Showing posts with label windows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label windows. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

John La Farge (1835-1910) as Collected in Boston

John La Farge
Study for Decorative Panel
ca. 1875-1900
watercolor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Study for Stained Glass Window
ca. 1875-1900
watercolor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Study for Skylight
ca. 1875-1900
watercolor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Peonies Blowing in the Wind (window)
1886
glass and lead
(created for London studio of Lawrence Alma-Tadema)
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Fish and Flowering Branch (window)
ca. 1890
glass and lead
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Butterflies and Foliage (window)
1889
glass and lead
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

"John La Farge was the eldest child in a family of urbane, affluent French immigrants who had earlier settled in New York City.  He was born in 1835, and his education was thorough, with attention to literature, French, and Roman Catholicism.  He received drawing lessons from his grandfather and training in watercolor technique from an unknown English artist.  Initially, though, he saw his artistic practice only as an avocation, a diversion during his teenage years at Mount Saint Mary's College in Maryland and Saint John's College in New York.  Afterwards, he studied law in New York City, while experimenting with oil painting."

"By 1856, however, La Farge had left for Paris, where his family connections helped to secure his introduction to that city's elite literary and artistic circles.  Indeed, his later career would be marked by its preoccupation with sometimes esoteric intellectual and aesthetic matters.  While abroad, he traveled in northern Europe, copied the Old Masters, and spent a few weeks in the studio of Thomas Couture.  The illness of his father, however, necessitated his return to the United States.  After briefly taking up the study of law again in 1857, he rented a studio (which he maintained for the rest of his career) in New York's Tenth Street studio building, where he met the building's architect Richard Morris Hunt.  This was the likely impetus for La Farge's decision in 1859 to travel to Newport, Rhode Island, and study painting with the architect's brother, William Morris Hunt."

"La Farge married Margaret Perry in 1860, and for most of the rest of his career, his family life was centered in Rhode Island.  In this seminal period of the late 1860s he cultivated an interest in Japanese art and explored a highly personal style of still-life and plein-air landscape painting.  His wide interests eventually led him to innovations in other media as well.  By 1875, for example, he was working in stained glass, and a year later, he directed the decorative program for Trinity Church, Boston, designed by the architect H.H. Richardson.  La Farge became a leader in the mural movement, and his commissions for churches, government buildings, and opulent private homes were a welcome source of income in later years.  This work usually kept him in Boston or New York, however, separated from his family.  . . .  Nearly always in need of money to pay the many employees required for his glass and mural projects, he found that his writing helped cover these mounting bills.  He was also known as a lecturer on art matters, although this great variety of activities became increasingly taxing in his final years.  He continued to take on large commissions, however, even as his fragile health and fiscal insolvency became critical."

 – from the artist's biography published in the Systematic Catalogue of the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

John La Farge
Mural Design - Angels representing Adoration
ca. 1890-1900
watercolor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Mural Design - Angels representing Praise
ca. 1890-1900
watercolor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Mural Design - Angels representing Thanksgiving
ca. 1890-1900
watercolor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Mural Design - Angels representing Love
ca. 1890-1900
watercolor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Angel and Magdalene
ca. 1890
watercolor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
The Three Wise Men
1878
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Woman bending down Branch
ca. 1881
oil on canvas
(study for Cornelius Vanderbilt house, New York)
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John La Farge
Moonlit Seascape
ca. 1883
watercolor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Sunday, January 7, 2018

Running Legs and Reflections - Lisette Model

Lisette Model
Running Legs, New York
ca. 1940-41
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Running Legs, New York
ca. 1940-41
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Running Legs, New York
ca. 1940-41
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Running Legs, New York
ca. 1940-41
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

"In New York, my ear was delicately tuned to the mixture of street noises.  When I photographed running legs and feet, I heard their music first.  It's not surprising that the patterns of legs, feet and shadows look something like musical scores.  They're dissonant too, incomplete, unresolved.  I don't think I was consciously aware of musical rhythms, counterpoint, harmony, dissonance as I made these pictures.  I knew something was going on.  That's why I went to lectures by psychiatrists and collected their articles on unconscious motivation.  If my pictures of running feet look like no one else's, it's because photographing, I wasn't documenting them.  They were visualizations of what I heard."

Lisette Model
Running Legs, New York
ca. 1940-41
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Running Legs, Fifth Avenue, New York
ca. 1940-41
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Running Legs, Forty-second Street, New York
ca. 1940-41
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Running Legs, Forty-second Street, New York
ca. 1940-41
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Reflections, New York
ca. 1940-45
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

"Try to think of my store-window reflections musically, too, darling.  I loved the ambiguity of space, which became rich orchestrations, multiple overlapping, themes that didn't resolve.  Quavering measures, confused rhythms, innumerable nuances, as in a dream.  Berenice showed me Atget's photographs of store windows.  I never wanted to see what others had done.  Not even the great Atget.  I was afraid of paralysis!  My reflections weren't surrealistic like his.  John Cage liked to criticize certain musical compositions saying, There is too much there there.  There is not enough of nothing in it.  I felt that way about Atget's reflections.  There's just the right amount of nothing in mine." 

Lisette Model
Reflections, Rockefeller Center, New York
ca. 1945
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Window, San Francisco
1949
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Window, San Francisco
1949
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Reflections, New York
ca. 1950
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

Lisette Model
Reflections, New York
ca. 1960
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Canada

 quoted passages are from Lisette Model: A Narrative Autobiography by Eugenia Parry, edited and designed by Manfred Heiting (Steidl, 2009)

Saturday, December 16, 2017

Idealized Domestic Spaces in 19th-century Europe

Rudolf von Alt
Library in the Apartment of Count Lanckoronski in Vienna
1881
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

the library of t-shirts

in order to upgrade the community's appreciation of poetry during the international year of cultural enrichment stage 2, members of the state's library progress committee decided to establish a small library of t-shirts on which would be printed quality verse in bold colours and lettering. the poems would be selected on the basis of one of three qualities: is the poem poignant, perspicacious, or pithy.

given the respectably researched fact that the wearing of words on t-shirts expresses a deep psychic desire for an intimate union of word and flesh, (and bear in mind the way "logo" nudges towards "logos") it is not surprising that this library of t-shirts has been a great success. no one seems to mind borrowing pre-worn clothing. of course the library's washing and ironing staff maintain the t-shirts in excellent condition. even after ten borrowings the shirts look brand new. and considering the phenomenal success of andrew lloyd webber's "cats" it is no shock revelation that t.s. eliot's "hollow men" has proved to be the library's most popular t-shirt so far. in fact there are now eight copies of this shirt on loan, most in metallic or fluoro colours.

a couple of the more entrepreneurial of the library's progress committee members are leading the push for diversification of the library's poetry program, into neck to knee anti-uv swimwear, with maybe slessor, shelly and stevie smith prints for starters; and into underpants, with their multiple attractions.

while the committee feels both these garments could increase poetry's appeal, they are worried about the practicability of adding these garments to the t-shirt poetry collection. would many members want to borrow pre-worn underpants, however compelling the poems' cadences and metaphors; while the wear and tear on the swimming costume fabric via chlorine and salt water would perhaps be too great. however they are interested in marketing and selling these articles from a stall in the library's foyer. the only committee member unenthusiastic regarding this proposal is an optometrist who has raised the issue of eye damage if the typeface of the lines of verse on the underpants were too small. a solution in the form of large print haikus is being considered.

 Joanne Burns from penelope's knees (University of Queensland Press, 1996)

George Pyne
George James Drummond's Room at Oxford
1853
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Wilhelm Amadeus Beer
Sitting Room with Writing Table
1867
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Friedrich Wilhelm Klose
Room in Schloss Buchwald
ca. 1840-45
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Friedrich Wilhelm Klose
Red Room in Schloss Fischbach
ca. 1846
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Friedrich Wilhelm Klose
Blue Room in Schloss Fischbach
1846
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Eduard Petrovich Hau
Empress Alexandra Feodorovna's Sitting Room, Cottage Palace, Saint Petersburg
ca. 1835
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Anonymous Austrian artist
Bedroom
ca. 1853
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Elizabeth Pochhammer
Apartments of Queen Elizabeth of Prussia, Charlottenburg Palace, Berlin
1864
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Caspar Obach
Salon, Stuttgart
ca. 1850-60
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Ferdinand le Feubure
Bedroom of King Pedro IV of Portugal, Palace of Queluz
1850
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Franz Xaver Nachtmann
Dressing Room of King Ludwig I, Munich Residence Palace
1836
gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

M. Sekim
Room in the Governor's Residence at Hermannstadt
ca. 1840
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Countess Schoenberg
Salon Siebleben near Gotha
1856
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Friday, December 1, 2017

More European Rooms from the Pulverized Past

Matthaus Kern
Study at St Polten
1837
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Eduard Gaertner
Study of Prince Karl of Prussia
1848
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

James Roberts
Study of King Louis-Philippe at Neuilly
1845
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

A WINDOW

Among a hundred windows shining
     dully in the vast side
of greater-than-palace number such-and-such
     one burns
these several years, each night
     as if the room within were aflame.
Some fault in the glass
     combines with the precise distance and
my faulty eyes to produce
     this illusion; I know it 
yet still I'm ready to believe perhaps
     some lives
tremble and flare up there, four blocks away
     across the sooty roofs and
the dusk,
     with more intensity than what's lived
behind the other windows,
     and the glowing of those brands of life
shows as seraphic or demonic flames
     visible only to weak and distant eyes.

 Denise Levertov, from The Jacob's Ladder (Jonathan Cape, 1965)

Josef Sotira
Study of Empress Alexandra Feodorovna
1835
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Ernst Christian Anton von Lautzow
Study of Grand Duchess Cecilia von Oldenberg
1839
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Anonymous English artist
Library
ca. 1830-50
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Anonymous English artists
Library
1850s
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Arthur Frederick Payne
Pynson Wilmot Bennitt's Room at Trinity College, Oxford
1857
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Julius Eduard Wilhelm Helfft
Music Room of Fanny Hensel née Mendelssohn
1849
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

S. Tolstoi
Man's Living Room
ca. 1853
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

C.M. Fredro
Room in Reuss Palace, Dresden
ca. 1835-37
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Emanuel Stöckler
Drawing Room of a Sportsman
1856
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Mary Ellen  Best
Drawing Room
ca. 1837-40
watercolor
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

C. Rath
Blue Room
1877
watercolor, gouache
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum