The Art Spirit by Robert Henri – “Not just for artists. A book of musings, writings, notes and lectures collected posthumously by a former student. Not so much about making art as it is about creating the conditions in which art happens, conditions in which we are able to engage at our highest functional capacity for taking in the world around us and putting it back out there.”
!Mira que luna! Look at that moon! Resources for learning English
Fernando Olivera: El rapto.- TEXT FROM THE NOVEL The goldfinch by Donna Tartt (...) One night we were in San Antonio, and I was having a bit of a melt-down, wanting my own room, you know, my dog, my own bed, and Daddy lifted me up on the fairgrounds and told me to look at the moon. When "you feel homesick", he said, just look up. Because the moon is the same wherever you go". So after he died, and I had to go to Aunt Bess -I mean, even now, in the city, when I see a full moon, it's like he's telling me not to look back or feel sad about things, that home is wherever I am. She kissed me on the nose. Or where you are, puppy. The center of my earth is you". The goldfinch Donna Tartt 4441 English edition
Showing posts with label ART. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ART. Show all posts
Monday, October 30, 2017
Lista de libros recomendados para leer en tiempo libre, nivelas, ensayos etc en TED.. TED-Ed’s super summer reading list: 40+ books recommended by our educators |
TED-Ed’s super summer reading list: 40+ books recommended by our educators |

The Art Spirit by Robert Henri – “Not just for artists. A book of musings, writings, notes and lectures collected posthumously by a former student. Not so much about making art as it is about creating the conditions in which art happens, conditions in which we are able to engage at our highest functional capacity for taking in the world around us and putting it back out there.”
The Art Spirit by Robert Henri – “Not just for artists. A book of musings, writings, notes and lectures collected posthumously by a former student. Not so much about making art as it is about creating the conditions in which art happens, conditions in which we are able to engage at our highest functional capacity for taking in the world around us and putting it back out there.”
Etiquetas:
01 Literature,
ART,
Books
Friday, September 5, 2014
Sunday, June 1, 2014
Obra Social "la Caixa" > Agenda Online > Le Corbusier. Un atlas de paisajes modernos.
Obra Social "la Caixa" > Agenda Online > Le Corbusier. Un atlas de paisajes modernos.:
Arquitecto, urbanista, pintor, diseñador de interiores, escritor, editor, fotógrafo y cineasta aficionado. Reconocido en la actualidad como figura clave de la arquitectura del siglo XX, Le Corbusier fue un artista multidisciplinar que deslumbró por su fuerza creativa y por la libertad poco convencional de sus ideas.
La exposición pretende dar a conocer las múltiples facetas del arquitecto a través de una extensa colección de obras que muestran todas las dimensiones de su proceso artístico, y que siguen la trayectoria del arquitecto a lo largo de seis décadas en las que observó, imaginó y persiguió paisajes sin cesar: paisajes arquitectónicos, paisajes domésticos, paisajes en los objetos.
Arquitecto, urbanista, pintor, diseñador de interiores, escritor, editor, fotógrafo y cineasta aficionado. Reconocido en la actualidad como figura clave de la arquitectura del siglo XX, Le Corbusier fue un artista multidisciplinar que deslumbró por su fuerza creativa y por la libertad poco convencional de sus ideas.
La exposición pretende dar a conocer las múltiples facetas del arquitecto a través de una extensa colección de obras que muestran todas las dimensiones de su proceso artístico, y que siguen la trayectoria del arquitecto a lo largo de seis décadas en las que observó, imaginó y persiguió paisajes sin cesar: paisajes arquitectónicos, paisajes domésticos, paisajes en los objetos.
Etiquetas:
Architecture,
ART
Monday, December 2, 2013
LEARNING ENGLISH FROM PAINTINGS: THE PROVERBS BY BRUEGEL.
http://www.topofart.com/artists/Pieter_the_Elder_Bruegel/art_reproduction/463/Netherlandish_Proverbs.php
Your Selection is:
Painting info.
Netherlandish Proverbs (also called The Blue Cloak or The Topsy Turvy World) is a 1559 oil-on-oak-panel painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder which depicts a land populated with literal renditions of Flemish proverbs of the day. The picture is overflowing with references and most of the representations can still be identified; while many of the proverbs have either been forgotten or never made the transition to the English language, some are still in use.
Proverbs were popular during Brueghel's time: a number of collections were published including a famous work by Erasmus. Frans Hogenberg had produced an engraving illustrating about 40 proverbs in around 1558 and Brueghel himself had painted a collection of Twelve Proverbs on individual panels by 1558 and had also produced Big Fish Eat Little Fish in 1556, but Netherlandish Proverbs is thought to be the first large scale painting on the theme. Rabelais depicted a land of proverbs in his novel Pantagruel soon after in 1564.
Bruegel's paintings have themes of the absurdity, wickedness and foolishness of mankind, and this painting is no exception. The picture was originally entitled The Blue Cloak or the Folly of the World which indicates he was not intending to produce a mere collection of proverbs but rather a study of human stupidity. Many of the people depicted show the characteristic blank features which Breughel used to portray fools. His son, Pieter Brueghel the Younger, specialised in making copies of his father's work, and painted up to twenty copies of Netherlandish Proverbs.
There are around 100 identifiable idioms in the scene (although Breugel may have included others). Some are still in use today, amongst them: "swimming against the tide", "big fish eat little fish", "banging one's head against a brick wall" and "armed to the teeth", and there are some that are familiar if not identical to the modern English usage, such as "casting roses before swine". Many more have faded from use or have never been used in English, "having one's roof tiled with tarts" for example which meant to have an abundance of everything and was an image Breughel would later feature in his painting of the idyllic Land of Cockaigne .
The Blue Cloak referred to in the painting's original title is being placed on the man in the centre of the picture by his wife. This was indicative that she was cheating on him. Other proverbs indicate mankind's foolishness: a man fills in a pond after his calf has died, just above the central figure of the blue-cloaked man another man carries daylight in a basket. Some of the figures seem to represent more than one figure of speech (whether this was Brueghel's intention or not is unknown), such as the man shearing a sheep in the centre bottom left of the picture. He is sat next to a man shearing a pig, so represents the expression "one shears sheep and one shears pigs" meaning that one has the advantage over the other, but he may also represent the advice "shear them but don't skin them" meaning make the most of your assets.
Your Selection is:
Painting info.
Netherlandish Proverbs (also called The Blue Cloak or The Topsy Turvy World) is a 1559 oil-on-oak-panel painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder which depicts a land populated with literal renditions of Flemish proverbs of the day. The picture is overflowing with references and most of the representations can still be identified; while many of the proverbs have either been forgotten or never made the transition to the English language, some are still in use.
Proverbs were popular during Brueghel's time: a number of collections were published including a famous work by Erasmus. Frans Hogenberg had produced an engraving illustrating about 40 proverbs in around 1558 and Brueghel himself had painted a collection of Twelve Proverbs on individual panels by 1558 and had also produced Big Fish Eat Little Fish in 1556, but Netherlandish Proverbs is thought to be the first large scale painting on the theme. Rabelais depicted a land of proverbs in his novel Pantagruel soon after in 1564.
Bruegel's paintings have themes of the absurdity, wickedness and foolishness of mankind, and this painting is no exception. The picture was originally entitled The Blue Cloak or the Folly of the World which indicates he was not intending to produce a mere collection of proverbs but rather a study of human stupidity. Many of the people depicted show the characteristic blank features which Breughel used to portray fools. His son, Pieter Brueghel the Younger, specialised in making copies of his father's work, and painted up to twenty copies of Netherlandish Proverbs.
There are around 100 identifiable idioms in the scene (although Breugel may have included others). Some are still in use today, amongst them: "swimming against the tide", "big fish eat little fish", "banging one's head against a brick wall" and "armed to the teeth", and there are some that are familiar if not identical to the modern English usage, such as "casting roses before swine". Many more have faded from use or have never been used in English, "having one's roof tiled with tarts" for example which meant to have an abundance of everything and was an image Breughel would later feature in his painting of the idyllic Land of Cockaigne .
The Blue Cloak referred to in the painting's original title is being placed on the man in the centre of the picture by his wife. This was indicative that she was cheating on him. Other proverbs indicate mankind's foolishness: a man fills in a pond after his calf has died, just above the central figure of the blue-cloaked man another man carries daylight in a basket. Some of the figures seem to represent more than one figure of speech (whether this was Brueghel's intention or not is unknown), such as the man shearing a sheep in the centre bottom left of the picture. He is sat next to a man shearing a pig, so represents the expression "one shears sheep and one shears pigs" meaning that one has the advantage over the other, but he may also represent the advice "shear them but don't skin them" meaning make the most of your assets.
Etiquetas:
ART
Monday, June 11, 2012
Friday, May 11, 2012
LEARNING ENGLISH FROM PAINTINGS: EL PASEO DE LAS DELICIAS DE MADRID DE FRANCISCO BAYEU Y SUBIAS.
EL PASEO DE LAS DELICIAS DE MADRID. FRANCISCO BAYEU Y SUBIAS.
A Goya Biography
Museo del Prado
1961 Goya biography
Galeria de Arte transparencias Ancora A Todo Color
1961 Goya biography
Galeria de Arte transparencias Ancora A Todo Color
For a timeline biography of Goya, go here.
Francisco Jose de Goya de Lucientes was born in Fuendetodos, in the province of Saragossa on the 30th of March in 1746. His parents were Joseph Goya and Gracia Lucientes. It is difficult, in the life of this painter to discern what is truth and what is legend, because fantasy and reality are mixed in this life as in no other.
His childhood was spent in Fuendetodos where his parents and brothers and sisters lived in the family house, which bore the family crest of his mother, and which was surrounded by the dry lands, treeless and waterless where his father practiced his trade of gilder.
About 1749 the family bought a house in the City of Saragossa and some years later finally went to live in it. Then Goya attended the Escuelas Pias, a School where he formed a close friendship with Martin Zapater, whom he was never to forget and whose correspondence with him has become valuable documentary evidence. He then entered the studio of Jose Lujan, Academic painter, from whom he learnt the elementary steps of painting. We do not know how this period of his life gave birth to the Goyesque legend which supposes him to have fought bulls at the local bull fighting festivals; to have strummed the guitar gaily; and to have loved so violently and so often, that one of these affairs forced him to leave Saragossa and move to Madrid.
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
ESTUDIO TÉCNICO Y RESTAURACIÓN DE LA GIOCONDA EN EL PRADO. GRACIAS MARISA.
Etiquetas:
ART
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Revising my old posts: Learning English through the Dulwich picture gallery
Etiquetas:
01 Revising my old posts,
ART,
RESOURCES
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
English through art: Caspar Davik Friedrich:
Caspar David Friedrich (September 5, 1774 - May 7, 1840) was a landscape painter of the nineteenth-century German Romantic movement, of which he is now considered the most important painter. A painter and draughtsman, Friedrich is best known for his later allegorical landscapes, which feature contemplative figures silhouetted against night skies, morning mists, barren trees, and Gothic ruins. His primary interest as an artist was the contemplation of nature, and his often symbolic and anti-classical work seeks to convey the spiritual experiences of life.
Friedrich was born in Greifswald in northern Germany in 1774. He studied in Copenhagen until 1798 before settling in Dresden. He came of age during a period when, across Europe, a growing disillusionment with an over-materialistic society led to a new appreciation for spiritualism. This was often expressed through a reevaluation of the natural world, as artists such as Friedrich, J. M. W. Turner and John Constable sought to depict nature as a "divine creation, to be set against the artifice of human civilization".
Although Friedrich was renowned during his lifetime, his work fell from favour during the second half of the nineteenth century. As Germany moved towards modernisation, a new urgency was brought to its art, and Friedrich's contemplative depictions of stillness were seen as the products of a bygone age. His rediscovery began in 1906 when an exhibition of 32 of his paintings and sculptures was held in Berlin. During the 1920s his work was appreciated by the Expressionists, and in the 1930s and 1940s, the Surrealists and Existentialists frequently drew on his work. Today he is seen as an icon of the German Romantic movement, and a painter of international importance.
The complete works:Friedrich was born in Greifswald in northern Germany in 1774. He studied in Copenhagen until 1798 before settling in Dresden. He came of age during a period when, across Europe, a growing disillusionment with an over-materialistic society led to a new appreciation for spiritualism. This was often expressed through a reevaluation of the natural world, as artists such as Friedrich, J. M. W. Turner and John Constable sought to depict nature as a "divine creation, to be set against the artifice of human civilization".
Although Friedrich was renowned during his lifetime, his work fell from favour during the second half of the nineteenth century. As Germany moved towards modernisation, a new urgency was brought to its art, and Friedrich's contemplative depictions of stillness were seen as the products of a bygone age. His rediscovery began in 1906 when an exhibition of 32 of his paintings and sculptures was held in Berlin. During the 1920s his work was appreciated by the Expressionists, and in the 1930s and 1940s, the Surrealists and Existentialists frequently drew on his work. Today he is seen as an icon of the German Romantic movement, and a painter of international importance.
Source: http://www.caspardavidfriedrich.org/
Etiquetas:
ART
Sunday, February 12, 2012
LEARNING ENGLISH WITH THE Lucian Freud's PAINTINGS
(b Berlin, 8 Dec 1922).
British painter and draughtsman. He was
the son of the architect Ernst Freud (1892–1970) and the grandson of SIGMUND
FREUD. His family moved to England
in 1932, and in 1939 he became a naturalized British subject and enrolled at
the East Anglian
School of Painting and Drawing, Dedham , run by Cedric
Morris. Apart from a year in Paris and Greece , Freud spent most of the rest of his
career in Paddington, London ,
an inner-city area whose seediness is reflected in Freud’s often sombre and
moody interiors and cityscapes. In the 1940s he was principally interested in
drawing, especially the face, as in Naval Gunner (1941; priv.
col.), and occasionally using a distorted style reminiscent of George Grosz, as
in Page from a Sketchbook (1941; priv. col.). He began to turn his
attention to painting, however, and experimented with Surrealism, producing
such images as the Painter’s Room (1943; priv. col.), which features an
incongruous arrangement of objects, including a stuffed zebra’s head, a
battered chaise longue and a house plant, all of which survived his Surrealist
phase and appeared separately in later paintings. He was also loosely
associated with Neo-Romanticism, and the intense, bulbous eyes that
characterize his early portraits show affinities with the work of other artists
associated with the movement, such as John Minton, whose portrait he painted in
1952 (London, Royal Coll. A.). He established his own artistic identity,
however, in meticulously executed realist works, imbued with a pervasive mood
of alienation. He was dubbed by Herbert Read ‘the Ingres of existentialism’ (Contemporary
British Art, Harmondsworth, 1951, rev. 1964, p. 35) because of such
images as those of his first wife, Kitty (the daughter of Jacob Epstein),
nervously clutching a rose in Girl with Roses (1947–8; London , Brit. Council).
Etiquetas:
ART
British artist Lucian Freud died at 88 last year (21-07-2011)
The original,
unnerving, sustained artistic achievement of Lucian Freud, who has died aged 88, had at its
heart a wilful, restless personality, fired by his intelligence and
attentiveness and his suspicion of method, never wanting to risk doing the same
thing twice. The sexually loaded, penetrating gaze was part of his weaponry,
but his art addressed the lives of individuals, whether life models or royalty,
with delicacy and disturbing corporeality.
Freud had a reputation for pushing
subjects to an extreme. But unlike the American painters to emerge in the
1950s, his approach was in the western tradition of working from life and
brought about with painstaking slowness, rather than unleashed virtuosity. Photographs
taken in the studio by his assistant, model and good friend, the painter David Dawson, show Freud working from a roughly sketched charcoal
form, the paint slowly spreading outwards from the head. Some canvases were
extended, others abandoned while still a fragment.
Lucian Freud with Martin Gayford in 2010. Photograph: David Dawson
Lucian Freud, considered one of Britain 's most
pre-eminent realist painters, has died at age 88, his dealer says.
Freud died
Wednesday night at his home in London after a
brief illness, said William Acquavella, owner of Acquavella Galleries in New York . He referred to
Freud as "one of the great artists of the 20th century."
"He
lived to paint and painted until the day he died, far removed from the noise of
the art world," Acquavella said.
Freud,
grandson of Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis, was known for his
portraits of human figures, especially his nudes.
Among his
famous works are Girl With a White Dog, a portrait of his first wife that
hangs in the Tate Gallery in London, and a 2001 portrait of Queen Elizabeth II
that was controversial because it was not beautiful.He painted regular people,
often family members and friends, sometimes with their pets, layering thick
gobs of paint on the canvas to convey fleshy curves.
Etiquetas:
ART
Friday, February 10, 2012
František Kupka: Learning through art with KUPKA
František Kupka
b. 1871, Opočno, eastern Bohemia (Czechoslovakia); d. 1957, Puteaux, France
František Kupka was born on September 23, 1871, in Opocno in eastern Bohemia. From 1889 to 1892 he studied at the Prague Art Academy. During this time he painted historical and patriotic themes. In 1892, Kupka enrolled at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste, Vienna, where he concentrated on symbolic and allegorical subjects. He exhibited at the Kunstverein, Vienna, in 1894. His involvement with theosophy and Eastern philosophy dates from this period. By spring 1896 Kupka had settled in Paris; there he attended the Académie Julian briefly and then studied with Jean-Pierre Laurens at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts.
Kupka worked as an illustrator of books and posters and, during his early years in Paris, became known for his satirical drawings for newspapers and magazines. In 1906 he settled in Puteaux, a suburb of Paris, and that same year exhibited for the first time at the Salon d’Automne. Kupka was deeply impressed by the first Futurist manifesto, published in 1909 in Le Figaro. Kupka’s work became increasingly abstract around 1910–11, reflecting his theories of motion, color, and the relationship between music and painting. In 1911 he attended meetings of the Puteaux group. In 1912 he exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants in the Cubist room, although he did not wish to be identified with any movement.
Creation in the Plastic Arts, a book Kupka completed in 1913, was published in Prague in 1923. In 1921 his first solo show in Paris was held at Galerie Povolozky. In 1931 he became a founding member of Abstraction-Création together with Jean Arp, Albert Gleizes, Jean Hélion, Auguste Herbin, Theo van Doesburg, and Georges Vantongerloo. In 1936 his work was included in the exhibition Cubism and Abstract Art at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and in an important show with Alphonse Mucha at the Jeu de Paume, Paris. A retrospective of his work took place at the Galerie S.V.U. Mánes in Prague in 1946. That same year Kupka participated in the Salon des Réalités Nouvelles, Paris, where he continued to exhibit regularly until his death. During the early 1950s he gained general recognition and had several solo shows in New York. Kupka died in Puteaux on June 24, 1957. Retrospectives were held at the Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris, in 1958 and at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, in 1975.
Etiquetas:
ART
Thursday, February 9, 2012
ENGLISH THROUGH ART: MAX ERNST
Max Ernst was born on April 2, 1891 in Brühl, Germany. After serving in the German army during WWI, he became an artist in the Dada movement and was notorious for his art events (one staged in a public rest room) and his dreamlike collage work. In 1922 Ernst moved to Paris and helped found Surrealism. He was married to Peggy Guggenheim, and Dorothea Tanning. Ernst died in 1976.
Profile
(born April 2, 1891, Brhl, Ger.—died April 1, 1976, Paris, Fr.) German painter, sculptor, one of the leading advocates of irrationality in art, and an originator of the Automatism movement of Surrealism. His youthful interests were psychiatry and philosophy, but he abandoned his studies at the University of Bonn for painting.
After serving in the German army during World War I, Ernst was converted to Dada (q.v.), a nihilistic art movement, and formed a group of Dada artists in Cologne; with the artist-poet Jean Arp, he edited journals and created a scandal by staging a Dada exhibit in a public rest room. More important, however, were his Dada collages and photomontages, such as “Here Everything Is Still Floating” (1920), a startlingly illogical composition made from cutout photographs of insects, fish, and anatomical drawings ingeniously arranged to suggest the multiple identity of the things depicted.
In 1922 Ernst moved to Paris, where, two years later, he became a founding member of the Surrealists, a group of artists and writers whose work grew out of fantasies evoked from the unconscious. To stimulate the flow of imagery from his unconscious mind, Ernst began in 1925 to use the techniques of frottage (pencil rubbings of such things as wood grain, fabric, or leaves) and decalcomania (the technique of transferring paint from one surface to another by pressing the two surfaces together). Contemplating the accidental patterns and textures resulting from these techniques, he allowed free association to suggest images he subsequently used in a series of drawings (“Histoire naturelle,” 1926) and in many paintings such as “The Great Forest” (1927) and “The Temptation of St. Anthony” (1945). These vast, swamplike landscapes stem ultimately from the tradition of nature mysticism of the German Romantics.
After 1934 Ernst's activities centred increasingly on sculpture, using improvised techniques in this medium just as he had in painting. “Oedipus II” (1934), for example, was cast from a stack of precariously balanced wooden pails to form a belligerent-looking phallic image.
At the outbreak of World War II, Ernst moved to the United States, where he joined his third wife, the collector and gallery owner Peggy Guggenheim, and his son, the American painter Jimmy Ernst. While living on Long Island, N.Y., and after 1946 in Sedona, Ariz. (with his fourth wife, the American painter Dorothea Tanning), he concentrated on such sculptures as “The King Playing with the Queen” (1944), which shows African influence. After his return to France in 1949, his work became less experimental: he spent much time perfecting his modeling technique in traditional sculptural materials.
Copyright © 1994-2011 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. For more information visit Britannica.comSOURCE: http://www.biography.com/people/max-ernst-40067
Etiquetas:
ART
Sunday, February 5, 2012
LEARNING ENGLISH THROUGH ART: EMIL NOLDE
Information about Emil Nolde: http://www.answers.com/topic/emil-nolde

Emil Hansen was born near the German-Danish border on 7 August 1867. He adopted the name of his birth town as his artist name at a later date. Nolde completed an apprenticeship as a furniture designer and wood carver in Flensburg between 1884 and 1888 and then worked for various furniture factories in Munich, Karlsruhe and Berlin. He was employed as a teacher of industrial drawing at the Gewerbemuseum (Industrial Museum) in St. Gallen in 1892, where he taught until 1898. There, where at first mainly landscape watercolours and drawings of mountain farmers emerged, Nolde became known through small coloured drawings of Swiss mountains.

Emil Hansen was born near the German-Danish border on 7 August 1867. He adopted the name of his birth town as his artist name at a later date. Nolde completed an apprenticeship as a furniture designer and wood carver in Flensburg between 1884 and 1888 and then worked for various furniture factories in Munich, Karlsruhe and Berlin. He was employed as a teacher of industrial drawing at the Gewerbemuseum (Industrial Museum) in St. Gallen in 1892, where he taught until 1898. There, where at first mainly landscape watercolours and drawings of mountain farmers emerged, Nolde became known through small coloured drawings of Swiss mountains.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
CLIL Learning English through art. Willian Hogarth La carriera del libertino: Il matrimonio
William Hogarth
Genre Painting
During the 18th century, there was a tremendous amount of variety in the subject matter of genre painting, which usually represented scenes from everyday life. Such work often depicted the lives of commoners, including beggars, soldiers of fortune, and tradespeople. One of the most popular subjects was the depiction of women engaged in domestic tasks. These paintings were collectively known as bambocciate, or scenes of "trivial" subjects. An eye for exaggeration and the grotesque was often a characteristic of this style. Flemish and Dutch artists accounted for the majority of genre painters, and Austrian and German painters followed their lead. Many of these, working in Italy as well as in their native lands, were loosely connected with a group of bamboccianti painters who had converged on Rome during the previous century. Of the many practitioners of low-life and peasant scenes, certain painters stand out as exceptional; these include the Italian Giacomo Ceruti (c.1698-1767). who was principally active in Brescia. The English artist William Hogarth (1697-1764) dealt with similar subject matter, but his bitter and witty comments and his moral reflections on the society of his day place him in a different, more satirical artistic category.
Source: http://www.all-art.org/history294-16.html
Picture source: http://pintura.aut.org/SearchProducto?Produnum=50868
(b London, 10 Nov 1697; d London, 25–26 Oct 1764).
English painter and engraver. He played a crucial part in establishing an English school of painting, both through the quality of his painting and through campaigns to improve the status of the artist in England. He also demonstrated that artists could become independent of wealthy patrons by publishing engravings after their own paintings. He is best remembered for the satirical engravings that gave the name ‘Hogarthian’ to low-life scenes of the period.
English painter and engraver. He played a crucial part in establishing an English school of painting, both through the quality of his painting and through campaigns to improve the status of the artist in England. He also demonstrated that artists could become independent of wealthy patrons by publishing engravings after their own paintings. He is best remembered for the satirical engravings that gave the name ‘Hogarthian’ to low-life scenes of the period.
Genre Painting
During the 18th century, there was a tremendous amount of variety in the subject matter of genre painting, which usually represented scenes from everyday life. Such work often depicted the lives of commoners, including beggars, soldiers of fortune, and tradespeople. One of the most popular subjects was the depiction of women engaged in domestic tasks. These paintings were collectively known as bambocciate, or scenes of "trivial" subjects. An eye for exaggeration and the grotesque was often a characteristic of this style. Flemish and Dutch artists accounted for the majority of genre painters, and Austrian and German painters followed their lead. Many of these, working in Italy as well as in their native lands, were loosely connected with a group of bamboccianti painters who had converged on Rome during the previous century. Of the many practitioners of low-life and peasant scenes, certain painters stand out as exceptional; these include the Italian Giacomo Ceruti (c.1698-1767). who was principally active in Brescia. The English artist William Hogarth (1697-1764) dealt with similar subject matter, but his bitter and witty comments and his moral reflections on the society of his day place him in a different, more satirical artistic category.
Source: http://www.all-art.org/history294-16.html
Picture source: http://pintura.aut.org/SearchProducto?Produnum=50868
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


