Showing posts with label parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parks. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Christopher Wood and Modernist Primitivism

Christopher Wood
Angelfish, London Aquarium
1930
oil on cardboard
Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museums

" . . . not trying to see things and paint them through the eyes and experience of a man of forty or fifty or whatever they may be, but rather through the eyes of the smallest child who sees nothing except those things which would strike him as being the most important . . ."

– Christopher Wood in a 1922 letter to his mother

Christopher Wood
Battersea Park, London
before 1930
oil on canvas
Dorset County Museum

Christopher Wood
Zebra and Parachute
1930
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

"Zebra and Parachute is one of Wood's last paintings.  The image brings together an unusual collection of elements that give the work a surrealist flavour.  A zebra appears against the backdrop of a modernist building.  The animal stands on the building's roof terrace near a raised flowerbed.  The distinctive lines of the architecture, which include strong diagonals produced by a zig-zagging ramp and the cylindrical forms of two chimneys or towers in the background, suggest an almost abstract arrangement that contrasts with the altogether different pattern produced by the zebra's stripes.  A dark shadow falls just in front of the zebra, casting the right-hand zone of the terrace into semi-darkness and adding to the mysterious atmosphere of the image.  In the sky above this scene, a parachute is descending.  The tiny figure that dangles in the parachute harness appears to be limp and lifeless.  The distinctive architecture of the building in Zebra and Parachute identifies it as the Villa Savoye, near Paris, designed by Le Corbusier (1887-1975).  The villa, begun in 1928, was finished in 1931, and construction was well underway at the time Wood produced this painting.  . . .  Along with this work, Wood produced at the same time the closely related painting Tiger and Arc de Triomphe [directly below].  In it, he set up a similar juxtaposition of the exotic and the man-made, this time placing a lazily sprawling tiger and a sitting leopard against a wooded background with a view of the Arc de Triomphe monument behind them.  Both paintings are reminiscent of the work of Henri Rousseau (1844-1910), known particularly for the depiction of animals in jungle settings in a naїve style."

– curator's notes from the Tate Gallery

Christopher Wood
Tiger and Arc de Triomphe
1930
oil on canvas
Phillips Collection, Washington DC

Christopher Wood
The Jumping Boy, Arundel, West Sussex
1929
oil on canvas
Museums Sheffield

Christopher Wood
The Steps, Chelsea
1927
oil on panel
National Galleries of Scotland

Christopher Wood
The Rainbow
1927
oil on canvas
Mercer Art Gallery, Harrogate

Christopher Wood
Le Plage, Hotel Ty-Med, Tréboul, France
1930
oil on panel
Museums Sheffield

Christopher Wood
Landscape near Vence
1927
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Christopher Wood
Landscape at Vence, Little White House
1927
oil on canvas
Kettle's Yard, University of Cambridge

Christopher Wood
Cassis, France
1927
oil on canvas
Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art

Christopher Wood
Bankshead, Cumberland
1928
oil on canvas, mounted on panel
Rugby Art Gallery and Museum

Christopher Wood
Street in Paris
1926
oil on panel
Southampton City Art Gallery

Christopher Wood
The Porte d'Honneur and the Petit Palais, Paris
before 1930
oil on panel
National Trust for Scotland, Brodie Castle

Christopher Wood
Flowers in a Black Jug
before 1930
oil on canvas
Leeds Museums and Galleries

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Non-abstract Modernism - early 20th century

Paul Fordyce Maitland
The Lady's Mile, Kensington Gardens
ca. 1900
oil on panel
Yale Center for British Art

Félix Vallotton
Poker Game
1902
oil on cardboard
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Henri Rousseau
Pink Candle
1908
oil on canvas
Phillips Collection, Washington DC

Rupert Bunny
On the beach (Royan)
ca. 1908
oil on canvas
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney

HYMN TO APHRODITE

Star-throned Incorruptible Aphrodite,
Child of Zeus, wile-weaving, I supplicate thee,
Tame not me with pangs of the heart, dread mistress,
    Nay, nor with anguish.
But come thou, if erst in the days departed
Thou didst lend thine ear to my lamentation,
And from afar the house of thy sire deserting,
    Camest with golden
Car yoked: thee thy beautiful sparrows hurried
Swift with multitudinous pinions fluttering
Round black earth, adown from the height of heaven
    Through middle ether:
Quickly journeyed they; and, O thou, blest Lady,
Smiling with those brows of undying lustre,
Asked me what new grief at my heart lay, wherefore
    Now I had called thee,
What I fain would have to assuage the torment
Of my frenzied soul; and whom now, to please thee,
Must persuasion lure to my love, and who now,
    Sappho, hath wronged thee?
Yea, for though she flies, she shall quickly chase thee;
Yea, though gifts she spurns, she shall bestow them;
Yea, though now she loves not, she soon shall love thee,
    Yea, though she will not!
Come, come now too! Come, and from heavy heart-ache
Free my soul, and all that my longing yearns to
Have done, do thou; be thou for me thyself too
    Help in the battle.

– originally by Sappho, translated from ancient Greek by John Addington Symonds (1873)

Egon Schiele
Male Nude propping himself up
1910
drawing with pigment
Leopold Museum, Vienna

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Nudes in Studio
1912
oil on canvas
Leopold Museum, Vienna

August Macke
Little Walter's Toys
1912
oil on canvas
Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt

Harold Gilman
Interior with washstand
ca. 1914
oil on canvas
Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide

Childe Hassam
Mt. Beacon at Newburgh
1916
oil on panel
Phillips Collection, Washington DC

ACHILLES TO THE DYING LYKAON

Float with the fish, they'll clean your wounds, and lick
away your blood, and have no care of you;
nor will your mother walk beside your pyre
as you swirl down the Skamander to the sea,
but the dark shadows of the fish will shiver,
lunge and snap Lykaon's silver fat.
Trojans, you will perish till I reach Troy –
you'll run in front, I'll scythe you down behind;
nor will your Skamander, though whirling and silver, save you,
though you kill sheep and bulls, and drown a thousand
one-hoofed horse, still living. You must die
and die and die and die and die –
till the blood of my Patroklos is avenged,
killed by the wooden ships while I was gone.

– from the Iliad of Homer, book 21, translated by Robert Lowell (1973)

Colin Gill
Observation of Fire
1919
oil on canvas
Imperial War Museum, London

John Lavery
Lady Henry's Crêche, Woolwich
1919
oil on canvas
Imperial War Museum, London

Joaquin Sorolla
Children looking for shellfish
1919
oil on canvas
Fundación Banco Santander, Madrid

Maurice de Vlaminck
Landscape with house on a hill
ca. 1925-26
oil on canvas
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Maurits van der Valk
Still-life with Asian art objects
before 1935
oil on canvas
Teylers Museum, Haarlem

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Five in Public




Mabel turned five last weekend with a family party. This weekend she turned five again with a party for her friends in the park



















Friday, April 3, 2015

Versailles

Versailles
1903

These albumen silver prints from glass negatives by Eugène Atget had their origin in the earliest decades of the 20th century. Versailles and other former royal domains near Paris were permitted a certain suggestive shabbiness in those days, appropriate to their venerability. That atmosphere has by now of course been banished forever in favor of slick restoration and massive tourism.

Versailles
1923

Versailles
1902

Versailles
1923

Versailles
1923

Versailles
1901

Versailles
1922

Versailles
1924

Versailles
1903

Parc de Sceaux
1925

Saint Cloud
1923

Saint Cloud
1921

Many of these particular prints were once owned by Berenice Abbott (1898-1991), the New York photographer who did more than any other individual to establish Atget's posthumous fame. Much of the Abbott collection is now at the Metropolitan Museum, where these images are made available.