Posts Tagged ‘drawing’

Portfolio – Gull Rock

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009










    Yr wylan deg ar lanw dioer
    Unlliw ag eiry neu wenlloer,
    Dilwch yw dy degwch di,
    Darn fel haul, dyrnfol, heli.

    Dafydd ap Gwilym



    Gull Rock - Janine Flynn limited edition fine art prints

      Janine Flynn
      Gull Rock
      323 mm x 445 mm



































    O sea-bird, beautiful upon the tides,
    White as the moon is when the night abides,
    Or snow untouched, whose dustless splendour glows
    Bright as a sunbeam and whose white wing throws
    A glove of challenge on the salt sea-flood.




    Read more Dafydd ap Gwilym

    “Yr Wylan” (To the Sea-gull), line 1; translation from Robert Gurney (ed. and trans.) Bardic Heritage (London: Chatto & Windus, 1969) p. 130.














    Gull Rock is one of the images featured in the interview in the first edition of
    Full articles and interviews with further images are available in the high quality PDF edition







Portfolio – Bluebells

Friday, April 10th, 2009





Bluebells















    Bluebells was recently featured at CafePhilos when Paul’s comment reminded me about drawing this piece.





    ‘I’m very attracted to this work for its wonderful description of sunlight, which the artist has made almost tangible. It is also a beautifully balanced composition, and the only thing I can discern missing from the work is a nude or two romping towards us through the flowers. Of course, I firmly believe all art should have a romping nude or two somewhere in the composition, so my opinion on that might not be quite so rational as I could wish.’






    The trunks and branches of trees have often seemed to have a vaguely human shape to me, with their boughs reaching skyward. The photo I worked this piece from had very strong resemblances to human forms in the two most prominent trees, emphasised by the strong light. I made definite efforts to soften this resemblance whilst I was drawing although I still recognise them as being there. It’s never occurred to me to wonder whether they are clothed though.





    I’ve read or heard that the subconscious notices everything whether the conscious brain brings that into awareness or not – as that’s how subliminal advertising works, it seems an accurate statement. A technique to stimulate creativity known during the renaissance was recorded in two major records from the time.




    Leonardo da Vinci Young Woman (so-called pointing Lady) c1516 The Royal Collection © 2005, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II


    Leonardo da Vinci
    Young Woman (so-called pointing Lady)
    c1516
    The Royal Collection
    © 2005, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II













    A WAY OF DEVELOPING AND AROUSING THE MIND TO VARIOUS INVENTIONS.




    I cannot forbear to mention among these precepts a new device for study which, although it may seem but trivial and almost ludicrous, is nevertheless extremely useful in arousing the mind to various inventions. And this is, when you look at a wall spotted with stains, or with a mixture of stones, if you have to devise some scene, you may discover a resemblance to various landscapes, beautified with mountains, rivers, rocks, trees, plains, wide valleys and hills in varied arrangement; or again you may see battles and figures in action; or strange faces and costumes, and an endless variety of objects, which you could reduce to complete and well drawn forms. And these appear on such walls confusedly, like the sound of bells in whose jangle you may find any name or word you choose to imagine.




    The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci
    Volume 1


    Trans by Jean Paul Richter 1888





    Portrait of Simonetta Vespucci Portrait of Simonetta Vespucci (Piero di Cosimo)  The Portrait of Simonetta Vespucci is a painting by the Italy Renaissance painter Piero di Cosimo, c.... (c. 1480) Oil on panel, 57 x 42 cm, Musée Condé, Chantilly, France

      Piero di Cosimo
      Portrait of Simonetta Vespucci
      c. 1480
      Oil on panel
      57 x 42 cm
      Musée Condé, Chantilly, France




















    ‘… He would sometimes stop to contemplate a wall at which sick people had for ages been aiming their spittle, and there he descried battles between horsemen, and the most fantastic cities, and the most extensive landscapes ever seen: and he experienced the same with the clouds in the sky.’





    referring to Piero Rosselli,
    known as Piero di Cosimo
    Vasari, 1568


    ‘The Penguin Book of Art Writing’ p446
    ed Martin Gayford & Karen Wright
    ISBN 0 140 25451 X











Presenting… Michelangelo – The Last Judgment

Saturday, April 4th, 2009





    439px-michelango_portrait_by_volterra


    Portrait of Michelangelo
    Volterra

















      Daniele da Volterra

      (RICCIARELLI) 1509-1566

      Volterra was a friend of Michelangelo who became known as “Il Bragghetone” (Breeches Maker) after his commission by Paul IV to cover some of the nude figures in Michelangelo’s “Last Judgment”.






    The following extract written by John W Dixon Jr. Professor Emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, provides a compelling argument to explain what Michelangelo intended from his composition of The Last Judgment. He emphasises that the exuberance of the figures is an “embodiment of the Lord” and is emphatic that “This is, after all, the transfiguration of the body at the end of time. While the painting is, in its own distinctive way, clearly a Last Judgment, it is not simply that. It is necessary to repeat: it is the Resurrection of the Body at the end of time.”



    Following that line of argument leads me to conclude that it is absolutely inconceivable that any clothing would be required to cover the glory of God’s creation and the miracle of resurrection.





    Terror of Salvation: The Last Judgment


    The Transfigured Flesh and the Resurrection of the Body.



    [...] As presented on the ceiling, the bodies are transfigured flesh. As presented on the wall, they are the resurrection of the body. These are, specifically, beautiful bodies. Not all are beautiful; the original of St. Catherine, for example, was grossly obese. The question of beauty cannot be put in the abstract; even more specifically defined, the problem is that of beautiful flesh. The modern temperament, indifferent to religion or defining religion only as doctrine, tends to interpret the presentation of beautiful flesh in one mode only: erotic desire. It is not fitting to deny the presence of either desirability or desire, which would be to offend against the integrity of the human body. The question is the motive and the function of such a presentation.











































    The undeniable influence of ancient sculpture on Michelangelo often serves as a distraction from what he is doing. It raises the complex, difficult question of “idealization” in Greek art, a problem beyond the scope of this study. As applied to sculpture, it seems to mean the art work as imitation of the idea, the essential principle of the human. Despite the resemblance of much of Michelangelo’s work to the Greek, his is never truly an idealization. In this, as in so much else, Michelangelo is a Florentine and a Dantean.


    In Canto XIV of Dante’s Paradiso, Beatrice asks, for Dante, if the souls in paradise will retain the light in which they now appear after they receive their resurrected bodies. Solomon answers:



      As long as the feast of Paradise shall be, so long shall our love radiate around us such a garment. Its brightness follows our ardor, the ardor of our vision, and that is in the measure which each has of grace beyond his merit. When the flesh, glorious and sanctified, shall be clothed on us again, our persons will be more acceptable for being all complete;…


    Paradiso XIV, 38-45. Singleton: 155¯





    “The flesh, glorious and sanctified”, or, as Charles Williams translated it, “Reclothed in the glorious and holy flesh” (“la carne gloriosa e santa”) (Williams: 207). As is normal with Michelangelo, he does not here illustrate Dante, for he is not representing Paradise. Shaped by Dante and his own insight, he defines the body as it had not been before (except, perhaps by the very non-carnal Fra Angelico).




    libyan-studylibyan-fresco









    Michelangelo does not present the idealized body but the transfigured body, the body as it is in the creative mind of God. The flesh is luminous in its transformation, a luminosity that was discernible even under the dirt but now is revealed in all its glory by the present cleaning. It is the flesh as such that is holy and glorious. The ignudi possess it and the soft and glowing back of the Libyan Sibyl is female flesh at its finest. By its nature, all flesh is glorious and beautiful. He eliminates the immediate and the adventitious, not for a Platonic idea but for the uncovering of the glory.






    Classical figures are at ease in their bodies; body and spirit are in complete harmony by their ideal nature. Michelangelo’s figures are willful and intense. The beauty of the holy flesh is an achievement. It is not an achievement in the sense of starting from nothing or even from corruption; the holy flesh is the original quality of creation. It is not for nothing that Adam is the most beautiful male figure on the ceiling. Quite unlike the Greek, Michelangelo’s figures always posses will and will is corruptible. That corruption comes to its full statement in the sodden collapse of Noah’s drunkenness. Its workings are explored in its various moments of human history, presented to us in the different levels of the ceiling.




    Always Michelangelo transcends the pain of history in terms of his vision of the transfigured body.




    The holy and glorious flesh was at the heart of what he had to say on the ceiling. On the wall it was the resurrection of the body. When the cleaning is completed we will know better how far he went in presenting the transfigured flesh. As it is, we can see the bodies in their magnificent strength and energy but no longer so self-sufficient or self-contained as they were on the ceiling. Now they are participants in the redemptive action, defined by their place in it, that place determined by their free choice.




    The damned move with freedom of action but, since they have rejected the source of humane action, they achieve only violence, despair, vain rebellion and confusion. The redeemed are variously taken up into the coherent unity of divine presence. They participate in the energy that proceeds from the central figure of the redeeming Christ.




MICHELANGELO Buonarroti Last Judgment 1537-41 Fresco, 1370 x 1220 cm Cappella Sistina, Vatican


MICHELANGELO Buonarroti
Last Judgment 1537-41
Fresco, 1370 x 1220 cm
Cappella Sistina, Vatican









    Extract from ‘The Terror of Salvation: The Last Judgment’ © John W. Dixon, Jr. all rights reserved.



Indelible Impressions – Vincent

Thursday, March 5th, 2009






    Marshall Cavendish issued a series about the great artists when I was younger, which I religiously collected – and still have. Every issue was just as religiously studied and with some of the artists, Van Vogh amongst them, I struggled to understand just what was special about their work.








Wheat Field with Crows, 1890

Wheat Field with Crows, 1890





“In both figure and landscape … I want to get to the point where people say of my work: that man feels deeply, that man feels keenly.”


Letter to Theo van Gogh
21 July 1882








    This particular painting, Wheat Field with Crows was a ‘milestone’ for me. I studied the colour plate for all the aspects I could think of – in the end I just sat and looked at it, allowing my eye to wander around the surface. I expect I filled in with many suppositions and assumptions, adding my own cultural interpretation about the ‘murder of crows’ but as I looked, there was so much sadness in this painting that it brought tears to my eyes; I didn’t know paintings could do that. It was many years before I stood before another painting that moved me as powerfully again, after I’d mistakenly thought that that effect was unique to this particular painting.








Garden with Arbor, June, 1881

Garden with Arbor, June, 1881












    “What I like so much about painting is that with the same amount of trouble which one takes over a drawing, one brings home something that conveys the impression much better and is much more pleasant to look at … it is more gratifying than drawing.


    But it is absolutely necessary to be able to draw the right proportion and the position of the object pretty correctly before one begins. If one makes mistakes in this, the whole thing comes to nothing.”


    Letter to Theo van Gogh
    20 August 1882








    It didn’t convert me into an admirer of Vincent’s work but I wasn’t going to dismiss him when he was the only artist I knew of that could create that effect on me. I’ve ‘bumped up’ against some of his oils since, usually reluctantly, and it’s always been rewarding for what I’ve learnt, if not a totally pleasant experience.


    I’d seen a few of his drawings over the years and knew of course, of his reputation as a draughtsman and of all his letters to his brother Theo – but I’d never read any quotations or had any idea of the volume of drawings and sketches he produced – so the examples and quotations here were a delightful surprise to me. I thoroughly enjoyed the glimpses into how he thought about his work from the quotations.


    So, in his own words…








Landscape with Willows and Sun Shining Through the Clouds, mid-March 1884

Landscape with Willows and Sun Shining Through the Clouds, mid-March 1884






      ”Corot drew and modelled every tree trunk with the same devotion and love as if it were a figure.”


      Letter to Theo van Gogh
      c.September 1881







      ”If one draws a pollard willow as if it were a living being, which after all is what it really is, then the surroundings follow almost by themselves, provided only that one has focused all one’s attention on that particular tree and not rested until there was some life in it.”


      Letter to Theo van Gogh
      c.15 October 1881











Haystacks near a Farm, 12-13 June 1888

Haystacks near a Farm, 12-13 June 1888














    “… you will see when you come to the studio that besides the seeking for the outline I have, just like everyone else, a feeling for the power of color. And that I do not object to doing watercolors; but the foundation of them is the drawing, and then from the drawing many other branches beside the watercolor sprout forth, which will develop in me in time as in everybody who loves his work. …”



    Letter to Theo van Gogh
    31 July 1882












Olive Trees, Montmajour 1888

Olive Trees, Montmajour 1888




      ”I have been knocking about in the orchards, and the result is five size 30 canvases, which along with the three studies of olives that you have, at least constitute an attack on the problem.


      The olive is as variable as our willow or pollard willow in the North, you know the willows are very striking, in spite of their seeming monotonous, they are the trees characteristic of the country.


      Now the olive and the cypress have exactly the significance here as the willow has at home.


      What I have done is a rather hard and coarse reality beside their abstractions, but it will have a rustic quality, and will smell of the earth. ”




      Letter to Theo van Gogh
      c.21 November 1889


















Indelible Impressions – Rubens

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009






    I was once in the Norwich Castle Museum, purposefully striding along the galleries to their fine collection of watercolours and ignoring the paintings hanging left and right. In mid stride – I stopped – and took one pace backward, wondering what on earth had captured my notice? Looking around at the paintings, there was nothing here to interest me?





portrait-of-a-chambermaid-2-c-1625






















    Painting a young maiden is similar to cavorting with great abandon. It is the finest refreshment.



    Portrait of a Chambermaid






    To my right was a rather plain 3/4 portrait in the the Dutch manner; an elderly man with a white beard, a red nose, dark and sombre clothing, hands resting in his lap with a white ruff I think. Not what would be described a handsome man though I think I recall a flash of spirit and a twinkle of laughter in his expression but those could easily be my imaginings.





nicolaas-rubens-1625-26

















    Every child has the spirit of creation. The rubbish of life often exterminates the spirit through plague and a souls own wretchedness.



    Nicolaas Rubens






    It wasn’t the subject that had stopped me dead in my tracks, so many years on and the composition is very hazy in my memory. I stood and studied this painting for several minutes, even getting into conversation with one of the museum staff about it. The owner had recently died and the painting was expected to be sold – and they were expecting it to go elsewhere.



    It was the sheer quality of the flesh painting – flesh that seemed almost to have blood running in the veins.





self-portrait-large


























I’m just a simple man standing alone with my old brushes, asking God for inspiration.



Self Portrait






    I was in Edinburgh some years later and excited about going to see a major Rubens they had on display at that time – how can anyone be excited about seeing a painting! Even though this enormous historical painting is a world famous masterpiece (and I’ve forgotten the title) it disappointed me because it lacked the same magic I’d seen in the humble portrait that had hung in Norwich Castle.








    ** More Peter Paul Rubens’ Quotes