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Showing posts with label Paintings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paintings. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2022

Picasso; Wives & Lovers

 

                    
                                        Picasso & Olga

For over a century now the name, art and legend of artist Pablo Picasso has graced the world with his skill, innovation, persistence and singular accomplishments. He is an artist seemingly without peer but he too was certainly graced by peers and they were great ones.  Chiefly among his fellows would be Henri Matisse, Salvador Dali and to a somewhat lesser degree George Braque.  Their works and honors have stood and stand the test of time as well. Arguably; Picasso does better his peers on some counts. Among these to  consideration are  the sheer numbers of his lifetime creative out-put, his mastery of multiple genre’s including ceramics, sculpture, the  poster, the collage and chiefly the thousands of paintings he produced (primarily oil and gouache.) One other thing of excellence and note for the immaculate Picasso was his acquisition of his many wives, mistresses, and lovers. And not to forget the mistresses and lovers that became wives. In ways he stands alone among his peers in this; his trysts, affairs, seduction and sometimes marriages and divorces with women and not always as a master of chivalry or particular honor.


The women of Picasso include most notably Marie-Thérèse, Françoise Gilot, Jacqueline Roque, Olga Khokhlova and Dora Maar. He loved these women, married, competed with and often controlled them. He painted them as models and adored them. Often the works reflected his emotions and love that sometimes grew into scorn. The subsequent paints becoming monstrous often painful images. The massively-egotistical Picasso even included his own penis in a portrait of Marie-Thérèse. His art, especially his paintings were a diary for Picasso. He has been quoted to have said: “Painting is a way of keeping a diary…” His thoughts, emotions, politics and different life phases are vividly portrayed in his art and artistry as record.
















































Gertrude Stein was another important woman in the life and fortunes of Picasso. The wealthy writer and early patron of Modernism promoted and wrote about him, always praising his talents and was an integral cog to his acceptance among other art patrons while assisted his personal growth as an artist.



Dora Maar

                                                       





                                                              Marie-Thérèse






Françoise Gilot
                                                                                           











                                         Gertrude Stein





                                                        Olga Khokhlova
                   
          
                                 
Jacqueline Roque

Picasso also chose to depict women other than the fore-mentioned (wives and Lovers) as different inspirations and subjects in his works. Random runners racing on beaches, mothers and their children, various nudes, dispossessed women along with acrobats and circus performers. Women were as inspiring to Picasso as a favorite subject along with his Minotaur’s, musicians and the frequent still life. 










                              
                    "Mass in morning, Bull Fight in the afternoon...Brothel at night."

                                                                                                                      Pablo Picasso





















A woman once asked Picasso as they looked at one of his paintings “What does it mean?” He responded “Madam; if I could have expressed it with words there would have been no need to have painted it.”





An artist’s voice as expressed in the tone and content of his work is the only true measure of the legacy and value of any said art. It is ultimately the varied expressions and study of the works that have merit. Is the work beautiful, meaningful, colorful, vibrant, moving, masterful or all of the above? We make these assessments sometimes collectively but is only truly important as we are affected individually and most importantly silently.



Sunday, July 4, 2021

A Brief Portfolio of Jamie Wyeth

Jamie Wyeth is an artist of such strong presence, depth, richness and volume he merits a special notice. While putting together a recognition blog I found more pieces worthy of display than fit a single showcase. I have selected six paintings consisting of  four oils and two watercolors with a single lithograph to represent his talents and passions. With no doubt there are infinitely more worth viewing; the work is infectious. Wyeth is among the known artists whose works speak most eloquently of their own accord. I will let the creations of Wyeth's hand; heart and mind tell their own stories...





















Sunday, November 13, 2016

Ron English "POPaganda"



















Go out on the street…look for him on walls, in magazines and in galleries. The work manifests as sculpture, paintings and toys along with his own movies and cameos appearances. Ron English is just about everywhere. “POPaganda” is the name of choice he has dubbed his art and his claim to fame is with much warranted. That being said Ron takes on contemporary and counter-culture ideas and art. He is recognized in both streams and duly respected.  





The work is colorful, hyper-real and extravagant. His sometimes bizarre references on contemporary consumerism, culture and art history are amusing and at times disturbing. English does not believe in leaving his viewers with any lack of zeal. His hand is sure and the technique masterful.  He has influenced elections as much as any artist especially in the campaign of Barack Obama (2008). His work “Abraham Obama” was inspired from his feeling that there was a definite similarity between the 16th President and the then to be 44th president in looks, demeanor and historical relevance.

                                                                                         



You can look for Tony-the-Tiger, Cap’n Crunch and Toucan Sam as enlarged obese symbols of American obsessive habits and addictions in the English oeuvre. The Frankenstein Monster, the Incredible Hulk, the Marlboro Man and Homer Simpson are not spared English’s scrutiny and abuse. Creatures from the animal kingdom are hardly spared or excluded; English is very generous in his appetite for extreme satirical candor.



It is actually Pablo Picasso’s Guernica that English has referenced to the largest degree and number. His recreations and improvisation on the bombing of the small Spanish village (one of the world greatest and utterly heartless acts of crimes against humanity) that continues to intrigue and inspire the contemporary artist. His parody’s can be humorous and ironic but some are equal to the original even daring to surpass in horror the original.   






English continues to work and explore the infinite. He is an artist well into but still in his prime and expands his inextinguishable thirst for creativity. His journey is one that is open to the world. I can only encourage you as he would love you to join along.  




Sunday, February 7, 2016

Vija Celmins The Drawings & Paintings Of...



Vija Celmins is an artist whose works ask and surely compel the viewer to slow down, breath in and absorb her brilliance and subtlety of technique and style. The photographic feel and look she masters beg to be studied unlike any other artist working today. She is not loud, bold or extravagant but the genuine powers of her pieces are transformative. Look at these works of her hand’s precision, intricacy and exacting measure. She delivers her grace of being for our understanding and joy.



“There aren't really rules for painting, but there’s certain facts and fictions about painting. Part of what I do is document another surface and sort of translate it. They’re like translations, and then part of it is fiction, which is invention.”
                                                                                                            Vija Celmins



The Latvian born Celmins (now living in the United States) has authored several books including The Painting of Modern Life and The Stars; a book about her long term obsession with viewing the cosmos. She likes to think of her paintings as things that she builds rather than paints. Celmins starts with the construction and preparation of her canvas and sees every step as integral to the finished piece. She also paints as many as nine layers of paint; as many as deemed necessary to achieve her desired result.


“Somehow the image begins to have a sort of memory in it, even if you can't see it. It can build up a dense feeling toward the end, and then it makes me happier.”
                                                                                                           Vija Celmins




The spider webs, stars and space configurations, still life’s and ocean surfaces are most often mono-chromes likened to black and white photos.  Vija uses photographs extensively as reference and she also paints familiar objects from her studio and home.  She uses color sparingly as if to not distract the viewer from a mental connection of purpose. Her works displayed in museums, sought by collectors and viewed by the millions are quiet treasures to behold.