Artists Role in the World

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The artist has always been a special breed of person in the world. Asking questions, looking for answers, but he/she has never been satisfied with letting things be. “The sun in my belly” is what Picasso called it. It has always compelled the artist to create something out of nothing. Under the artists hand, wood, stone, metal, charcoal and paint became the whole world. All of human imaginings, heaven and hell, gods and goddesses, beasts in the field and fowls in the air, artists have been creating these over and over again.  Centuries of artists have made the unseen seen, given visual form to humankind’s thoughts and feelings.  No wonder artists for centuries have been the priests, teachers, explorers, and yes, even the magicians.

Fang mask used for the ngil ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers.
Fang mask used for the ngil ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers.

A powerful instrument for survival of primitive people was the priest (artist). He was called upon to cure all the ills with his masks and incantations, his fetishes and magic objects (created art).  Of course, he was expected to avert disasters and attract good luck, romance, and what ever the tribe desired. He was in fact the earliest insurance agent…one who could protect man against the uncertainties of life and assist him to face the finalities of death.

The Coatlique, the Aztec Goddess of Death, with its necklaces of serpents and its belt of skulls, its death’s-head as a face, is probably the most condensed form of terror ever created by an artist’s hand.

Coatlique, the Aztec Goddess of Death
Coatlique, the Aztec Goddess of Death

The great masks and figures of Africa, the Kuan of China whose benign presence radiates serenity across the centuries.  The Shaman masks of Northwest America, of Japan and New Guinea, are examples of the work of the artist-priests who used art in the functions as protectors, teachers, prophets, with visible power.

During the Middle Ages, when Christianity was the faith and refuge of millions, the artist poured his religious feelings into his art. Religious paintings, statues, stained glass windows, became the popular art of the time in the Holy Roman Empire. While the church established priesthood to propagate the faith, the Church turned to artists for ways to reach the masses of people. It’s hard to imagine Christianity without the Madonnas of Fra Angelico, Giotto, or Cimabue, or the great characters of Piero Della Francesca or Michelangelo.

Fra Angelico, "The Annunciation"
Fra Angelico, “The Annunciation

 

Fra Angelico: The Virgin of the Annunciation
Fra Angelico: The Virgin of the Annunciation

During the heyday of the Renaissance, emperors and Popes vied with each other to enlist the greatest artists for their projects. Popes Julius II and Paul III fought the Medici for the services of Michelangelo. Charles V, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, was happy to hold the brushes of Titian while the artist painted his portrait.

Yet, even while working for the Church, artists played other roles, that of scientist, experimenter, and teacher. You have to consider Leonardo da Vinci in this role. He was a prime example of a “Renaissance Man,”not only a master of anatomy, but of optics, aerodynamics, mechanics, botany, geology, and archeology.

Da Vinci: "Rhombicubocthedron"
Da Vinci: “Rhombicubocthedron”
Da Vinci: "Study of Foetus in the Womb"(1510)
Da Vinci: “Study of Foetus in the Womb”(1510)
Da Vinci: "A Design for a Flying Machine"
Da Vinci: “A Design for a Flying Machine”
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Master Artist Parodied Paintings of the Masters

Part of the twentieth century rebellion against tradition was turning away from continuing to parody the master artists before them. An art statement emphatically made in 1919 by Marcel Duchamp when he presented his Mona Lisa with a moustache and and goatee.  Others, however, parodied the classics or done new versions bringing old themes up to date.  Many famous artists have had their favorite painters they parodied with no illusions as their influence upon their work

Van Gogh, The Good Samaratin (Parody of Delacroix)
Van Gogh, The Good Samaratin (Parody of Delacroix)

During his confinement in the asylum at St. Remy, the emotionally distraught Vincent Van Gogh began copying paintings as a kind of therapy. Since I have no models, he wrote, I use black-and-whites by Delacroix and Millet…as I would a real-life subject.

Copying from a monochrome reproduction, Van Gogh invented his own color scheme with his serpentine line and thick paint brush strokes. It made the painting style entirely his own

Whatever the reason that an artist uses a particular work-whether to learn from it, to reinterpret it, to parody the conventions of an earlier time or satirize the values of his own time-if successful it becomes his own.

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Naive Art~Eye of the Innocent

Naive art is a comfort from chaos, a release if you wish, but who says a painting must be a mirror image of the disorder of our time or the disgruntlement of the artist? Must art be so subtle or non-communicative that it leaves the viewer confused, not sure what it is or whether it is interesting to anyone once the novelty has worn off?

It is a pleasure from time to time to turn to what is known as naive or primitive art, to peruse through coffee table art books showing the works of Rousseau, Kane, Bombois, Hicks, Pippin, and Grandma Moses. Their work has a simplistic tone, an innocence that beguiles and charms and takes us back to a world we somehow have lost.

Unlike the art school artist, the primitive artist has no interest in how anyone else paints. Seldom are they accurate in the treatment of perspective or the relative size of objects.  He/She magnifies details in a way a more sophisticated artist would. The virtue (if I could be so bold to define it in this manner) is the innocence of the art.  Virtue in a world filled with trained painters that have lost the ability to see with the eye of the innocent.

Henri Rousseau, "The Dream" (1910)
Henri Rousseau, “The Dream” (1910)

 

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Henri Rousseau, "Tiger in a Tropical Storm (Surprised)"(1891)
Henri Rousseau, “Tiger in a Tropical Storm (Surprised)”(1891)

 

 

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Two Artists That Were Masters of Protest

Caricature, Romanticism, Expressionism, Dada, and Social Realism are the labels scholars have pinned on the art of social comment. Yet the works that continue to interest us are those of individual artists who have pressed beyond the strictures of any “ism” in art or politics.

Chiefs of government come and go, however corruption, poverty and war will probably abide forever, or at least, far into the future of mankind. The failings of social and political institutions and the flaws of individual people have, since the Renaissance, provided subject matter for artists who wanted to probe and protest the human condition.

Whether we are or are not inspired by the works of artists that wish to make a social comment with their art, it matters little.  We need not know the conditions that prompted them, because the conditions have been with us since the Serpent sold a bill of goods to Adam and Eve. Does Peter Bruegel’s “Blind Leading the Blind” really make a statement against submissive following of the established church or slavish following of the reform movement? It doesn’t really matter, because we are accustomed to the image of men being led blindly to the edge of the abyss.

Pieter Bruegel the Elder, "Blind Leading the Blind" (1567)
Pieter Bruegel the Elder, "Blind Leading the Blind" (1567)

William Hogarth (below) is another artist that used his works to make a societal comment with his series of paintings of “The Rakes Progress”. These were a series of satires from contemporary English life in 1730. The point of the series was morality with candid scenes of vice and dissipation.

William Hogarth "The Rakes Progress: The Orgy"
William Hogarth "The Rakes Progress: The Orgy"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Color Sketches for Future Painting

practice sketch
practice sketch

Well, I’ve been sketching, trying to come up with a likeness of my father back in 1950.  I posted the rather disappointing likeness (left) on the blog the other day and mentioned I was going to try to get it better, so I’m posting another one below.

Color Sketch
Color Sketch

Well, this one seems a little better as long as you don’t get too hung up on the far eye that is not on the same plane as the other one and the ear which is too big.  Again these are just practice sketches to get me closer to my goal.

Well, anyway, it’s a work that I tamper with from time to time and decided that I should go ahead and get it started so I’ve dusted it off, blocked in some of the images, and painted the sky and the bit of desert showing in the background.  My plan is to complete the picture of the man and use it as a reference for all the hues and values for the rest of the painting.

Block out for painting with undercoat
Block out for painting with undercoat

The painting will be 24X36, acrylic on board.  As I mentioned on a previous blog, the only concern I have is that of the face.  Except for a watercolor I did some years back as a study for a future painting, I’ve never attempted to paint a person, mostly doing landscapes and pastoral scenes.  Thus, the reason for the practice sketches.

I have drawn and pen and inked a lot of pictures that included people and feel fairly confident that I can handle it.  As a matter of fact, I’ll more than likely start painting people in most of my future works of art.  That is why I have to learn to do it right.

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Full size pencil sketch for painting
Full size pencil sketch for painting

 

 

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Art Center Information Presents a Day with Salvador Dali and the Surrealist’s

For your art information, we’ll center on Salvador Dali today.

Salvador Dali
Salvador Dali

There were two major influences on the artist, Salvador Dali.  One was Sigmund Freud, and the other was Surrealism.  It was Freud’s ideas on the unconscious mind and dream interpretations that were the basis for the Surrealists’ art movement in the 1920s.  The Surrealists’ expressed the inner working of the mind through their writing and art.

Even from an early life, Dali believed he would achieve with his art all that he dreamed.  He was driven by a need for money, fame, and acceptance as a great artist. He delighted in endless self-promoting, consistently declaring himself as the only true Surrealist, unabashedly embracing fame and celebrity.

Salvador Dali: "The Ghost of Vermeer of Delft Which Can be Used as a Table" (1934)
Salvador Dali: “The Ghost of Vermeer of Delft Which Can be Used as a Table” (1934)

 

In Dali’s Painting, The Ghost of Vermeer of Delft Which Can be Used as a Table,Vermeer is represented as a dark spindly figure in a kneeling position. The figure’s outstretched leg serves as a table top surface, on which sits a bottle and a small glass.

To Dali, his life and art were one and the same.  His paintings are memories of his childhood spent on the coast of Spain which had its own fiercely independent history and spirit. With his art, he converted the signs symbols and landscapes of these early years.

The title of the painting refers to the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer and the image of Vermeer viewed from his back is a reference to Vermeer’s paintings.

Dalí painted the piece in oil on panel and it measures 24 x 18 cm.

Apparition of Face and Fruit Dish on a Beach
Salvador Dali: “Apparition of Face and Fruit Dish on a Beach” (1938)

 

Apparition of Face and Fruit Dish on a Beach, is considered on of Dali’s true masterpieces. The picture shows a fruit in a wine glass. Below the fruit is a human face which shows the handle depicted by the face’s nose bridge. The texture of the face is the sand of the beach. The left eye is a cannon and the right eye is a window in which a snowy mountain with trees on it is behind the window.

The images depicted on this site are for art education and information.  We hope you have enjoyed it.

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Reviewing The Red Truck

I’ve always liked paintings that showed weather in them such as winter scenes with snow, or street scenes either in a rainstorm or just after the rain.  I especially like artists depicting the reflections off a wet street from the lights of cars, or people walking with  raised umbrellas in a gentle rain and lights reflecting off the wet sidewalk.  Maybe it is just that I like reflections.

R. D. Burton Painting: Red Truck
R. D. Burton Painting: "Red Truck"

It’s needless to say, there is a lot of work and planning that goes into the painting of these types of pictures.  The composition and perspective alone is a challenging nightmare.  In the red truck, a painting I did last winter, the perspective was indeed a challenge and a nightmare.  What bothered me was that it looked so simple.

The building next to the building at the corner stuck out a few feet closer to the street as did others that followed that line.  I thought seriously about moving the perspective line back so they all lined up with the corner building.  It would have made it much simpler had I done that.  It would probably look more accurate, but I chose not use my artistic license.  I kept it the way it was.  I knew I was already breaking a few rules with the composition (lines leading out of the picture and so forth).  I did it the way I chose to do it. So what if I break a few rules? Don’t we all?

I did enjoy doing the painting and felt pleased with when it was finished.

 

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Art Center Information Draws and Paints All Day

Sketch for "old Woodie"
Sketch for "old Woodie"

You ask what we’ve been doing at the Art Center Information blog sight all day.  Drawing and attempting to paint a color sketch for my future art, “Old Woodie”.

The man pumping the gas in the picture is supposed to be my father back in 1950, which is where I got the idea for the painting.  It was a small black and white photograph that I’d not paid attention to until I was going through an old family album.  I’ve blogged about it before, but I’ve been procrastinating instead of painting it because this one is for me. I have no intention of selling it.  I doubt if it would have that much commercial value to anyone other than myself.

I’ve never painted people in acrylics before, so it is a new experience.  Although I got through the sketch, it’s not exactly what I want, but the good thing is that I now know how to tackle the job.  In other words, I now know what not to do.  First, the painting was complete before I put the last shadow wash on it.  It made it muddy.  The skin tone is too dark (I forgot acrylics usually dry darker that when wet).  The underside of the hat is the wrong color…etc. etc.

I’ll experiment on shadow washes on egg shapes in the morning, but I believe I’ve got a handle on it now.  Again, just like I always say here at the Art Center Information blog, if you can imagine it in your mind you can paint it on a substrate…no matter which medium you’re working in.

 

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Art Center Information Presents the Ashcan School~Apostles of Ugliness

We’re proud to present information at the art center about the Ashcan School, contemptibly know as the Apostles of Ugliness.

Having spurned academic painting and Impressionism as an art, Robert Henri wanted ‘paint to be as real as mud, as the clods of horse manure and snow that froze on Broadway in the winter.’ This was the dynamic that made up the concept of the artists from the Ashcan school, known by some as the New Realists, New York Realists, and more contemptibly Apostles of Ugliness.

Robert Henri: "Snow in New York" (1902)
Robert Henri: "Snow in New York" (1902)

Robert Henri was the most influential of the group.  He gathered around himself the likes of George Luks, William Crackens, John Sloan, Everett Shinn, and other artists, illustrators, and jounalists who were determined to rescue art from what they felt was a bloodless aestheticism.

In 1908, the art information centered on the above listed artists and Ernest Lawson, Arthur B. Davis, and Maurice Prendergast who held a successful show at the Macbeth Gallery in New York. The Eight (as they came to be known) were responsible for organizing the Armory Show of 1913-the most important exhibition in the history of American art.

The attention the social reformers of the group, Henri, Luks and Sloan paid to the more seamier side of life mirrored a social depiction as well as an artistic one.

Robert Henri "Salome" (1908)
Robert Henri "Salome" (1908)

Looking at Henri’s Salome of 1909 the critic Robert Hughes observed: “Her long legs thrust out with strutting sexual arrogance, and glint through the over-brushed back veil. It has far more oomph than hundreds of virginal, genteel muses, painted by American academics. He has given it urgency with slashing brush marks and strong tonal contrasts. He’s learned from Winslow Homer, from Edouard Manet, and from the vulgarity of Frans Hals.” (Quote source, Wikipedia)

George B. Luks:  "Allen Street" (1905)
George B. Luks: "Allen Street" (1905)

George B. Luks made many paintings of working class subjects and scenes of the urban street.

Luks’s  painted representations of immigrant shoppers, pushcart peddlers, casual strollers and curious onlookers of the ethnic variety that characterized metropolitan, turn-of-the century New York. His work typifies the ‘real-life’ scenes painted by the Ashcan School artists.

This information is centered on the art of the Ashcan School, please enjoy:

Everett Shinn: "Washington Square" (1912)
Everett Shinn: "Washington Square" (1912)
John French Sloan, "McSorley's Bar" (1912)
John French Sloan, "McSorley's Bar" (1912)
William Glackens: "Italo American Celebration, Washington Square" (1912)
William Glackens: "Italo American Celebration, Washington Square" (1912)

 

 

 

 

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Just a Little Bit of Art is all it Takes-A Love Story

Love Story
Love Story

Here is a drawing that I wouldn’t sell for a million dollars.  Actually, it’s not mine to sell, it belongs to my wife of thirty-four years this July.  However, it is very valuable to me because it was the icing on the cake that tilted the balance in my favor.

The benefit of  having a touch of art talent came in handy that Christmas, 1981.  My lady friend (now wife) and I lived about seven hours apart and I was driving in to spend Christmas with her.  I’d bought gifts, but realized the night before I left that I forgot to get her a Christmas card.  I sat down and immediately began ink sketching one for her.

I cross-hatch ink drew her likeness from a photograph I had.  The art is not that great, and the poem (whew!) is not that great.  I can’t say that about the past (almost) thirty-five years, because they have been.

Ah!  We artists are romantic.  What can I say. I slipped her into the watercolor below (the blond at the extreme left and bottom). I posed for the man reading the newspaper.

Richard D. Burton:Pappy's Break
Richard D. Burton: “Pappy’s Break”~Watercolor (16″X22” on paper)

 

 

 

 

 

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