Showing posts with label still-life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label still-life. Show all posts

Friday, November 22, 2019

Surviving Art of the Difficult 1870s

Anonymous Maker
Mantel Ornaments
ca. 1870
glass
Art Institute of Chicago

Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
Interrupted Reading
ca. 1870
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Berthe Morisot
Woman at her Toilette
ca. 1875
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Antonin Mercié
Gloria Victis
ca. 1873
bronze statuette
Art Institute of Chicago

Ernest Meissonier
The Defense of Paris
1870-71
oil on panel
Art Institute of Chicago

Henri Fantin-Latour
Still Life - Corner of a Table
1873
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

"These monetary crises in the fall of 1873 were followed by a world-wide depression which lasted almost until the end of the decade.  . . .  There was, at the time, the usual disagreement as to the causes of the depression and the remedies which should be applied.  . . .  The Dutch found that the fall in the price of German vinegar was an important contributing cause, while excessive speculation, the falling off in the production of wine, and the disappearance of fish from the coast of Brittany were among the causes advanced by the French.  In 1885, a British Royal Commission succeeded in reducing the major causes to six, one of which was overproduction.  And it is interesting to note that the Oxford Prize Essayist for 1879 already had found the "real and deep-seated cause" in the fact that "the whole world is consuming more than it has produced."

"In retrospect, it appears that the crises were largely traceable to the financial excesses which had characterized the five or six years preceding 1873.  Governments and individuals borrowed to finance undertakings of almost every sort, especially railroad construction.  The United States, Turkey, Egypt, and South American were supplied with funds from England, which loaned over 1.5 billion dollars in the brief period 1870-74; while Russia, Austria, and Italy were supplied chiefly by Germany, to whom France paid a war indemnity of five billion gold francs between 1871 and 1873.  With the first scare, both stock and commodity prices fell, bonds went into default, over-extended bankers failed, and credit began to contract." 

– from The Depression of 1873-79 by O.V. Wells (Journal of Farm Economics, May 1937)

Auguste Renoir
Lunch at the Restaurant Fournaise (The Rowers' Lunch)
1875
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Edward Burne-Jones
Perseus and Andromeda
(study for The Doom Fulfilled)
1875
gouache on board
Art Institute of Chicago

Auguste Rodin
The Age of Bronze
1875-76
bronze (life size)
Cleveland Museum of Art (Ohio)

Charles Gifford Dyer
Seventeenth-Century Interior 
1877
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Paul Cézanne
Plate of Apples
ca. 1877
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Camille Pissarro
At the Window, rue des Trois Frères
1878-79
pastel
Art Institute of Chicago

John Warrington Wood
Rebecca
1878
marble (half life-size)
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Edgar Degas
Portrait after a Costume Ball (Portrait of Madame Dietz-Monnin)
1879
pastel and distemper on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Canonical and Quotidian Modernists (Before 1950)

Emil Nolde
Red-Haired Girl
ca. 1919
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Emil Nolde
North Sea Landscape
ca. 1920
watercolor
Art Institute of Chicago
 
Paula Modersohn-Becker
Still Life with Green Vase
ca. 1902
oil on board
Art Institute of Chicago

Henri Matisse
Apples
1916
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

El Lissitzky
Proun
1920
painted paper collage on board
Art Institute of Chicago

from On a Panel of Adam Naming the Animals

                                                     I.
One must remember: all around was Wonder.
                                       And each entity caught that glint and glowed

Under the particularity of its nature. Him –
                                       Seated beneath the noble oak in glorious leaf

Full aloft – pronouncing each syllable in deft
                                       Voice and sure of its apt transubstantiation:

                                         *          *         *

                                                     V.
Yet despite his careful setting of each appellative
                                       Stone in that arch, which was atopped by God,

Midnight found him struck – dolor mortalis –
                                        In his mind he saw how the spirit thumps and

Tears at the fabric of a word's small tent –
                                        And learned his lesson that to name is man's                           

                                                     VI.
Unique tautology. He turned his face then
                                        In the coal-bright dark – in molten shame –

From that of God's: for he knew his swift
                                        Tongue flawed and approximative – it alone

Lacked the precise, assured syntax of flight.

– Ellen Hinsey (The White Fire of Time, Wesleyan University Press, 2002)

Oskar Schlemmer
Abstract Figure
ca. 1921-23
nickel-plated bronze
Art Institute of Chicago

Pablo Picasso
Head
1927
oil and chalk on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago
 
Jacques Lipchitz
Seated Figure
1917
limestone
Art Institute of Chicago

Raoul Dufy
Venus and Seashell
1925
gouache on paper
Art Institute of Chicago

Robert Motherwell
Wall Painting with Stripes
1944
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Mikhail Mikhailovich Solov’ev and Inna Mikhailovna Levidova
Glory to the Soviet Youth!
1945
color stencils on paper
Art Institute of Chicago

Lovis Corinth
Self Portrait
1923
drawing
Art Institute of Chicago

Giorgio de Chirico
The Eventuality of Destiny
1927
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Jean Arp
Growth
1938
unique marble enlargement of plaster maquette
Art Institute of Chicago

Monday, November 4, 2019

Plants & Flowers Rendered by Artists in Two Dimensions

Anonymous Artist working in England
Lady's Slipper Orchid
1906
watercolor
Wellcome Collection, London

Jan van den Hecke
Anemones in a Glass Vase
ca. 1650-56
oil on canvas
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Jan Anton van der Baren
Roses in a Glass Vase
ca. 1659
oil on vellum
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Wolfgang Tillmans
Affinity
2009
inkjet print
Art Institute of Chicago

Vase Poppies

Lavenderish dusk
strapped for stays,
pomegranates under the rubberband
chucked for a glass Oz,

letdown
splayed by the pillar-shelves
to page upon the Ottoman:

his talk has wrought suit
amid citrus gapes
and pall dunked in the bowl
and grated sage
or cleaved clear paleo-pines.

Postgeist, upcast
California upon weed,
what banker yields
so fragrant a cant
as this vagrant cant?

– Jennifer Scappettone (2010)

Raoul Dufy
Les Altheas
(fabric design for Bianchini Férier, Lyon)
ca. 1914-20
screen-printed silk
Art Institute of Chicago

Eliot Porter
Frostbitten Apples, Tesuque, New Mexico
1966
dye imbibition print
Art Institute of Chicago

Eliot Porter
Moss, Waterfall, Cinders near Mt Hekla, Iceland
1972
dye imbibition print
Art Institute of Chicago

Daniel Seghers
Madonna and Child framed by Flowers
(figures in grisaille by Erasmus Quellinus the Younger)
ca. 1645
oil on canvas
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Jan Philips van Thielen
Madonna and Child framed by Flowers
(figures in grisaille by Erasmus Quellinus the Younger)
1648
oil on canvas
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

John Singer Sargent
Thistles
ca. 1883-89
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Henri Matisse
Still Life with Geranium
1906
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Charles Sheeler
Geraniums, Pots, Spaces
1923
drawing
(charcoal, Conté crayon, colored pencils)
Art Institute of Chicago

Henri Fantin-Latour
Still Life with Flowers
1881
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Henri Fantin-Latour
Roses in a Bowl
1881
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Monday, October 21, 2019

Giorgio Morandi in Milan and Chicago

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1918
oil on canvas
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

Giorgio Morandi
Metaphysical Still Life with Triangle
1919
oil on canvas
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1919
oil on canvas
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

Giorgio Morandi
Self Portrait
1924
oil on canvas
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

Giorgio Morandi
Landscape (The Pink House)
1925
oil on canvas
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

Giorgio Morandi
Large Still Life
1928
etching
Art Institute of Chicago

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1929
oil on canvas
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

"Morandi's still lifes are not that still: they are not Platonic placements of rigid geometrical bodies.  The components interact and jostle, exerting pressure on one another rather than sitting quietly at rest.  . . .  The artist Robert Irwin speaks of Morandi as dealing with the "time and space relationships within the painting per se."  . . .  It is striking that the shadows in his paintings go this way and that, as if there were different sources of light, or as though the bottles were sundials casting shadows made at the different times of day they were painted."

– Arthur C. Danto, from an exhibition review in The Nation (2008)

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1930
etching
Art Institute of Chicago

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1933
etching
Art Institute of Chicago

Giorgio Morandi
Landscape
1941
oil on canvas
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1943
drawing
Art Institute of Chicago

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1948
drawing
Art Institute of Chicago

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life with Nine Objects
1954
etching
Art Institute of Chicago

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1956
drawing
Art Institute of Chicago

"Ironically, the very positions that had reinforced the image of Morandi as an anti-Fascist – his rejection of the classicizing Fascist iconography that focused mainly on the human figure, and his insistence that art should have no role in politics – also put him at odds with postwar Marxist critics.  During Fascism, the Communist Party had been outlawed, but now it seemed that Marxists and Fascists shared the same views about the purpose of art.  As a result Morandi was attacked by Italy's post-war Marxists on virtually the same grounds for which he had been reviled in earlier years by factions within the Fascist Party."

– Janet Abramowicz, Giorgio Morandi: The Art of Silence (Yale University Press, 2004)