Showing posts with label models. Show all posts
Showing posts with label models. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2019

Painted Scenes and Figures from the Nineteenth Century

Jean Béraud
Sunday at the Church of Saint Philippe du Roule, Paris
1877
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"When this painting was exhibited in the Salon of 1877 it was seen as a document of contemporary Parisian life.  Béraud depicts a view of the rue du Faubourg St-Honoré, which had recently become a fashionable shopping street.  The church was designed in the eighteenth century by the architect J.F. Chalgrin."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

Samuel Butler
Mr Heatherley's Holiday - An Incident in Studio Life
1874
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

"It was Heatherley's that set me wrong.  This is Butler's largest and most successful painting.  It satirises the dusty, macabre jumble out of which 'grand style' Victorian classicism was expected to arise.  Heatherley's art school in Newman Street, which Butler attended for a number of years, was run by the old man shown here, who famously never took a holiday.  His mending of a skeleton misused by students pinpoints Butler's rejection of academicism."

– curator's notes from Tate Gallery

Charles Chaplin
Young Girl Drawing
ca. 1860-66
oil on panel
Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, County Durham

"Chaplin rarely used dark colours, preferring to apply a standard palette of pastel shades of pink, blue and yellow.  His fondness for these shades accentuates his almost transparent flesh tones.  His contemporaries praised his handling of lavish fabrics, paying tribute to his life-like portrayal of satins, gauzes and taffetas." 

– curator's notes from the Bowes Museum

Thomas Eakins
Between Rounds
1898-99
oil on canvas
Philadelphia Museum of Art

"Most of Eakins's paintings after 1886 were portraits, but he returned to sporting subjects in the late 1890s with a series that he began after attending professional boxing matches at the Philadelphia Arena (then located at the intersection of Broad and Cherry Streets, diagonally across from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts).  The resulting canvases were as revolutionary in their subject matter as his rowing scenes had been more than two decades earlier."

– curator's notes from the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Thomas Eakins
Billy Smith - Sketch for Between Rounds
ca. 1898
oil on canvas
Philadelphia Museum of Art

"Eakins fastidiously planned Between Rounds.  Susan Macdowell Eakins later recalled, 'In Between Rounds every person in the picture posed for him.  The interior was the Hall used by the fighters.'  Although the painting does not depict a specific bout, Eakins combined details from several to give it verisimilitude and worked diligently to capture the atmospheric effects of dust and smoke in the arena."

 – curator's notes from the Philadelphia Museum of Art

circle of Théodore Géricault
Portrait of a Young Man
ca. 1822-23
oil on canvas
Harvard Art Museums

Acquired in the 1940s by the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University, at a time when the painting was still erroneously believed to be a Géricault self-portrait.

William Michael Harnett
Still Life with Bric-a-Brac
1878
oil on canvas
Harvard Art Museums

"This painting portrays a group of exotic objects from the collection of William Hazleton Folwell, the Philadelphia dry-goods importer who commissioned the work.  Comprising genuine antiques, contemporary ceramics, and modern replicas, Folwell's collection reflects the eclecticism of Victorian taste and the influence of the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition held in 1876.  This international fair introduced Americans to objects form around the world and sparked widespread interest in collecting exotica."

– curator's notes from the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Antonio Mancini
St John the Baptist
ca. 1890-95
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

"Provenance: Until 1920, Mary Smyth (Mrs. Charles) Hunter (b. 1856 - d. 1933), London and Hill House, Epping, England.  Mrs. Hunter almost certainly acquired the painting directly from the artist.  She and her husband patronized him, and Mancini stayed with them during a visit to London in 1908.  Sold in 1920 by Mrs. Hunter to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for £2000 ($8200)."

– curator's notes from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Édouard Manet
The Brioche
1870
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"Manet reportedly called still life the 'touchstone of the painter.'  From 1862 to 1870 he executed several large-scale tabletop scenes of fish and fruit, of which this is the last and most elaborate.  It was inspired by the donation to the Louvre of a painting of a brioche by Jean-Siméon Chardin, the eighteenth-century French master of still life.  Like Chardin, Manet surrounded the buttery bread with things to stimulate the senses – a brilliant white napkin, soft peaches, glistening plums, a polished knife, a bright red box – and, in traditional fashion, topped the brioche with a fragrant flower."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

Jean-François Millet
Retreat from the Storm
ca. 1846
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"The impending storm poses a real threat to this woman and her child, whose subsistence depends on the stray sticks of firewood they have gathered.  Throughout the 1840s the number of homeless peasants increased dramatically in France, reaching a crisis in the recession of 1847 and contributing to the fall of King Louis-Philippe in the 1848 revolution."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

Eduardo Rosales
After the Bath
ca. 1869
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

"Este desnudo es uno de los cuadros más unánimemente admirados del pintor  hasta el punto de haber sido comparado con la Venus del espejo (National Gallery, Londres) de Diego Velázquez  aun cuando se trata, sin lugar a dudas, de un boceto.  Representa a una mujer madura en pie, desnuda ye de espaldas, que se inclina hacia la izquierda para secarse la pierna, levemente flexionada, con un paño blanco.  El cortinaje verde, que cae ampuloso por la derecha, ye la pose de la modelo, refinada y cauta, aseguran que se trata de una composición de estudio." 

– curator's notes from Museo del Prado

Paul Signac
Jetty at Cassis - Opus 198
1889
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"Between 1887 and 1891 Signac spent the warmer months pursuing his two passions, marine painting and boating, on excursions to seaside resorts.  One of five views made during a trip to the Mediterranean port of Cassis in April-June 1889, this work was singled out for praise when the series debuted at the Salon des Indépendants later that year.  At Cassis, Signac found 'white, blue and orange, harmoniously spread over the beautiful rise and fall of the land – all around the mountains, with rhythmic curves.'  Until 1894 he evoked analogies with musical compositions by inscribing each of his pictures with an opus number."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

Alfred Sisley
The Seine at Port Marly - Piles of Sand
1875
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

"Of all the landscapes Alfred Sisley painted in and around Marly-le-Roi, where he lived from 1875 to 1878, this scene of workers dredging sand to facilitate barge traffic is perhaps the most original.  Generally, the Impressionists showed the Seine as a place of weekend leisure for Parisians, painting activities such as boating, yachting, promenading, and dining.  Sisley depicted the river during the workweek, along with some of the men who depended on it for their livelihood."

 curator's notes from the Art Institute of Chicago

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
The Streetwalker
ca. 1890-91
oil on cardboard
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"As early as 1901 the woman in this painting was identified as a streetwalker.  Her name, however, has been lost to history, only the nickname La Casque d'Or (Golden Helmet), which refers to her wig, has survived.  She sits in the garden of Monsieur Forest, Lautrec's neighbor in Montmartre."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

Sunday, August 18, 2019

Drawing from the Model at the Académie

Charles Le Brun
Study for Alexander
ca. 1660-61
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Louis de Boullogne the Elder
Académie
1654
drawing
private collection

"The debate began in 1665 in the wake of Gianlorenzo Bernini's visit to the Académie.  Concise mention of this is made in the minutes:  The said Sieur Bernini confirmed by his opinion the feelings of the company in relation to the education of students, namely that, before studying from life, their minds should be filled with beautiful ideas from the Antique."


Jean-Baptiste de Champaigne
Studies for Dead Christ
before 1681
drawing
private collection

Charles de La Fosse
Figure with Violin
ca. 1680-90
drawing
private collection

"Study of the model constituted the main form of instruction offered by the Académie for more than a century and a half.  . . .  The specificity of the Académie, indeed its monopoly, lay entirely in teaching how the male human body should be drawn.  In his lecture on the Laocoön of August 1670, Michel Anguier presented the human body as a microcosm of the entire world:  The ancient philosophers were well aware that to discover the secrets of nature was one by one to lift the veils from the face of the Creator, since by the knowledge of his creatures they came to know the Creator; in the same way, the Greek sculptors, formed in this erudite school, followed this beautiful path in ridding their figures of the veils constituted by clothing and of any other thing that might hide the most beautiful and accomplished of all creatures, whom they called an epitome of the world, filled with divinity; whom the sages of Egypt called an adorable animal, Pythagoras the measure of all things, Plato the marvel of marvels, and Zoroaster the statue and masterpiece in which nature's most audacious endeavor appears."

Louis de Boullogne the Younger
Reclining River God
ca. 1695-1715
drawing
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Louis de Boullogne the Younger
Figure of Christ
1708
drawing
Morgan Library, New York

"François Quatroux took up this idea and used it for his own purposes:  I propose to take as my subject in this lecture the human body, a picture in epitome of everything contained in this great world, and which is, for the purposes of this subject, called microcosm or the world in small, made by the hand of the All-Powerful.  Those who knew the human body knew the entire universe.  The same discourse, now in secular form, was taken up by Charles-Nicolas Cochin a century later:  Any degree of superiority, not only in the arts but indeed in all the professions that depend on them, is relative to the superiority that the artist has acquired in the art of the human figure.  . . .  No one who has not begun by profound study of nature and the nude can rise above the mediocre."

Louis de Boullogne the Younger
Académie
1710
drawing
Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University

Louis de Boullogne the Younger
Académie
before 1715
drawing
private collection

"Teaching on this subject  gave rise to a recurrent debate within the Académie: should the student draw the body of the model as he saw it, or should he add what he knew about anatomy and proportions?  Everyone argued that simply reproducing the model was impossible: no model could sustain a pose for two hours; flexed muscles inevitably relaxed – and only five minutes' rest was granted during each pose.  The student had to sketch his outline rapidly at the beginning of the session, before the model made excessive use of the support supplied.  A draftsman could draw the muscles only if he already knew them; they were not, for the most part, readily visible.  Cochin explained this clearly:  That it should be so difficult to draw what one has before one's eyes may seem astonishing but will be less surprising if one notes that the draftsman, though drawing from the life, can draw only from memory; it is not so much nature that he copies, since he no longer sees that nature when he casts his eye down on the paper; it is the image that he has formed of it and he retains this image with greater or lesser detail, according to the level of his knowledge."


Nicolas de Largillière
Two Figures struggling together
ca. 1709-1710
drawing
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Figure Study
ca. 1715-16
drawing
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Figure Study
ca. 1717
drawing
Teylers Museum, Haarlem

Charles-Antoine Coypel
Académie
ca. 1750
drawing
Harvard Art Museums

"To draw the model was necessarily to interpret it, and the principal question was how far interpretation should go – in particular, whether one could draw nature properly without first studying anatomy and the Antique.  More generally, academicians wondered in what order to train their students.  Should they first impart technical competence, teaching them to draw accurately what they saw, before encouraging them to bestow greater nobility on their figure?  Or should they first teach the basis of the grand manner, since training students to reproduce nature in all her petty detail might prevent them acquiring that manner at a later stage?" 

A.J. Defehrt after Jean-Honoré Fragonard
Académie
ca. 1762-77
engraved illustration to the Encyclopédie
Art Institute of Chicago

A.J. Defehrt after Jean-Honoré Fragonard
Académie
ca. 1762-77
engraved illustration to the Encyclopédie
Art Institute of Chicago

"These arguments illustrate what was at stake in drawing from life.  It was a form of teaching more theoretical than practical, whether administered by "naturalists" or enthusiasts for the improvement of nature."

Anne-Louis Girodet
Figure reclining on Divan
ca. 1793
drawing
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

– texts and quoted passages from The Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture: The Birth of the French School, 1648-1793 by Christian Michel, published in France in 2012, translated by Chris Miller and published by Getty Research Institute in 2018

Monday, July 22, 2019

The God Pan - III

attributed to Ugo da Carpi after Parmigianino
Pan
ca. 1510-30
chiaroscuro woodcut
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Peter Paul Rubens
Pan reclining
ca. 1610
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Annibale Carracci
Pan and Hermaphroditus
before 1609
etching
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Nicolas Poussin
Bacchanal before a Herm of Pan
1631-33
oil on canvas
National Gallery, London

after Salvator Rosa
Pan
ca. 1660
etching
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

To Homer

Standing aloof in giant ignorance,
     Of thee I hear and of the Cyclades,
As one who sits ashore and longs perchance
     To visit dolphin-coral in deep seas.
So thou wast blind – but then the veil was rent,
     For Jove uncurtain'd Heaven to let thee live,
And Neptune made for thee a spumy tent,
     And Pan made sing for thee his forest-hive;
Aye on the shores of darkness there is light,
     And precipices show untrodden green,
There is a budding morrow in midnight,
     There is s triple sight in blindness keen;
Such seeing hadst thou, as it once befel
To Dian, Queen of Earth, and Heaven, and Hell.

– John Keats (posthumously published in 1848)

Hubert Quellinus
Bust of Pan
before 1670
engraving
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Jean-Baptiste Monnoyer (designer) for Beauvais Manufactory
Offering to Pan
ca. 1688-1732
tapestry (wool and silk)
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Jean-Jacques Lagrenée
Sacrifice to the God Pan
ca. 1775
etching
Art Institute of Chicago

Bertel Thorvaldsen
Pan teaching the Pipes to a young Satyr
1831
drawing
British Museum

Edward Burne-Jones
The Garden of Pan
1886-87
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

Hippolyte Petitjean
Pan IV (Arcadia)
ca. 1898-1900
lithograph
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Adolf Hirémy-Hirschl
Three Studies for Pan
ca. 1900
pastel
Art Institute of Chicago

Clarence H. White
Youth in the Woods (Pan)
ca. 1905-1908
platinum print
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John Singer Sargent
Sketch for a Figure of Pan
(study for Rotunda of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
ca. 1917-21
drawing
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Ernest-Louis Lessieux
Pan
before 1925
lithograph (postcard)
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Monday, June 24, 2019

Photography: A Little Summa - Susan Sontag

Lynne Cohen
Furniture Showroom
1979
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery, London

Marketa Luskacova
Woman and Man with Bread, Spitalfields, London
1976
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery, London

Jonas Dovydenas
Adolescent, Manchester, Kentucky
1971
gelatin silver print
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Guy Bourdin
Untitled
1952
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery, London

Iwao Yamawaki
Cafeteria after Lunch, Bauhaus, Dessau
ca. 1930-32
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery, London

1. Photography is, first of all, a way of seeing.  It is not seeing itself.

2.  It is the ineluctably "modern" way of seeing – prejudiced in favor of projects of discovery and innovation.

Yva (Else Simon)
Dance
ca. 1933
photogravure
private collection

Edvard Munch
Self-portrait “à la Marat”
1908-1909
photograph
Munch Museum, Oslo

Samuel Joshua Beckett
Loїe Fuller Dancing
ca. 1900
gelatin silver print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Arnold Genthe
Merchant and Body Guard, Old Chinatown, San Francisco
ca. 1896-1906
gelatin silver print
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Adrien Constant de Rebecque
Man posed as Dying Soldier
ca. 1863
albumen print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

6.  In the modern way of knowing, there have to be images for something to become "real."  Photographs identify events.  Photographs confer importance on events and make them memorable.  For a war, an atrocity, a pandemic, a so-called natural disaster to become a subject of large concern, it has to reach people through the various systems (from television and the internet to newspapers and magazines) that diffuse photographic images to millions.

7.  In the modern way of seeing, reality is first of all appearance  – which is always changing.  A photograph records appearance.  The record of photography is the record of change, of the destruction of the past.  Being modern (and if we have the habit of looking at photographs, we are by definition modern), we understand all identities to be constructions.  The only irrefutable reality – and our best clue to identity – is how people appear.

Mathew Brady
Portrait of Edwin Booth and his daughter Edwina
ca. 1863-65
albumen print
George Eastman House, Rochester NY 

Lady Clementina Hawarden
Poodle on Chairs
1861
albumen print
Victoria & Albert Museum

Horatio Ross
Tree
ca. 1858
albumen silver print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Roger Fenton
Billiard Room at Mentmore
ca. 1858
albumen silver print
Getty Museum, Los Angeles

John Adams Whipple and James Wallace Black
The Moon
ca. 1857-60
salted paper print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

10.  To know is, first of all, to acknowledge.  Recognition is the form of knowledge that is now identified with art. The photographs of the terrible cruelties and injustices that afflict most people in the world seem to be telling us – we who are privileged and relatively safe – that we should be aroused; that we should want something done to stop these horrors.  And then there are photographs that seem to invite a different kind of attention.  For this ongoing body of work, photography is not a species of social or moral agitation, meant to prod us to feel and to act, but an enterprise of notation.  We watch, we take note, we acknowledge.  This is a cooler way of looking.  This is the way of looking we identify as art.

11.  The work of some of the best socially engaged photographers is often reproached if it seems too much like art.  And photography understood as art may incur a parallel reproach – that it deadens concern.  It shows us events and situations and conflicts that we might deplore, and asks us to be detached.  It may show us something truly horrifying and be a test of what we can bear to look at and are supposed to accept. Or often – this is true of a good deal of the most brilliant contemporary photography – it simply invites us to stare at banality.  To stare at banality and also to relish it, drawing on the very developed habits of irony that are affirmed by the surreal juxtapositions of photographs typical of sophisticated exhibitions and books.

Louis-Antoine Froissart
Flood in Lyon
1856
albumen silver print
Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Franck-François-Genès Chauvassaignes
Nude artist's model
ca. 1856-59
salted paper print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Mervyn Herbert Nevil Story Maskelyne
Charlton House, Malmesbury, Wiltshire
1856
salted paper print
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Louis-Adolphe Humbert de Molard
Louis Dodier as a Prisoner
1847
daguerreotype
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey
Ancient Columns
early 1840s
daguerreotype
Getty Museum, Los Angeles

– text by Susan Sontag, from Photography: A Little Summa (2003)