2012年10月31日 星期三

Bernard Buffet: New York


It is a city of geometric heights, a petrified desert of grids and lattices, an inferno of greenish abstraction under a flat sky, a real Metropolis from which man is absent by his very accumulation; the implicit morality of our new Greuze is that we are distinctly happier in Belleville than in Manhatten.
This is a folklore New York rather like Bizet's Spain or the Italy of the Theatre Mogador: an exoticism which confirms the Frenchman in the excellence of his habitat.

According to Buffet, the architecture of this city is uniformly longiform and quadrangular. Here the grid reigns under its most ill-favoured aspect: the contour, this black line which encloses everything, obviously intends to expel man from the city. 

By obsessively multiplying the window, by inlaying it with black, Buffet empties it, destroys it, makes the living edifice into a dead surface, as if number, unless it is swarming, must fatally establish an abstract order.

To paint New York from above, at the top, is to rely once again on the first spiritualist myth, i.e. that geometry kills man. In his way, Buffet follows in the wake of our venerable moralists, for whom the refrigerator is antipathetic to the soul. 
The intentional desolation of his New York-what can it mean except that it is bad for man to live in groups, that number kills the spirit, that too many bathrooms are harmful to the spiritual health of a nation, that a world is too 'modern' is a sinister world, that we are bored when we are comfortable, in short according to the most reactionary remark of human history, the alibi of all exploitations, that 'money doesn't make happiness?' It is not New York which is terrible, it is work. 

Roland Barthes: Buffet Finishes off New York

2012年10月15日 星期一

Dutch still life

Reading Roland Barthes: A Barthes Reader lately:)

There is an essay about Dutch still life (the title is the world as object)



Consider the Dutch still life: the object is never alone, and never privileged: it is merely there, among many others, painted between one function and another, participating in the disorder of the movements which have picked it up, put it down-in a word, utilized. There are objects whenever you look, on the tables, the walls, the floor: pots, pitchers overturned...All this is man's space: in it he measures himself and determines his humanity, starting from the memory of his gestures: his chronos is covered by functions, there is no authority in his life but one inprints upon the inert by shaping and manipulating it. 



The universe of fabrication obviously excludes terror, as it excludes style. The concern of Dutch painters is not to rid the object of its qualities in order to liberate its essence but, quite the contrary, to accumulate the secondary vibrations of appearance, for what must be incorporated into human space are layers of air, surfaces, and not forms or ideas. 

2012年8月23日 星期四

Caixa Forum-Goya: Lights and Shadows

I have visited Barcelona in April and I have visited the Caixa Forum because it is free and there was a Goya exhibition.

He was born on 30 March 1746 and died on 16 April 1828
He was a Spanish romantic painter and printmaker regarded both as the last of the Old Masters and the first of the moderns. Goya was a court painter to the Spanish Crown, and through his works was both a commentator on and chronicler of his era.

The most famous paintings of Goya are the Nude Maja and the clothed Maja and I was so glad to view it in the Museum. 
I like the clothed Maja more than the naked Maja. Goya's master skills successfully captured the lust of in the clothed Maja. You can feel her intense seducing eyes. 


Goya became stone-deaf after a serious illness in 1792. Deafness made him more critical, mistrustful but also visually more sensitive.  He began to face the dark side of life, and at this time he created Caprichos (whims), critique of social evils and human weaknesses. 
Later, Goya witnessed the cruelty of War when French invaded Spain, completed his prints of "The Disaters of War" which was published only after his death.

2012年8月20日 星期一

Documenta: Geoffrey Farmer

Geoffrey Farmer-leaves of grass






This is one of my favourite exhibitions in the Documenta.

The work spans sixty feet and is built from thousands of clippings from US image-centric magazine-Life taken between the years of 1935 and 1985. 
Each of the small photograph cut-outs feature various objects from advertisements and articles including politicians to products evocative of a particular point in visual history for the American journal.

I think it represents our culture! It is quite nice to recognize some icons, some famous ppl, some food, toys...

Art is fun:) 





Some previous work of Geoffrey Farmer:http://www.we-find-wildness.com/2012/06/geoffrey-farmer/

2012年8月19日 星期日

Documenta 13-William Kentridge

William Kentridge: The Refusal of Time










My Spanish friend said that it is her favourite exhibition

The Refusal of Time is an installation. Five films are projected on three walls of an industrial space near the Kassel train station.  A large wooden structure with moving parts—it resembles something like an accordion and an oil rig combined—occupies the center of the room; this is the “breathing machine (elephant).” Intermittent sounds of Kentridge speaking and music (most memorably tubas and singing) are transmitted through silver megaphones, one at each corner, each with a different soundtrack. 

I was only able to watch the first 15 mins of the films because of the time limit. 
I quite enjoyed the films and the atmosphere created by Kentridge! 

Reflection: What is time? And how can one oppose its enforced standardization?
The idea of time zone and world segments!

More information: http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2012/jun/30/kentridge-galison-refusal-of-time/
Video in youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2VPkD6MJi4

2012年8月17日 星期五

Documenta 13-Paul Chan

Paul Chan-What is what, why the why











Paul Chan-born 1973, Hong KongChina.
Lives and works in New York, USA.






























艺术家Paul Chan在dOCUMENTA 13的作品被安排在了主展区之外一栋二层矮建筑的一层,这个空间颇像一个零售店面,而这个空间安排与Paul的作品可谓相得益彰——“店面”的四壁挂满了几百本“书”,准确的说是几百张书皮。原来Paul将他的小画画在了这些书皮上,与书皮原本的颜色、结构及文字形成了新的视觉关系。用英文诠释其概念非常简单清晰:Volumes without Volume,可以尝试翻译为“没有卷的卷书”。这些书的内容Paul从来没有读过,没有了内容的书成为了承载他的视觉想象的新的平台。无论是小画还是书,都呈现着各自的不完整,而这两种不完整的组合恰恰构成了Paul在dOCUMENTA 13的相对完整的叙述。

Nice interview: http://www.artbook.com/blog-paul-chan-e-book-interview.html

Reflection: what is knowledge? What? Why?

2012年8月16日 星期四

Documenta 13-Etel Adnan

I'm happy to visit the worldly famous art exhibition, Documenta 13
Just want to record some of the nice artworks:)
First one: Etel Adnan


Etel Adnan was born in 1925 and raised in Beirut, Lebanon. Her mother was a Greek from Smyrna, her father, a high ranking Ottoman officer born in Damascus. In Lebanon, she was educated in French schools.
She studied philosophy at the Sorbonne, Paris. In January 1955 she went to the United States to pursue post-graduate studies in philosophy at U.C. Berkeley, and Harvard. From 1958 to 1972, she taught philosophy at Dominican College of San Rafael, California.

Apart from a painter, she is a author and poet!

38 untitled paintings are shown in the Documenta 13:





Etel Adnan:  "Painting is something else, a language without a language problem - an unknown, abstract world with endless possibilities. There is in it logic, a truth, a directness guided by intuition that remains elusive in words. If I want to express the spirit of a place, an emotion, an idea, I paint; if I want to describe or comment on it, I write…" 

Abstract art was the eq. of poetic expression. I didn't use the words, but colour and lines

My comment: I feel a sense of tranquility in her abstract paintings. The colours speak and express themselves:) I also can feel the joy of colour


Bokunen Naka

Just watched a programme in Japanese TV which is called Takeshi Art Beat: Bokunen Naka, woodblock print artist


The programme introduces the artist Bokunen Naka who is based on Okinawa, Japan.
His woodblock art is amazing and the programme shows how did he produce a print!

Woodblock printing is a form of fine art printmaking where an artist carves away a design from a piece of wood. In order to do this, the artist uses woodcutting tools that are somewhat similar to chisels. These tools come in a wide variety of sizes and edges such as v-shaped and u-shaped, and each individual tool produces a different cut. Printmakers well versed in their art know the exact woodcutting tool they need to produce a desired effect. 

Bokunen adds an additional dimension to his artwork by painting onto the back of the semi-translucent paper he uses for printing, enlivening the black ink images with splashes of vibrant colors. Lush, green banyan trees, cobalt oceans and carmine hibiscus pop from the pale yellow museum walls. Small placards are scattered among the museum prints that include quotes from Bokunen describing the content and inspiration for his work, as well an explanation of how he makes his art. The gallery’s far wall is a stunning series of large murals with dancer-like figures that seem to move whimsically but have enigmatic expressions. At over seven feet in height, it is easy to become lost in the scene while marveling at the time it must have taken Bokunen to create this body of work.

During the programme, he mentions about the importance of colour:)
The colours expresses themselves when they are together 
The colours have souls:) (which made me rmb the paintings of Edel Adnan which I have seen in Documenta 13)




2012年4月25日 星期三

Claude Monet's Nymphéas bleus



English name of the painting:Blue Water Lilies
(Nymphaea" is the botanical name for a water lily)


Monet focused on a small area of the pond, seen as a piece of nature, almost a close-up. No details stand out and the overall impression is one of a shapeless surface. The square format reinforces the neutrality of the composition. The lack of a frame of reference gives the fragment an infinite, limitless feeling.


I love the floating mood in this painting:) such a fantasy!
I would love to have a dream about this blue water lilies, just wonder if I could fly round them~~


P.s. There is a gigantic one in the Musée de l'Orangerie

2012年4月21日 星期六

Animals in the streets of Paris

Randomly find a nice exhibition in Paris!
Have you ever seen animals in the streets?
 "The city is a place of transit and permanent movement, a crossroads conducive to meetings. Thus, unlike the art as set out in a gallery or museum, the works presented are confronted in the street without stops passers who discover his whereabouts during daily. Sophie’s art installations lead the public to question the art and the process of contemplation in a non-formal, particularly bind and ephemeral. In addition, they raise a fundamental question with humor mental: the role of animals in our society. The presence of a Pantherre, or a giraffe at a street corner, that one has the habit of borrowing creates situations intriguing and poetic ... something to ponder ...
"
If you want to view more, please visit: http://www.sophie-photographe.com/ADLRDP%20ang.html

2012年4月17日 星期二

Gustave Caillebotte: The floor scrapers, 1876


It is quite rare that an impressionistic painting reflects the hard life of labour.
It shows the big constrast between the bourgeosis house and the working class.
We can feel the sweat and the hard work of the three men.
They are the modern day heroes.

2012年4月14日 星期六

Alfred Sisley:Boat in the Flood at Port-Marly



西 斯 勒(Alfred Sisley) 是 居 住 於 法 國 的 英 國 人 , 他 承 襲 了 英 國 風 景 畫 家 所 畫 出 的 戶 外 光 線 的 效 果 , 在 戶 外 作 畫 , 觀 察 大 自 然 時 , 捨 棄 先 入 主 之 見 , 將 感 覺 即 時 留 在 畫 面 上 , 終 於 成 為 了 印 象 派 的 大 師 。

In 1874, Sisley moved to Marly-le-Roi and became the chronicler of this village situated a few kilometres to the west of Paris. His most beautiful motif was when the Seine burst its banks and flooded the neighbouring village of Port-Marly in the spring of 1876. The artist produced six paintings of this event. He captured the great expanse of water with moving reflections that transformed the peaceful house of a wine merchant into something mysterious and poetic.

In this version, Sisley positions the house at an angle, leaving a large amount of space for sky and water. For the flooded area he used light colours and broad, brushstrokes placed side by side. Conversely, he expressed the solidity of the house and its pink and yellow walls, with very precise brushwork. Thus, the stability and permanence of the solid elements contrast with the fleeting movements of the water, which at any moment might recede.

The presence of several human figures in boats reinforces the impression of an ordinary day transformed by "a devastating invasion where the familiar, everyday, usual aspect of things was irresistibly substituted by a new, unexpected, enigmatic and disturbing expression''


What I like about this painting:
movement vs still-life
sureallity and dream-like moment
vertical house and trees
movement of the clouds

Edgar Degas: The Dance Class



Another painting by Degas! Also it is about ballet dancers.
We are in the backstage and view in eye level point
Degas recreate the life of the dancers, their realities. We can notice the different personalities of the girls, some are quite relaxed, some are still practicing.
Degas was interested in dancers because the nature of a painter and dancer is quite similar, they need to be perfect.
In the painting, our gaze is focused on the ballet master and his wood. It shows the reality of the scene, to be a successful dancer, you must devote hours and hours of practice.

2012年4月12日 星期四

Edgar Degas (1834-1917) The Orchestra at the Opera Circa



There are 2 subjects in the paintings
We are invited to observe it from the area reserved for the audience
The first subject is the ballet performance and the second one is the orchestration which is usually heard rather than seen. They are usually been ignored because they are hidden.

Degas knew the musicians personally. The composer Emmanuel Chabrier can be seen in the box and Désiré Dihau, one of Degas' friends who played at the Paris Opera, is the bassoonist. Degas juggled with the traditional arrangement of the orchestra to place him in the centre of the composition.

I really like the contrast between the two subjects and the idea of the painting:)

Morisot: "Butterfly Hunt"



Berthe Morisot: Butterfly Hunt

Morisot is unique as one of the two women Impressionists.(another one was Mary Cassatt).It was Manet who noticed her talent and the two developed a close bond and Manet painted her regularly. Although it is suggested that they became quite close, Manet was married and as it happens, Morisot ended up marrying Manet's brother, Eugene. She generally painted both landscapes and portraits, however, as she progressed as an artist she tended to lean towards portraiture a lot more focussing on family and children, much like Mary Cassatt did. She is undoubtedly important as being one of the first ever recognised woman artists and the fact that she was part of one of the most recognised movements in art history confirms her excellence in the world of art.

I like this painting because:
it captures the real sensation:)
The light and colour matches perfectly



Edouard Manet: Berthe Morisot With a Bouquet

Berthe Morisot became Manet muse for 7 years:) It is the famous painting.
I like this painting because
it has a strong contrast in the background:white background vs black clothes, hair and eyes
Love the gaze(seems telling us sth about herself)Is she happy?
Love the shape of her face

Monet:poppy field

Cont. the tour in Orsay Museum



Claude Monet: Poppy field

I have a poster in my room:)
I think it is one of the masterpiece in the impressionist period
It is a snapshot.
The light is constantly changing and Monet was so good at capturing the moment at the poppy field
I love the landscape of the painting, blue sky and white clouds in the background, 2 people (a bourgeosis woman and a child) in the background emerging in nature, a small house hidden in the trees. Then another pair in the foreground:) The four people are all enjoying the hot summer day walking around the poppy field:)
It gives a sensation of a relaxing afternoon

A trip to Orsay Museum, Paris



Only stayed in Paris for one day:)
Chose to visit Orsay Museum because of the impressionist collection. It is one of my favourite art periods and although I was there two years ago, I would love to revisit again to have some new inspiration.

I rented a audio guide so I can have a better understanding of the paintings and I hope to learn more about art.

I will introduce some of the best paintings in the museum. Hope you enjoy the tour:)



Frédéric Bazille (1841-1870), Edouard Manet (1832-1883)
Bazille's Studio

French Impressionist, Frédéric Bazille was one of the greats of his time, in the same tier as Monet, Manet, and Renoir. Born in Montpellier, Languedoc-Roussillon, France, Bazille came from a wealthy family who encouraged his love of painting only if he studied medicine. So 1859, Bazille began studying medicine, moving to Paris in 1862. There, he met Renoir and Alfred Sisley, drawing him into Impressionism. In 1864, he failed his medical school exam and began painting full-time. He began close friends with Sisley, Monet and Manet as evidence in the painting shown here.

The full title, L'Atelier de la rue Condamine, Bazille’s Studio on 9 rue de la Condamine, was completed in 1870 and shows the artist and his friends within his apartment studio. Inside the studio, Bazille is showing one of his paintings to friends and fellow painters, Claude Monet, Édouard Manet, Pierre Auguste Renoir(who he shared the studio with) and famed French writer Émile Zola. On the left, we see Renoir in conversation with Zola who stands on the staircase. In the center of the painting is Bazille himself showing one of his works to Manet and Monet, who stands behind him. At the piano on the right of the painting is one of Bazille’s musician friends, Edmond Maitre, who is entertaining the artistic geniuses present. The painting is a clear example of Impressionism, showing the details of studio and the features of the artists present. This en plein air painting shows the artist in an open area to give the views the sense they are there, in the moment. Ironic enough, this painting was rejected shortly before Brazille’s death.

The painting shows Bazille’s bold modeling of figures, and the broad handling of colors that became his hallmark. Dying four years before the first Impressionist exhibition by a bullet while serving in the Franco-Prussian War, Bazille is linked to the movement for his radically new way of painting that recorded his everyday life.

information from http://artstoryinamedium.blogspot.co.uk/2010/05/bazille-artists-studio.html

What I like about the painting: the setting of the painting
The half curtain--enable the light to get in
Paintings inside the painting-includes still-life, nude woman, landscape, so in love with the details
everyone in the painting is occupied with sth. Playing piano, talking
The empty chair in the foreground, who was sitting there before?