Like Us!

Worth Watching
  • Empires - The Medici: Godfathers of the Renaissance
    Empires - The Medici: Godfathers of the Renaissance
    A fascinating and highly entertaining look at one of the most important families of the Renaissance era--the Medici.
  • Sister Wendy - The Complete Collection (Story of Painting / Grand Tour / Odyssey / Pains of Glass)
    Sister Wendy - The Complete Collection (Story of Painting / Grand Tour / Odyssey / Pains of Glass)

    “Sister Wendy Beckett has transformed public appreciation of art through her astonishing knowledge, insight and passion for painting and painters.” This set includes Sister Wendy's Story of Painting, Sister Wendy's Odyssey, and Sister Wendy's Grand Tour. Simultaneously delightful and scholarly--this is a must have for anyone interested in art history.

  • Exit Through the Gift Shop
    Exit Through the Gift Shop
    When British stencil artist Banksy traveled to Los Angeles to work, he came across obscure French filmmaker Thierry Guetta and his badly organized collection of videotapes involving the activities of graffiti artists. Inspired, Banksy assembled them with new footage to create this talked-about documentary, and the result is a mind-boggling and odd film (so strange as to be thought a hoax by some) about outsider artists and the definition of art itself.
  • The Impressionists
    The Impressionists
    A dramatization of the Impressionist movement as seen through the eyes of Claude Monet. Highly entertaining and informative.
  • The Impressionists: The Other French Revolution
    The Impressionists: The Other French Revolution
    A very personal and revealing look at the personalities that created Impressionism.
Friday
Apr152022

Jacopo Bassano: An Artist of Remarkable Originality

Jacopo Bassano - The Last Supper - c. 1546 - Oil on canvas, 168 x 270 cm - Galleria Borghese, Rome (click photo for larger image)Jacopo Bassano (ca. 1515-1592) known also as Jacopo dal Ponte, was an Italian painter who was born and died in Bassano del Grappa near Venice. He took the village as his surname.

Even though Jacopo worked in a small town, he was one of the Veneto's most influential painters in the mid-1500s. A pioneer in genre scenes and landscape painting, he initially trained with his father in the town of Bassano. 

By 1534 he had found his direction in the art of nearby Venice, learning as much from the chiaroscuro and luxurious color of Titian's works as from his teachers. He always stayed abreast of developments in Venetian painting, sometimes borrowing details from Lorenzo Lotto's works in his portraits. Engravings were critical in forming Jacopo's style, particularly those by and after artists like Albrecht Dürer, Raphael, and Parmigianino. 

Local taste required that art illustrate reality, and Jacopo drew inspiration from the simple human scenes, farm life, and changing aspects of nature he observed in his hometown. To Mannerism's energy, extreme movement, and tightly compressed space, he added realism and earthiness. A humble and subtle observer, his sitters may seem unaware of his presence. Increasingly, he used religious and philosophical subjects as pretexts for painting genre scenes and landscapes. Jacopo's workshop was a minor industry in Bassano, and his four sons continued his style into the next century. (Excerpted from the Getty Museum)

Bassano's “Last Supper” (featured here) is one of the masterpieces of 16th-century Italian painting. Instead of the elegant grouping of figures in Leonardo's painting, which inspired it, this dramatic scene features barefoot fishermen at the crucial moment when Christ asks who will betray him, and the light passing through a glass of wine stains the clean tablecloth red. Recent restoration has only now revealed the extraordinary original colors, which had been heavily painted over in the 19th century, when the emerald green and iridescent pinks and oranges were not in fashion.

Wednesday
Apr132022

Quote of the Day

"Whoever wants to know something about me, they should look attentively at my pictures and there seek to recognise what I am and what I want." - Gustav Klimt

Monday
Apr112022

Sir Anthony van Dyck: A Significant and Prolific Painter

Sir Anthony van Dyck - Entry of Christ into Jerusalem - c. 1617 - Oil on canvas, 151 x 229 cm - Museum of Art, Indianapolis (click photo for larger image)Sir Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641) was a Flemish painter who was one of the most important and prolific portraitists of the 17th century. He is also considered to be one of the most brilliant colorists in the history of art.

Van Dyck was the son of a rich silk merchant, and his precocious artistic talent was already obvious at age 11, when he was apprenticed to a Flemish historical painter. He was admitted to the Antwerp guild of painters in 1618, before his 19th birthday, and  spent the next two years as a member of Peter Paul Ruben’s workshop in Antwerp. Van Dyck's work during this period is in the lush, exuberant style of Rubens, and several paintings attributed to Rubens have since been ascribed to Van Dyck.

From 1620 to 1627 Van Dyck traveled in Italy, where he was in great demand as a portraitist and where he developed his maturing style. He toned down the Flemish robustness of his early work to concentrate on a more dignified, elegant manner. In his portraits of Italian aristocrats—men on prancing horses, ladies in black gowns—he created idealized figures with proud, erect stances, slender bodies, and the famous expressive "Van Dyck hands". Influenced by the great Venetian painters, no other painter of the age surpassed Van Dyck at portraying the shimmering whites of satin, the smooth blues of silk, or the rich crimsons of velvet. He was the quintessential painter of the aristocracy, and was particularly successful in Genoa. There he showed himself capable of creating brilliantly accurate likenesses of his subjects, while he also developed a repertoire of portrait types that served him well in his later work at the court of Charles I of England.

Back in Antwerp from 1627 to 1632, Van Dyck worked as a portraitist and a painter of church pictures. In this period he began to make small monochrome portraits in oil and drawings in chalk of princes, soldiers, scholars, art patrons, and, especially, of fellow artists, with the view of having them engraved and published.

In 1632 he settled in London as chief court painter to King Charles I, who knighted him shortly after his arrival. Van Dyck painted most of the English aristocracy of the time, and his style became lighter and more luminous, with thinner paint and more sparkling highlights in gold and silver. At the same time, his portraits occasionally showed a certain hastiness or superficiality as he hurried to satisfy his flood of commissions.

Van Dyck was one of the most influential 17th-century painters. He set a new style for Flemish art and founded the English school of painting; the portraitists Sir Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Gainsborough of that school were his artistic heirs.

The work featured here is a youthful work of the artist painted when he was a member of Peter Paul Rubens's workshop. The picture was executed in the style of Rubens. 

(Excerpted from the Web Gallery of Art)

Friday
Apr082022

Nell Blaine: Perseverance in the Face of Adversity

Nell Blaine - Rooftops, Rain - 1967 - Oil on canvas - 20 1/8 x 26 1/8 in. (50.9 x 60.1 cm.) - Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian, Washington D.C. (click photo for larger image)American Artist Nell Blaine (1922-1996) though not as widely recognized as she should be, stands as a microcosm of post-World War II stylistic tendencies, from gestural Abstract Expressionism to the geometries of pure abstraction, and eventually to a lyrical realism that included still lifes, landscapes, and interior views. 

Importantly, she also played a key social role in gathering artists together to create a vibrant community of painters, poets, and musicians. Together, they created a collaborative environment that opened numerous avenues of exploration. She helped to lay the foundation for future generations of landscape and nature artists by demonstrating how that genre could be brought into the second half of the 20th century. 

Blaine's perseverance in the face of adversity is also a key aspect of her legacy. She suffered from polio but refused to let it end her career. She had to adapt to painting with her left hand and limited range of mobility, as she was confined to a wheel chair. She demonstrated to the world that physical limitations do not have to end artistic pursuits.

In the work featured here, Nell Blaine depicts a series of city rooftops in a range of pastel colors and shades of blue. The surface of the roof that dominates the foreground appears to shimmer in the fallen rain. One of Blaine's striking abilities is to turn mundane, even dirty, things into beautifully colored compositions. (Excerpted from TheArtStory) 

Wednesday
Apr062022

Did You Know?

The small town depicted in Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night is Saint-Rémy-de-Provence in the south of France. Van Gogh painted the work while he was a patient at the Saint-Paul-de-Mausole, a psychiatric hospital in Saint-Rémy. Presently, the hospital has a wing named after the painter.