March 3rd, 2010

light and mood

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Rooftops in Moonlight. Henri Le Sedaner, 1910.

On a night-time drive recently with my father I was struck by what a different mood and sense of space was given to the otherwise familiar country lanes in the dusk light. More intimate, peaceful… they had an entirely different character.

Henri Le Sidaner had a knack for capturing this phenomenon of light and mood in his paintings. And not just dusk light.

French painter and pastel artist Henri Le Sidaner (Eugéne Augustin) began academic training at the l’École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, briefly studying under Alexandre Cabanel, but soon rejected that pursuit in favor a fascination with the paths into broken color and light being blazed by the Impressionists.

Le Sidaner is best known as an Intimist painter. Intimism is one of the less familiar of the “isms”, whose primary proponents were Pierre Bonnard and édouard Vulliard. Other practitioners include Edmond Aman-Jean.

It was essentially a form of genre painting that in some ways bridged Post-Impressionism and Symbolism, borrowing the broken color and flurry of almost Pointillist brushstrokes from the former, and the emotional content from the latter.

The name refers to the frequent subjects of quiet room interiors, intimate garden scenes and small views of landscape. Le Sidaner often portrayed table settings in gardens, soft nocturnes, and almost tonalist scenes of canals and waterways.

Unlike the Impressionists, who sought to portray light with fidelity to nature, La Sidaner and the other Intimists put their intense strokes of color in service of the emotion or mood with which they wished to infuse the scene.

More examples and relevant links at lines and colors blog.

February 28th, 2010

Mihyang Kim

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Mihyang Kim, Self-Portrait in October 2009.
Acrylic on canvas | 2009 | 61 x 71 cm

My work is about nature and the human body. Painting nature and the human body is the easiest way to express my ideas because I grew up in the countryside and I am a nurse. I am inspired by nature and organic shapes and vivid colors that can be found in the outside world and biological bodies. I think nature and human bodies live in co-existence with each other. My work has common themes of balance and co-existence. The balance found in nature and also the fight for balance and co-existence in human life or political struggles.

Mihyang’s website.

February 24th, 2010

the lone tenement, george bellows 1909

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Click to enlarge.

(via fivebranchtree)

February 17th, 2010

anna charina’s russian scenery

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First Ice. Moscow River with B. Ustinsky Bridge
(trans. Google Translate!) by Anna Charina

I found Anna Charina‘s painting blog completely by chance. If you speak Russian, then here’s a link without Google Translate engaged.

December 22nd, 2009

colour script

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Making a movie completely inside a computer has its quirks. In any pixar movie, the colour palette is worked out before the animation begins. This planning takes the form of a “colour script”.

Pixar has released several images from the colour script of Toy Story 3, and they’re rather pretty. I wouldn’t mind seeing an entire animation in this impressionistic, sketchy handpainted style! Beautiful light and colour in these sketches.

Two images here, two here and two here (get a single blog, will you, pixar?).

December 5th, 2009

demons, demons!

Oyster-Gatherers-of-Cancale-John-Singer-Sargent
Above: Oyster Gatherers of Canacle by John Singer Sargent

Those who watched Sargent painting in his studio were reminded of his habit of stepping backwards after almost every stroke of the brush on the canvas, and the tracks of his paces so worn on the carpet that it suggested a sheep-run through the heather. He, too, when in difficulties, had a sort of battle cry of “Demons, demons,” with which he would dash at his canvas.

On Craig Mullins‘ website — worth a look in itself — the artist has provided an excellent pdf document comprising various notes on Sargent’s methods and mannerisms. Altogether a vivid and endearing portrait is made.

November 12th, 2009

Dusk

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(click for larger)

“The Point-du-Jour at Auteuil: Dusk” by Luigi Loir (1845 – 1916), 1883.

I stumbled upon this painting in a collection of others (all to be seen at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts) as a result of a google image search.

October 17th, 2009

NASA melts Martian ice with warmth of heart

If that title was unexpectedly romantic then it was perfect.

NASA, it transpires, has for the past 50 years enlisted not just calculating concept artists in its ranks, but also artists employed to document the human experience that is attached to NASA’s
monumental missions.

John Walker of the National Gallery of Art quickly agreed to help, arguing that artists could “probe for the inner meaning and emotional impact of events which may change the destiny of our race.”

The results of this stunning collaboration between scientists and artists are collected in NASA/ART: 50 Years of Exploration, by James Dean and Bertram Ulrich, published by Abrams Books.

alone

David Stone titled this painting “A Handful of Emeralds” after hearing astronaut John Young describe the stars as “a handful of emeralds thrown across the sky.” He tried to express the magnificent, revolutionary solitude experienced by an astronaut adrift in a manned maneuvering unit, staring out at the void of space.

Discover magazine has a selection of images from the book, with descriptions.






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