Chirico Foundation. de Chirico was actually making these paintings before the First World War, whereas the Surrealists got together in the 1920s. He later painted much more traditional pictures, not very well.
Thursday, January 11, 2007
Saatchi Gallery
We went to the Saatchi Gallery in the 80s when it was in St. John's Wood. A few years ago it moved to the old GLC (Greater London Council) building and now it's in Chelsea. They have setup a virtual tour on their new website "Stuart" (sounds like a bit of a phoney name; Stu[dent]+Art??). The website's a sort of MySpace for artists. I like Julie Bennett's paintings
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Gothic Posters, Be Careful When You Sell Your PC
Morbid, gothic posters by Franciszek Starowieyski, a Polish poster artist. Oh. My. Goodness. A story from Scott Granneman on The Register about the perils of being careless with your data when you sell your computer. Phew.
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Sculpture, Photoshop, Real Beauty
Cool (or not!) sculpture by the beach. This is a sculpture of a tree made from a book. Photoshop tutorial that goes through age-reducing techniques (not excercise and healthy eating!). That reminded me of this Flash Movie from the Dove Campaign For Real Beauty that I'd seen before but not bothered to share for some reason
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)