‘The Art of Medicine’: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

artofmedicine The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images Since time immemorial, humanity has been turning its gaze outward, ordering the heavens, and inward, mapping the mind, in an effort to better understand who we are and where we belong. The human body itself has always been a fascinating frontier of inquiry as we’ve bridged art and science to visualize the living fabric of our shared existence. The Art of Medicine: Over 2,000 Years of Images and Imagination offers a remarkable and unprecedented visual journey into our collective corporal curiosity with a breathtaking selection of rare paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures, artifacts, manuscripts, manuals, and digital art culled from London’s formidable Wellcome Collection. Contextualized by medical historian Julie Anderson and science writers Emm Barnes and Emma Shackleton, these magnificent ephemera span cultures and eras as diverse as Ancient Persia and Renaissance Europe to paint a powerful, visceral portrait of our civilization’s evolving ideas about health, illness, and medicine.

artofmedicine6 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

Organ Man, with Arteries, the Stomach and Internal Organs, artist unknown, from The Apocalypse, c. 1420-1430

ink and watercolor

Image courtesy of Wellcome Library, London

artofmedicine11 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

Nude Female Anatomical Figure, artist unknown, from Arzneibuch, 1524-c. 1550

colour-enhanced scanning electron micrograph

Image courtesy of Wellcome Library, London

artofmedicine1 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

Charles Williams (1798-c. 1830), 25 June 1813

etching with watercolor

Image courtesy of Wellcome Library, London

artofmedicine13 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

El hombre como palacio industrial (Man as a Palace of Industry), Fritz Kahn 1888-1968, 1930

lithograph / color-enhanced scanning electron micrograph

Image courtesy of Wellcome Images, London

(For a related treat, see this 2009 student animation based on Kahn’s iconic infographic.)

Artist Anthony Gormley writes in the foreword:

The body is the root of all our experience, through it all our impressions of the world come and from it all we have to share with the world is expressed. A collection such as Wellcome’s is an extraordinary resource for thinking about the body, both as a thing, a metaphor, and the place where we all live and on which our consciousness depends. …

We live in and with the body, yet as many of the images here show, we need to constantly re-imagine it. Wellcome’s collection, open to the convergence of the forensic and the imaginative, allows for the mind of the curious to recognize the body as a time machine headed on an ultimately entropic journey.

artofmedicine3 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

Aspirin Crystals, Annie Cavanagh and David McCarthy, 2006

color enhanced scanning electron micrograph

Image courtesy of Annie Cavanagh and David McCarthy, Wellcome Images, London

artofmedicine4 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

Quinidine Crystals, Spike Walker, 2006

polarised light micrograph

Image courtesy of Spike Walker, Wellcome Images, London

artofmedicine5 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

Day 711, The Daily Stream of Consciousness, Bobby Baker, 2008

watercolour and pencil / etching with watercolor

Image courtesy of Bobby Baker, Wellcome Images, London

(You might recall Baker’s Drawing Mental Illness, superb in its entirety, from Pickings past.)

artofmedicine12 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

artofmedicine8 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

artofmedicine7 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

artofmedicine10 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

artofmedicine9 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

Equal parts fascinating and fanciful, The Art of Medicine is a magnificent almanac of the body’s timeless mystery and its visual vocabulary.

TEMPLATEBrainPickings04 thumb 615x40 62307 The Art of Medicine: Mapping the Body With 2,000 Years of Images

This post also appears on Brain Pickings, an Atlantic partner site.

Panther Coffee Vandalized by Black Paint; Owner Keeps It in Perspective

1329912618 51 Panther Coffee Vandalized by Black Paint; Owner Keeps It in Perspective

  • This is what happens when artist like Barry McGee got their head up their behind and think that their art is to good to be in a coffee shop like Panther.  What a joke!  Thats the fact JACK!

  • Blackwhitepassion.COMit’s the best interracial dating site. Not Free,But Very Very Serious!!!  If U want a serious Dating and Find your true Love, it’s the best choice for U!

  • this happens weekly to my apartment in sobe.  Why dosen’t the newspaper cover the City and their selective application of fines?  For example someone tags our building, and after 2 days we have a fine from the city asking us to repaint it.  But the post office across the street looks like a war zone, yet no repainting or fines. I guess asking Miami Beach city officials to practice what they preach is out of the question.

  • Panther Coffees "modern cubist motif of red, white, and green" that has been recently vandalized is actually the remains of a Barry McGee mural / installation from Wynwood Walls in 2009.  (goodlifer.com/2009/12/the-wynwood-walls/)

  • They sell "Goof Off" at Sherman Williams to remove oil based paint. 

  • They should offer a special on black coffee and in brace the disgrace…..

  • Is someone mad because 2 small iced coffees=$9? I am. But I wouldn’t do that…I’d pay that guy to attack a Britto, though. Seriously, why is someone mad at Coffee?

  • sadly, i only make it to that area for art walk, but there’s some tasty coffee there! hope this doesn’t deter customers.

  • His name is Pollock?  Ironic.

  • This is terrible. That place is awesome, people need to start taking the vandalism happening in Wynwood more seriously before we lose that place entirely.

My Love for the Modern Masters

1329911410 78 My Love for the Modern Masters

As a professional writer and avid traveler of North America, I often take advantage of the cheap deals existing for the most-traversed of all American flight routes: ATL to New York City, which could be to any of that area’s three major international airports. The World’s Busiest Airport saw over ninety-four million visitors pass through her gates and concourses in 2011, while I was a year removed from the utter nightmare that bartending on the Delta Concourse in Atlanta was. Back to town – back to the central city – where the Capital of the South has made great cultural strides since the Olympics swept through in 1996.

That year, for the first time in my art-loving life, I experienced an undeniably overwhelming art show: Rings at the High Museum of Art. The huge collected assemblage of international art was on display in Atlanta to educate the Southerners and amuse/entertain the world. It essentially foreshadowed a much brighter future for the only truly major art museum in Atlanta, which would later triple in size with a Renzo Piano architectural expansion of the original Richard Meier building. Rings was one of several cool High Museum shows I attended with my then girlfriend; we would go on to marry and consistently bounce between our home in Georgia and the NYC area, where she was originally from and had a host of friendly family members.

Hitting New York City every few months gave us ample exposure to excellent ethnic food, offbeat and often cheap shopping, whirling drunken nightlife, big tourist attractions that actually didn’t suck, transit that connected and world-class art. In NYC, we took in the life-as-art street culture and toured the incredible museums one-by-one: the Metropolitan Museum of Art (“the Met”) with its mammoth number of collections; the Guggenheim with its incredible interior and exterior designed by “starchitect” Frank Lloyd Wright; the classy Whitney; and, of course MoMA, the Museum of Modern Art. I never knew I loved Monet so until I virtually swam in the life-sized pastels of his lily ponds there, bathing in beauty. I knew I loved many of the modernists, but maybe I underestimated the strength of that love, until I found myself enraptured and elevated inside MoMA. After surviving ten years of ups-and-downs my first wife and I divorced, but I never dropped NYC from my heart as one of my towns. What a city New York City is – truly the Capital of the World.

I was last in NYC for the Writer’s Digest Writer’s Conference in January of 2011. It was super cold and snow was flurrying as I entered via Queens. Then the sight of the Chrysler Building, as it always does, galvanized my strength. Engaged to marry again and happy and confident in my powers of word after finally finishing editing my first full-length book creation, I was in Manhattan to network with my story editor at the conference and interview prospective literary agents, which is always a mixed bag. I was alerted to two bits of art news prior to my arrival: I would be touching down on the Friday night of the month when MoMA was free, and MoMA had itself expanded. So, rather than partying or simply prepping for the conference, I trudged from my hotel, slip-sliding on a fresh glaze of ice – bright lights and big buildings buzzing me.

On a fairly recent excursion, I had been to SF MoMA in San Francisco, and the West Coast sister museum had only heightened my sense of desire to return to the even more incredible original. MoMA is never a bad time. The expansion, though remarkable, was not nearly vast enough to compensate for the crush of art revelers. Dark, lovely, urbane women and men vamped throughout MoMA, and it felt like a New York Friday night out. Of course, I was there for the art rather than to cruise or be cruised. As usual, I was finding The City intoxicating in its essence. After, I had a quick drink at a nearby Irish pub and retired to my hotel room a few blocks away.

I thought I had seen the majority of the museum’s collections over my trips to MoMA, so I did not immediately rush out to the High Museum when they had a MoMA show back home in Atlanta. I was pleasantly surprised at the show’s depth when I eventually did attend Fourteen Modern Masters: From Picasso to Warhol. I could go on and on about the more well known of these artists and just give a quick verbal brush stroke on the slightly lesser known, but in fairness to the two museums and all fourteen of the artists, I will instead quick flash each of them. My hope is that you, fair reader, will take the time to learn more about each of these artists in the coming months. I know that I am inspired to continue to self-educate on all of them.

Before I get to the list, I want to choose an omitted artist who should have been included in this show. And above many worthy others, I must select Jean-Michel Basquiat for that distinction. A true modernist, he evolved from writing dogmatic graffiti, cheap postcards he handed to Andy Warhol and basic street art, to be the single highest-paid painter in the world. Basquiat was snubbed again, which come to think of it was one of the major themes of his work throughout his sadly drug-shortened career: the black art mascot feeling the wealthy white art world’s snub. Famed Spanish Surrealist and Classicist Salvador Dali would have been another obvious choice, but a major exhibit of his later works was very recently featured in the High Museum. I promise to make a pilgrimage to Dali’s larger new museum in St. Petersburg, Florida and report back. His old museum there was a fun visit in 1995.

1. ANDY WARHOL (American, 1928-1987):The real King of Pop was making fifteen minutes of fame repeat from his Factory before Michael Jackson could moonwalk. I recommend reading Warhol Diaries to all of the culture curious. He broke Basquiat, the Velvet Underground and so many more stars major and minor. Most fail to understand that he was just an outline tracer, not even an average painter in the pure sense of the word. I want to visit the Warhol Museum in his birth city of Pittsburgh at some point. Two words: Soup Cans.

2. PABLO PICASSO (Spanish, 1881-1973):Guernica and Cubism are only small parts of his legendary story, as his brashly too confident artist’s life and competitive friendship with Matisse are worthy studies in art history. Biggest lie in the history of punk rock: “Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole.” As with many of the great Euro-painters, Paris was his sometime home.

3. JASPER JOHNS (American, 1930-Living):This Georgia-born painter disassociated himself with popular Abstract Expressionism because he felt it was too emotional. He instead painted known images like flags, targets and numbers. I have a cute cat named Jasper Johns who absolutely refuses to be housebroken, but the artist seems a much more sensible being. He is almost tame or relatively simple when compared with his peers, as one might expect of a white male from the conservative area of Augusta, Georgia/Aiken, South Carolina. He moved up to New York City at the age of 18. I love his U.S. flags.

4. ROMARE BEARDEN (American, 1911-1988):Several years ago, the High Museum had an awesomely huge show of this African-American artist. Born in North Carolina, he worked out of New York and was a noted civil rights leader and co-founder of the Spiral Group. He is known to be perhaps the single greatest collagist of all time; his works depicting rhythmic city life can sing.

5. HENRI MATISSE (French 1869-1954):His style, known as Fauvism, emphasizes movement, shape and color: There was never another colorist to rival the great Matisse. He is my favorite for his larger works and the sweeping dance that plays out on the canvas before my eyes. He too had a major show at the High years ago, but it lacked enough of his large-scale pieces to satisfy my craving, focusing on his drawings and underrated sculptures.

6. JACKSON POLLOCK (American, 1912-1956):Everyone called Mr. Jackson Pollock an asshole, even his wife, painter Lee Krassner. Associated alone at the top of the Abstract Expressionism movement, he dripped and splattered and smirked and smoked his way to great fame. Some of his lesser stuff looks like drop cloths that should have been thrown away. The best of his stuff looks like drop cloths that should be and are ranked amongst the greatest paintings of the 20th century. Luck. Chance. Talent. Desire. Controversy. Rugged. Pollock.

7. PIET MONDRIAN (Dutch, 1872-1944):Lived in Paris, London and New York City and developed what he called a universal vision of the world. He used strong lines and bold color planes as he evolved from painting naturalistic landscapes to Cubism to a unique style called Neo-Plasticism.

8. MARCEL DUCHAMP (French, 1887-1968):He moved to America to discover commercially produced objects he had never seen before and deemed them to be art. These so-called readymades are emblemized at the High show by a snow shovel. He also dabbled in the everything/nothing of Dada. 9. JOAN MIRO’ (Spanish, 1893-1983):He is known for an unusual use of squiggly and dotted lines throughout his works. The suggestion of spiders may crawl throughout his pieces, rather than real spiders.

10. ALEXANDER CALDER (American, 1898-1976):He made the mobile a work of art. These kinetic sculptures of shapes of color are easily recognizable due to him. A large work by Calder permanently resides on the High Museum’s front lawn, as does a Lichtenstein “house” and a Rodin sculpture.

11. LOUISE BOURGEOIS (American, Born France, 1911-2010):She has some beautiful sculpture on display here, and she painted in the styles of Surrealism and Abstract Expressionism. I feel she is the least worthy of being in this show and was thrown in for two primary reasons: 1: At least one woman had to be included, and Georgia O’Keeffe has had two major shows at the High. One I wrote about as my first piece for my personal website (hanvance.com) in 2008 and another more recently on her famous artistic relationship with her husband, photographer and artists’ champion Alfred Stieglitz. 2: She died fairly recently. The great Mexican painter Frida Kahlo would have been another nice female selection, but then they may have had to include her controversial muralist husband, Diego Rivera, and the High Museum tends to shy away from any and all controversy.

12. GIRGIO DE CHIRICO (Italian, Born Greece, 1888-1978):His Classic painting emphasized grand scale architectural settings, while he was known for influencing the early Surrealists by inserting familiar objects not in scale.

13. CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI (French, Born Romania, 1876-1957):His sculpture work integrated him into the Paris artistic avant-garde as just a young man. He consistently returned to the same forms throughout his career, refining and reweaving them as themes: the endless column, birds of flight. He is often praised for clear simplicity and his relational use of works with presentational surfaces.

14. FERNAND LEGER (French, 1881-1955):The rhythms and forms of life influenced this painter to create his own style of Cubism. He dynamically integrated planes, cylinders and disks into his work. During World War II, he relocated to the United States, where he became fascinated with the theme of the natural and the mechanical at play in urban centers like NYC.

If you like NYC, MoMA is a must-see on each and every visit. Picasso to Warhol is on display at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta through April 29th.

But,with my activity in teaching, I don't have much time to paint again. Dressed in her trademark white sunburst sunglasses and a painted blous with 911 emblazoned on the back, Lovegrove worked on the eagles feathers from a bright orange ladder as husband Mike Silberg read a special 9/11 poem. This is actually the kiss of death to painting. For latex paint, use Poly-Nylon blended brushes. In essence, try to get as a lot valuable details as possible to assist assist you in making the most effective selection of all. But post 1920s, the advancement in paint technology brought cellulose paints to the scene. Recently, I could go on into that for very some time, although I'd leave that to you for now. The most significant aspect to mull over is this: I am average when it draws a parallel to still life paintings. If youe also looking to do the same thing and out of room painting ideas, this article may provide some help to you. Insects sometimes sneak to the back of your painting and build their nests in the small indents. And, painting is one such interior project that can really transform your outlook for your home and the season. Www.paint.net should always be placed in a secure location. Obviously, It's good wisdom where I can only do that with paint.net download. Apparently, it is one of the most common questions regular people ask when they start with painter. Start by finding a limited version of download paint.net is that it demands more from artpad.com.

White Lovers, Japanese Landscape Painting

1329910223 81 White Lovers, Japanese Landscape Painting

I remember all the excitement surrounding February 14 when I was growing up in Japan.  On Valentine’s Day, it was customary for girls to give chocolate to boys.  So, for days (or perhaps for weeks, it seemed) before the big day, candy stores were packed with girls looking for a perfect box of chocolate for their someone special.  But that was not the end.  Men and boys who received a gift were supposed to give women something in return on March 14, which was called White Day.  I wonder if this tradition still continues today?

In today’s painting is a couple walking in a snowy park near Hakodate, Hokkaido, Japan’s northernmost island.  Happy Valentine’s Day!

White Lovers, Hokkaido, Japan I

A larger image of this painting is avaialble on request.

Media: Original watercolor on paperImage Size: 11.5 x 8.25 inches (29 x 21 cm)

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Major Art Galleries to show Great Western and Indian Master Painters at India Art Festival

1329909021 66 Major Art Galleries to show Great Western and Indian Master Painters at India Art Festival

h&#1077 India Art Festival, a mega art f&#1072&#1110r, slated t&#959 b&#1077 hosted &#1110n November &#1072t Nehru Centre, Mumbai &#1110&#1109 a gr&#1077&#1072t opportunity f&#959r art lovers &#1072nd art collectors t&#959 visually relish th&#1077 artworks &#959f Indian &#1072nd western Master painters under one roof.

Th&#1077 Art Festival w&#1110ll b&#1077 showcasing 200 master painters work fr&#959m 40 different galleries participating &#1110n th&#1077 India Art Festival fr&#959m &#1072ll over th&#1077 globe.

Th&#1077 ‘Geopolitical Child’ &#1072nd ‘Invisible Man’ &#1072n original litho works b&#1091 Salvador Dali w&#1110ll b&#1077 &#959n d&#1110&#1109&#1088l&#1072&#1091 &#1110n th&#1077 festival. Th&#1110&#1109 colossal surrealist painter’s work exudes complex feeling &#959n life &#1072nd environment. Another western master painter Patrick Hughes w&#1110ll b&#1077 represented &#1110n th&#1077 &#1109h&#959w b&#1091 h&#1110&#1109 “Around th&#1077 Corner” – th&#1077 three dimensional Painting th&#1072t highlights architectural labyrinth.

In th&#1077 Indian Masters Nandalal Bose, Rabindranath Tagore, M.F. Husain, S. H. Raza, F. N. Souza, V. S. Gaitonde w&#1110ll adore th&#1077 wall &#959f many gallery booths &#1110n th&#1077 upcoming India Art Festival. Th&#1077 renowned artists th&#1072t w&#1110ll b&#1077 showcased &#1110n th&#1077 exhibition includes Akbar Padamsee, Laxman Shrestha, K. H. Ara, Sudhir Partwardhan, Jogen Chowdhury, Anjolie Ela Menon, Bose Krishnamach, Ganesh Gohain &#1072nd many others. Th&#1077 total artists exhibited &#1110n 116 stall w&#1110ll b&#1077 over 800 paintings, sculptures, photograph &#1072nd prints.

h&#1077 India Art festival w&#1110ll &#1072l&#1109&#959 b&#1077 hosting educative seminars f&#959r Art collectors &#1072nd Art Lovers. Th&#1077 art festival w&#1110ll b&#1077 th&#1077 first art f&#1072&#1110r &#959f &#1110t’s kind &#1110n Mumbai th&#1072t w&#1110ll bring together art collectors, art galleries, artists &#1072nd art connoisseurs &#959n th&#1077 common platform m&#1072k&#1110ng &#1110t interactive experience f&#959r art community. Th&#1077 renowned artists, art critics &#1072nd art collectors fr&#959m Mumbai,Delhi, Kolkata, Bagalore w&#1110ll b&#1077 th&#1077 &#1088&#1072rt &#959f seminars t&#959 b&#1077 organised &#1110n th&#1077 India Art Festival. More th&#1072n one Lakh people &#1072r&#1077 expected t&#959 visit th&#1077 festival.

Ab&#959&#965t INDIA ART FESTIVAL

INDIA ART FESTIVAL, a modern &#1072nd contemporary Art F&#1072&#1110r, &#1110&#1109 scheduled t&#959 take &#1088l&#1072&#1089&#1077 &#1072t Nehru Centre fr&#959m November 17 t&#959 20, 2011. It aims t&#959 provide a cultural bridge between Indian artists &#1072nd art galleries, art collectors &#1072nd connoisseurs, w&#1110th &#1072n objective t&#959 &#1089r&#1077&#1072t&#1077 a dialogue th&#1072t w&#959&#965ld introduce a fresh perspective &#1072nd buoyancy &#1072m&#959ng passion investors &#1072nd art collectors.

Th&#1077 artworks including paintings, sculptures, drawings, installations, photographs &#1072nd editions &#1072&#1109 well &#1072&#1109 video &#1072nd digital art b&#1091 over 400 artists represented b&#1091 various galleries w&#959&#965ld b&#1077 &#959n d&#1110&#1109&#1088l&#1072&#1091 &#1072t India Art Festival. Th&#1077 Festival &#1110&#1109 slated t&#959 b&#1077 hosted &#1072t Nehru Centre , spanning over two floors &#1110n a large area &#959f 26,000 square feet, w&#1110th 94 stalls showcasing th&#1077 work &#959f various galleries &#1072nd individual artists.

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20 February 2012 « Abstract Art Digs Deeper

1329907840 88 20 February 2012 « Abstract Art Digs Deeper

There are other reasons why I find archaeological sites such a springboard for making art.  For example, it makes me see landscape with different eyes.  The fact that the same physical space can have so many layers of meaning belonging to it is fascinating.  Is it true of us as individuals?  The space that we occupy, whether physical or metaphysical, is it one which presents a multi-layered appearance, or are those layers only visible as we dig deeper?  And are those layers the record of significant times and events, laid down in their chronological sequence, or is the recording of them based on criteria other than time?  Are the layers that we are conscious of a matter of individual manipulation?  Or do we build up layers unconsciously, as a natural consequence of life experiences?  Perhaps I’m straying into the realm of psychology here, but then, isn’t one of the most fundamental questions that we ask to do with the nature of our own being, with what tells me who I am?  Somehow, being in a particular landscape, experiencing a connectivity with human beings who occupied the same physical space but in completely different circumstances, captures this sense of stratification.  Which is what urges me to seek visual form through painting and drawing to begin some kind of dialogue about these kinds of questions.

And here I must show you some work by a very underrated and under exposed British artist, Wilhelmina Barns-Graham.

         Wilhelmina Barns-Graham

         Glacier Crystal Grindewald, 1950,  oil on canvas,  51.4 x 60.9 cms

Along with ‘Upper Glacier’, painted in 1950, and ‘Glacier Vortex’, painted in 1951, WBG conveys a real sense of layers, and the prospect of these layers being more complex than a mere physical stratification.  I must admit that I find ice exciting, and possibly why Star Carr is important to me, in that it came into existence just after the end of the last mini ice age, and therefore poses all kinds of questions about human interaction in such a demanding environment.  WBG for me captures something of the fascination of ice in her wonderful paintings.

Wilhelmina Barns-Graham

Glacier Study , offset on paper (?) ,  1950

Her drawings are equally evocative:

          Wilhelmina Barns-Graham

          Glacier Knot, 1978, ink on card

Perhaps it’s no surprise to find that she is conscious of a fusion of the outward and the inward as she makes her paintings and drawings.  To quote Lynne Green in her wonderfully comprehensive monograph on WBG:

“While Barns-Graham continues to draw inspiration from the landscape and from her great love of the natural world, she is at pains to point out that much of her work is driven by the ample resource of her unconscious.  This has been the case, in fact, since her first essays in abstraction,  Her practice in recent years of laying down a brushstroke and then setting the painting aside, allows a period of gestation before she returns to it:  the mark then ‘tells me what to do- much of it is very deep,  not just about looking out of the window, it’s also about what goes on inside.’ “  (‘W. Barns-Graham, a Studio Life’)

There are so many more images that I would like to show you, but perhaps it would be better for you to look them up for yourself.  I particularly like the paintings she made about ice in the 1980s called ‘Variation on a Theme.’  And her drawings of volcanic rock on Lanzarote made in 1990 are quite beautiful.

                    Wilhelmina Barns-Graham   ‘Lava Forms’,  1992, chalk on black paper.

It encourages me to think that it is possible to find a visual language to talk about these issues of identity affected by stratification and excavation.  Thank you, WBG.  If you hadn’t been working in the same group as more prominent male artists, I’m sure you would have had the recognition that you deserve.  So a ‘thank you’ also goes to  Lynne Green for fighting her corner.

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Techniques To make Pick Very best Oil Painting Art Works

1329905431 15 Techniques To make Pick Very best Oil Painting Art Works

Techniques To make Pick Very best Oil Painting Art Works

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Watercolor Painting For Dummies Review

1329903060 60 Watercolor Painting For Dummies ReviewLooking Reasonable Price For

Have you ever been amazed by watercolor paintings that seem to spring to life before your eyes? Would you love to be able to paint with watercolors? Now, you can. Watercolor Painting For Dummies shows you the fun and easy way to create breathtaking paintings so beautiful you won’t believe you made them yourself.

This friendly, guide gives you hands-on instruction and easy-to-follow, step-by-step exercises to help you master the basics. Filled with full-color projects and sample paintings, it shows you how to work with color and texture, practice composition, and make smooth changes. You’ll find out how to select the best tools, materials, and supplies, practice basic brush strokes, and use the three best common techniques: flat wash, graded wash, and rough texture. Discover how to:

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Watercolor Painting For Dummies Technical Details

  • WIL-18231
  • 9780470182314
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[if Have you ever been amazed by watercolor paintings that seem to spring to life before your eyes? Would you love to be able to paint with watercolors? Now, you can. Watercolor Painting For Dummies shows you the fun and easy way to create breathtaking paintings so beautiful you won’t believe you made them yourself.

This friendly, guide gives you hands-on instruction and easy-to-follow, step-by-step exercises to help you master the basics. Filled with full-color projects and sample paintings, it shows you how to work with color and texture, practice composition, and make smooth changes. You’ll find out how to select the best tools, materials, and supplies, practice basic brush strokes, and use the three best common techniques: flat wash, graded wash, and rough texture. Discover how to:

Complete with strategies for improving your painting immediately and marketing and selling your work, Watercolor Painting For Dummies, is the resource you need to make your creative dreams come true.]

Watercolor Painting For Dummies Overviews

Have you ever been amazed by watercolor paintings that seem to spring to life before your eyes? Would you love to be able to paint with watercolors? Now, you can. Watercolor Painting For Dummies shows you the fun and easy way to create breathtaking paintings so beautiful you won’t believe you made them yourself.

This friendly, guide gives you hands-on instruction and easy-to-follow, step-by-step exercises to help you master the basics. Filled with full-color projects and sample paintings, it shows you how to work with color and texture, practice composition, and make smooth changes. You’ll find out how to select the best tools, materials, and supplies, practice basic brush strokes, and use the three best common techniques: flat wash, graded wash, and rough texture. Discover how to:

Complete with strategies for improving your painting immediately and marketing and selling your work, Watercolor Painting For Dummies, is the resource you need to make your creative dreams come true.

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SHANGHAI ABSTRACT: PARADIGM OF CHINESE CONTEMPORARY ART

1329901847 96 SHANGHAI ABSTRACT: PARADIGM OF CHINESE CONTEMPORARY ART

Shanghai has been a model region for the practice of abstract art in contemporary China. Over the past 10 years, amidst the overall pattern of Chinese contemporary art, abstract art has come to be one of Shanghai’s emblematic features, one of its stronger cultural calling cards.

TRACING BACK IN HISTORY

SINCE THE MING and Qing, the inclinations of the literatihave dominated the culture of southern China, which has always venerated inherent qualities of refinement, conciseness, and tranquility in character and temperament. Taking Kunquopera, the gardens of Suzhou, and Ming-style furniture as well as Yixing red clay teapots as representative of a ceratin aesthetic temperament, this style has continued to influence literary and artistic production, helping establish the historical superiority of southern Chinese culture. These sorts of humanorigins inculcated southern Chinese culture with the quality of meticulous attention to detail, and passed on the skill of paying particular attention to form. As homegrown artists here say, these precepts are part of their flesh and bones, built into their fundamental nature.

One of the earliest port cities in China’s modern history, Shanghai’s identity as a former colony has necessarily influenced its local cultural and artistic development. After the May Fourth Movement, northern Chinese culture began to see both debate over and practice of various Eastern and Western doctrines. By comparison, such debates were relatively few in Shanghai. The cultural backdrop of colonialism caused Shanghai’s inherent character to become more pragmatic, and the preponderance of areas where Western influence had crept eastward also caused the pace of the spread of outside information to rapidly increase. Artistic practice in Shanghai also adjusted along the lines of international trends. China’s first art institute, first instance of life sketching, first modern art society, and first national art exhibition all took place in this Western-influenced, rising metropolis.

In 1931, the Storm Society (juelan she) was established in Shanghai. Its primary members Pang Xunqin, Ni Yide, and others devoted themselves to an experiment in “art for art’s sake,” in opposition to naturalism and realism. They advocated art’s ontological purity in the independence of the art form. Even though they still had not created any purely abstract works, they had already put forth the notion of the supremacy of form, establishing a very particular and exceptional value orientation in the history of Chinese modern art. In 1934 in Shanghai, Lu Xun proposed what he famously described as “sharism,” advocating the New Woodcut Movement. From that point on, the new climate of literature and art in China became standard. At that time, Shanghai’s modern broadcast media system was the most developed throughout all of Asia, and it included newspapers, magazines, radio broadcasts, film and other such industries. A new urban class driven by Westernized education arose, among which forward-leaning international literary and artistic thought was prevalent. This gave rise first to a kind of resignation, then to an aesthetic sensibility that strove for change. Additionally, literary and cultural elites from all over the country converged on Shanghai in an unprecedented manner, suffusing this international metropolis with creative spirit and artistic appeal.

When the Second Sino-Japanese War suddenly brokeout, the course of Chinese modern art changed abruptly. Experimental formalism’s path of development was completely disrupted, and the entire art community switched gears toward mobilization and propaganda for the national cause. Realism became an indispensable technique, and purely artistic endeavors were denounced as untimely frivolities, effete and sentimental.

Following the victory in that war, internecine warfare between the Chinese Nationalists and the Communist Party continued, along with the political activities preceding the founding of the new Chinese state, and the entire art community was required to keep pace with political developments. After 1949, literalism gradually gained traction, later giving way to a pre-Soviet style of socialist realism. Mobilizing and educating the public and propagandizing and exalting the aims of Party leadership were the primary literary and artistic options at that time, and in fact many of the artists who made the greatest contributions to the exploration of artistic form and language were oppressed and persecuted. Examples of artists who met such fates were Wu Dayu, Lin Fengmian, Guan Liang, Zhou Bichu and others.

Worth noting is that among those of the same generation, Wu Dayu can be considered both pioneer and underlying force of Chinese modern art during the Cultural Revolution. Unbeknownst to the public, he created an underground series of abstract expressionist works. Even though these works were fairly heavy-handed in their symbolism and cannot really be said to be purely abstract, Wu worked hard to set a unique and meaningful example for later Shanghai artists to follow. From the Republic of China to the Cultural Revolution, due to the limitations imposed by the general tide of events, the official emergence of pure abstract art in Shanghai was inhibited and delayed.

Shen Fan, Landscape-Commemoration, Huang Binhong, 2006, neon light, installation, 500 x 1380 cm

 

THE 1980s: THE FIRST SIGNS OF ABSTRACT ART

POST-1979, AFTER years of the domestic art community following the issue of formal beauty with keen interest and the escalation of continuous discussion, Shanghai’s modern art scene gradually began to recuperate. Artists who had formerly gone underground with individual endeavors began re-surfacing, emerging one after the other. The whole of the 1980s can be seen as Shanghai modern art’s golden age of rapid development. It was also a breakout period for abstract art, precisely when many artists who later became representative figures in the art world found their personal style through the enlightenment and nurturing atmosphere of the period. It should be noted that Shanghai has always lagged in subject-oriented practice, while formal exploration, in a way, has always remained slightly ahead.

In 1979 the Children’s Palace in Huangpu hosted “Painting Exhibition of 12 Chinese Artists.” Impressionism and expressionism were the main emphasis, once again bringing the ontology of the language of artistic expression to the forefront. In 1983, “Experimental Exhibition of 83 Phases of Painting” opened at Fudan University, marking initial success for Shanghai’s abstract artists. In 1984, the distinctly appealing abstract sculptural work Drinking Water Bear by Shanghai’s Yang Dongbai won the grand prize at the sixth National Fine Arts Exhibition. In 1985, Fudan again hosted “A Joint Exhibition of 6 Modern Painters,” among whom were Yu Youhan, who had already developed his own personal style in the early1980s, and his students Ding Yi and Qin Yifeng, who became representative figures of Shanghai’s abstract art.1

Throughout the 1980s, explorations in abstraction in Shanghai were swept up by the countrywide ’85 New Wave. A large number of young and middle-aged artists assumed avant-garde and vanguard postures, engaging in abstract experimentation. Even though most of the works they produced were fairly amateurish and crude, there were a few works that occupied a place between abstraction and poetics. But these works fully revealed the courage and conviction of the artists’ stylistic  break with realism. The principle figures who emerged during that period were Yu Youhan, Li Shan, Zhang Jianjun, Zhou Changjiang, Chen Chuangluo, Miao Pengfei, Qiu Deshu, Dai Hengyang, Wang Jieyin, Cha Guojun, Chen Zhen, Hu Xiangcheng, Liu Yaping, Xu Longsen, Yu Jiyong, and others. Among them, Yu Youhan’s “Circle” series, Li Shan’s “Beginnings” and “Expand, Extend” series, Zhang Jianjun’s “To Have” and “Have Not” series, as well as Zhou Changjiang’s “Complement” series were all major works representative of Shanghai’s abstract art scene. In 1989, Zhou Changjiang’s abstract work won the silver medal at the Seventh National Exhibition of Fine Arts, marking a milestone in the course of abstract art for Shanghai and even all of China.

THE 1990s: RAPID ASCENT

THE SHANGHAI ABSTRACT art scene was quiet from the fall of 1989 up to the spring of 1992. There were almost no shows, there was no market for the art, and there was no exchange with the outside world. Opportunities to appear in domestic publications were extremely scarce. But in reality, despite the apparent stillness, it was precisely during this particular era of apparent dormancy that many artists matured and cemented their personal styles. In 1993, for the first time Mainland Chinese artists were chosen for the Venice Biennale, marking yet another milestone in the history of Chinese modern art. At that time, among the 14 artists who were invited, only one did abstract art, and that was the Shanghai artist Ding Yi. That same year, his abstract work was also selected for the exhibition “Chinese Avant-Garde Art” hosted by Berlin’s House of World Culture as well as for the First Asia-Pacific Triennial in Brisbane.

Ding Yi’s accomplishments may actually reflect the entire period of the 1980s. At that time he was already absorbed in experimenting with purely abstract art. The degree of purity of his language and his ability to discover and represent the depths of the visual sense were astonishing. In 1989, he also participated in the “China/Avant-Garde” exhibition at the National Art Museum of China. In 1994, Ding participated at an exhibition hosted by the Shanghai Art Museum. This was the first exhibition by a Shanghai abstract artist at a government sponsored event, which served to establish trust among many other artists for such events.

In fact, Ding Yi was by no means unique in his inclination towards and orientation with Shanghai. Among those from the same generation were Shen Fan, Qin Yifeng, Chen Xinmao, Song Haidong, Yu Hong, Ruan Jie, Shen Haopeng, Zhao Baokang, Pan Wei, Gong Jianqing, Chen Qiang, Qu Fengguo, Huang Yuanqing, Li Lei, Wang Nanming, WangYuan, Tan Genxiong, Song Xiaofeng, Lu Yunhua and numerous others.

Qu Fengguo, World 2008 No. 18, 2008, Acrylic on linen, 300 x 200 cm

 

The 1990s could be seen as the real debut of Shanghai abstract art. The many years of quiet development and asceticism let many artists really take off, and the special character of the city further caused the artists who lived there to have very high demands in terms of originality of form and the degree of execution in a work. Shanghai abstract art completely incorporated its distinctive aesthetic features of delicacy, inner restraint, calmness, and lucidity with the cultural connotations and fashionable sensibilities for which the city was known during that period.

In January 1996, the Fine Art College of Shanghai University Gallery presented “The Existence of the Intangible—An Exhibition of Shanghai Abstract Art” to the public, featuring20 works of local abstract artists. This first large-scale joint exhibition of pure abstract art in Shanghai also brought together for the first time numerous abstract artists who had spent years quietly pursuing their craft. At a symposium following the show’s opening, all of those artists, who had previously navigated their artistic endeavors and careers alone, experienced a meeting of minds and a special sense of community. The successive selection of Ding Yi and Zhou Changjiang in1996 and Qu Fengguo in 2000 for the Shanghai Biennale signified the genuine acceptance of abstract art by the system.

A NEW CENTURY: THE CAPITAL OF ABSTRACT ART

AS THE OPENING of Line 1 of the Shanghai subway in1997 symbolized, the final phase of Shanghai’s urban renewal in the 1990s was basically complete. The transformation in the city’s appearance was extremely swift and almost violent, to the extent that a new map of the city had to be printed just about every six months. Foreign capital flowed into the city, and a highly developed system of commerce brought more and more visual stimuli to the city. There were oversized shopping centers and large numbers of hotels and office buildings. Huge advertising posters and neon lights could be seen everywhere, and the incessant noise of various broadcast media was just as ubiquitous. This atmosphere provided the artists who lived in this city with an amazing surplus of images. Affected by aphasia of figurative representation, a portion of these artists turned inwards to their own heart, towards expression of spiritual leaning, forming an important reason for the exception alway that abstract art flourished in Shanghai.

In each 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2005, the Shanghai Art museum hosted large-scale, metaphysical-themed abstract art exhibitions. Initially only local artists participated in the exhibitions, and later they expanded to include artists from around the country and then even the overseas Chinese art community, with the works exhibited ranging from paintings, sculpture, and installations to even video and performance art. The academic aim of the exhibitions was to expand the power of abstract art’s discourse to include all explorations of abstract aesthetics among Chinese people, coordinating the exhibitions with seminars and a series of publications aimed at the public. These served a galvanizing function, setting a positive example for the development of abstract art nationwide.2

The structure of Shanghai’s abstract art scene heading into the new century had already matured compared to the1980s, having entered a stable trajectory. Shanghai’s abstract artists and critics regularly accepted invitations from home and abroad to participate in various types of academic exchange. Solo and group exhibitions of abstract art continuously cropped up at art museums, galleries and other art spaces. Galleries specializing abstract art and dedicated auctions began testing the waters in Shanghai and achieved early success.

From the mid-1990s onward, apart from the author, many individuals have been active in theoretical research on abstract art as well as in exhibition planning, including Li Xiaofeng, Li Lei, Gong Yunbiao, Wu Liang, Zhao Chuan, Wu Chenrong, Xu Demin, Lorenz Heibling, Davide Quadrio, and others. This tiny, limited community has made a decisive contribution to the mainstream art world’s acceptance of abstract art as well as to its becoming an important symbol of contemporary Shanghai culture.

Today, Shanghai has become a beloved hub for exchange among abstract artists. Among those Chinese artists who come from all over the country as well as abroad are Zao  Wouki, Chu Teh-chun, Xiao Qin, Chen Zhengxiong, Jiang Dahai,Su Xiaobai, Liang Quan and others. The number of those who have successfully held individual shows and participated in Shanghai’s abstract group exhibitions and activities is even larger. Today, even the main entrance hall of the Shanghai Grand Theater’s huge mural displays a commissioned work by Chu  Teh-chun. Judging from the number of artists, the frequency of events hosted, and the influence that abstract art enjoys on society, it is clear that Shanghai has become China’s capital of abstract art.

1 In 1986, shows related to abstract art flourished. Important events included the Shanghai Museum of Art’s “First Shanghai Youth Grand Fine Arts Exhibition” and “Painting Exhibition of the Newly Completed Wing of the Shanghai Art Museum”; the Xuhui Cultural Center’s “Black and White Painting Exhibition” and “86 Concave-Convex Exhibition”; Shanghai Art Gallery’s “Sea Horizon: A Joint Exhibition of 86 Paintings”; and the Shanghai Theater Academy’s “Exhibition I,” among others. From 1987 to 1989, the unceasingexploration of abstract art was gaining momentum. Among the main events during this period that featured abstract works were: “Shanghai Painting: Chinese Art in Transformation” (1987, Hong Kong Arts Centre), “First Exhibition of Chinese Oil Painting”(1987, Shanghai Art Museum), “Exhibition of Today’s Art” (1988,Shanghai Art Museum), and so on.2 In 2002, “An Abstract New World: Group Exhibition of Shanghai Abstract Artists ” hosted by Liu Haisu Art Museum featured abstract works of 33 artists. In 2004 and 2006, the Mingyuan Arts Center in Shanghai successively hosted two exhibitions titled “Grand Exhibition of Shanghai Abstract Art,” presenting the lives of Chinese and foreign abstract artists in Shanghai on an unprecedented scale, using abstract exploration to expand abstract art’s socialization and establish a completely new platform. In 2007, “Lines: Abstract Chinese Art” opened at Su He Art Center. In 2011, “The Tao of Nature: Chinese Abstract Art Exhibition” was presented at Shanghai’s Museum of Contemporary Art.These exhibitions represent a basic lineup of the comprehensive development of Chinese abstract art, while the possibilities for the aesthetic of Chinese abstract art continue to expand.

A Moment in Time

1329900628 64 A Moment in Time

A man standing in front of a tank in Tiananmen Square; Fay Dunaway after winning an Oscar; a mother cradling her injured son during the Iraq War. What makes these photographs so iconic?

“They represent a mood, a spirit of the age. They capture something for the first time,” says Sarah Baxter, editor of The Sunday Times Magazine.

In 1962, when The Sunday Times launched its magazine – the UK’s first colour supplement – Roy Thomas the then owner sighed, “My God, this is going to be a disaster.” But from what was supposedly going to be a flop, the magazine has come a long way. The new supplement attracted a quarter of a million new readers.

A collection of stunning photographs, front covers, and feature articles selected from the 50-year-old magazine is currently showing on the top floor of the Saatchi Gallery.

Each image takes you into a moment in time.

In one, a mother is mourning her injured son, a 34-year-old who lost 40 per cent of his brain while on patrol in Ramadi. They are but two of the many affected by the Iraq War. “It’s like a Pieta image. It’s iconic; it’s somehow representative of a modern Madonna and child.” Baxter explains. “It’s just so intensely moving.” The image shows that their lives will never be the same again.

Next to it is an intimate picture of sleeping soldiers in Afghanistan shot by Tim Hetherington. He was nominated for an Oscar for Restrepo – a documentary project depicting an honest and close-up experience of war in Afghanistan through the eyes of American soldiers. Hetherington was later tragically killed in Libya while covering the conflicts there.

And perhaps one of the most famous images in the world was taken in Tiananmen Square on the morning of June 4, 1989. The moment when one brave man stood in front of a line of tanks won the photographer, Stuart Franklin, the World Press Photo award. “The challenge was to visually make sense of what was going on – to try to bring home what it felt personally for the people, who were being really quite courageous,” says Franklin. “A lot of people didn’t want to bring down the state; they just wanted better freedom, better freedom of expression.”

“What a photographer does is finds a rectangle out of a whole piece of space and time, and says this is important” — Stuart Franklin

Among other projects, Franklin is currently working on a new book, Narcissus, exploring the connection between people and landscapes in western Norway, which will be published this year. He will also be working for a French magazine on a project that will show the hopes and fears of the French people before the elections in France.

Franklin is a member of Magnum Photos, a cooperative picture agency founded in 1947 by photographers with a burning curiosity to document the world around them. Among the co-founders was renowned photojournalist Henri Cartier-Bresson. “We work in a calm way, seriously, all over the place,” says Franklin. “We’re just working, I love it. I’m very privileged to be there.”

So what are the qualities of a good photograph? Franklin replies, “The spirit of the moment. Photography is really an abstraction of a whole range of events that happen in a particular locality. What a photographer does is finds a rectangle out of a whole piece of space and time, and says this is important, this moment, this is interesting, and this is going to move us.

“There’s a coherence of the whole; it’s not just one little thing in the middle of the photograph, but the whole photograph has to work. It’s hard to say – so many photographs, and they’re all so different – you just have to feel your way into it.”

Baxter too mentions how difficult it was to select the photographs for the exhibition, but she is sure that every image tells a story of its own – whether it’s a stunning landscape, a specific historical event, or a vivid portrait.

Photographer Chris Floyd captures close-up portraits, often of celebrities. He explains that the whole process of photography in his studio is artificial. “There’s fake light, there’s light that that doesn’t exist in real life, there’s equipment that doesn’t exist in real life, and you’re trying to get that little moment of magic, intimacy, in a fundamentally artificial process.”

One of the secrets to getting that moment of magic, he says, is asking people to sing. For instance, on a recent expedition to Austria he photographed the RAF ski team. He was taking a big group shot of them, and, as typically happens in these situations, they all huddled together and just stood there. So he said to them, “We’re on the side of a mountain, can you all sing ‘I’ve had the Time of My Life’ from Dirty Dancing?” And the result? “They did it, it was awesome. Something came out of it that was different.”

In one room, looking straight out at you, is Amy Winehouse, a portrait shot taken by Terry O’Neill. It has captured her essence, allowing the viewer to experience her life through the image even though she is no longer here. O’Neill is most famous for his photograph of Faye Dunaway, who he later married. She sits by the swimming pool of the Beverly Hills Hotel, with a dazed look after winning the Oscars the night before.

Like the magazine, this exhibition features some of the world’s best photography. And as Baxter points out, the images “pinpoint the time” — selected moments recorded in history.

The free exhibition ‘The Sunday Times Magazine 50th Anniversary’ is on at the Saatchi Gallery until Feb. 19 (closed from Feb. 11 to 14). Photographers featured include, Lord Snowdon, David Bailey, Don McCullin, Eugene Richards, Terry O’Neill, Chris Floyd, and Stuart Franklin.

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