Van Eyck’s work- (1420’s-1441) also struck me aesthetically. His oil painting technique is just absolutely exquisite and the figures portrayed are unforgettably, indelibly etched in my mind. The lack of a mathematical perspective in his work simply adds to my enjoyment of it.
Fouquets Virgin and Child (1452-1455) was fascinating because of it’s very bizarreness. It almost seems like a modern work with it’s use of color, abstracted figures and absurd depiction of a holy character. 
Leonardo da Vinci’s Virgin of the Rocks (1485) Is another work that seems like a leap forward in technique with its use of Chiaroscuro, like spotlights on the figures creating strong lights and darks and giving them a more realistic modeling. Also the sfumato (smoky) technique of creating subtle transitions between light and dark that is almost imperceptible makes the figures seem soft like genuine flesh.
I loved the Mannerist style, particularly Allegory with Venus and Cupid (mid 1540’s) by Bronzino which I have chosen as a touchstone for a puppet show we are doing next quarter. The elongated torsos forced into small spaces and the hidden imagery are just fun to look at and contemplate
Hieronymus Bosch has been a favorite of mine for a long while, having copied Garden of Earthly Delights (1505-1515) for a play poster in the eighties. The imagery is stunning and creepy and fantastic and it is wonderfully composed and painted.
I enjoyed seeing da Vinci’s style pushed from chiaroscuro to tenebrism by the Caravaggesques, particularly Gentileschi’s portrayal of women and Renoirs painting.
Goyas work is really intriguing... the early painter to the King work is not interesting to me but the 3 of May1808 (1814-1815) breaks new ground with its portrayal of death, awe and terror that make up the sublime and in his Black Paintings he created images that seem to come from deep in his psyche and are incredibly interesting to me, though a bit frightening as I contemplate what a dark place he must have been in to create them. Also interesting to consider is that he did not grow up surrounded by images of this nature so he was breaking yet newer ground at the same time that he was seemingly going a bit mad
The majority of the art that really struck me was sculpted or painted in oils in a naturalistic way without the High Italian Renaissance idealization of anatomy. I was also drawn to works which exhibited a deliberate manipulation or abstraction of form in the figures that makes them less ideal or even sublime. I am not sure if this is personal taste or a backlash against our modern advertising culture that portrays increasingly fit and beautiful models while the average citizen gets larger and less well mannered. The idealized humans portrayed in much of the art, particularly around Italy, had less appeal to my own personal taste. Or maybe it’s my northern European roots....
I like that you were drawn to such a wide variety of art! I can see what you were saying about deliberate manipulation or abstraction of form. I like that kind of art, too. (Well, I like it all, obviously, because I'm an art historian.)
ReplyDeleteBut I'm intrigued by artists who want to depart from representing reality in some kind of way. For me, I'm equally interested in idealism (as a departure from reality) and I am struck by the figural distortions found in, say, Mannerism.
-Prof. Bowen
I guess you have enjoyed overall period in this quarter. I also enjoyed to learn about every single period. Mannerism style is one of favorite things to me as well. When I saw the Mannerism style artworks at the very first time, I thought that it is weird but now i realized that it is one of styles.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you on the figures. I can connect far better with the elongated distorted figures than I can with what society and pop culture sell as beautiful now.
ReplyDeleteThis seemed to be your quarter for art history. Mannerism was interesting to me too, with elongations and distortions to emphasize certain qualities was very interesting to study.
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