Friday 29 June 2012

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Designs
Leather Colour

Albert Marquet, Paris Under Snow, 1905-06


This view of Notre Dame cathedral and the bridge of Saint-Michel was probably captured from Albert Marquet’s studio. He painted similar scenes tirelessly, from various angles and during different times of day and different seasons, creating diverse moods according to the effects of light. Though Marquet’s use of broad, simplified forms is typically Fauve, his use of colour is more restrained, as is clearly evident in this painting. He has captured the gloomy atmosphere of a dull winter day with sombre colours painted in muted tones. Note how the human beings and horses are represented by simple and gestural brushstrokes to convey form and movement.


Albert Marquet, Posters at Trouville, 1906


We visited Trouville, Normandy last summer.

Amedeo Modigliani, Portrait of Maude Abrantes


Love his portraits...

Albert Marquet, St. Raphael, the Terrace, n.d.


Lovely mood....

John James Audubon, Two Cats Fighting, 1826


Mr Bingley and Henry are now the best of friends!

Cataloguing for life


Greetings!

Yesterday, Dennis R. of Aspen, Colorado wrote, "I read with interest your letter on why you shouldn't put dates on paintings. What are your thoughts about catalog numbers on paintings? Assuming an artist uses some sort of sequential system, an astute observer may be able to guesstimate the date. Or is this taking things too far?"

Thanks, Dennis. Several times in my life I've started cataloguing and failed. I once got as high as 75 before zoning-out. If I had to do it all over again I'd have had an early lobotomy and given #1 to my first parent-noted drawing at age four and carried through to this morning's effort at #23,865 (just guessing). Fact is, I was absent from class the day they covered sequential systems. You may have better luck.

In my studio at least, an insider-accessible, comprehensive cataloguing system would be worth a boxcar of gold bricks. I can see an entry now:

#1678, Whistler Mountain, Oil/C, 16"x 20", Jan 17, 1978, "It was a dark and stormy night and the ski-hill was a ribbon of ice. Sara hit a mogul and broke her leg."

But alas, unpleasant associations like this will forever be difficult to pinpoint. Recently, an old painting came in for cleaning and I noted #43 in my writing on the back. I would have loved to tell the owner something about it, but I've lost the catalogue.

Personally, I like the idea of an old fashioned journal--a sort of Pepys' Diary with cryptic tweetlets and insider asides. ("Particularly bad day for bears," kind of thing.) Just out of interest, I'd also like to know the time I started and the time I finished. Oh, and the amount of paint I used. I guess the main argument against keeping track is the possibility it may turn perfectly lovely chaos into bookkeeping. 
  
I took a chance and asked Joan Morris who works with Mark Zuckerberg if they might come up with an app just for us, but they were all too busy watching the stock.
  
Dennis, don't do what I did, do what I say. Get yourself a big handsome book and start cataloguing and notating everything you do. It's too late for me. I'd look even more stupid starting at #23,866.
  
Best regards,

Robert

PS: "Chaos breeds life when order breeds habit." (Henry Brooks Adams)

Esoterica: There are 7,650,000 Google destinations when you type in "computerized cataloguing systems." I've heard of artists using commercial and library applications like "Catalog Builder" and "E-catalog." A long-time standard is "GallerySoft," designed specifically for art galleries to keep track of inventory, but in use by a few artists. Some catalogue systems have search capabilities. Type in "broken leg" and in my case I would have been whisked to the unfortunate memories associated with #1678. We're now in the 21st Century, folks. Ya gotta love this stuff.


Current Clickback: "What photography isn't" looks at digital photography and painting. Your comments will be appreciated.

Read this letter online and share your thoughts on keeping a catalogue of your work. Live comments are welcome. Direct, illustratable comments can be made at rgenn@saraphina.com

The Art Show Calendar: If you or your group has a show coming up, put an illustrated announcement on The Painter's Keys site. The longer it's up, the more people will see it. Your announcement will be shown until the last day of your show.

The Workshop Calendar: Here is a selection of workshops and seminars laid out in chronological order that will stimulate, teach, mentor, take you to foreign lands or just down the street. Many of these workshops are recommended by Robert and friends. Incidentally, if you are planning a workshop and have photos of happy people working, feel free to send them to us and we'll include a selection in the workshops feature at no extra charge.

The Painter's Post: Every day new material is going into this feature. Links to art info, ideas, inspiration and all kinds of creative fun can be found in this online arts aggregator.

If a friend is trying to subscribe to the Twice-Weekly Letter via Constant Contact, please let her or him know that confirmation is required and to reply to Constant Contact's confirmation email.

You can also follow Robert's valuable insights and see further feedback on Facebook and Twitter

Dennis R. is at dennis@aspenweaver.com

Featured Responses: Alternative to the instant Live Comments, Featured Responses are illustrated and edited for content. If you would like to submit your own for possible inclusion, please do so. Just click 'reply' on this letter or write to rgenn@saraphina.com

Yes, please go ahead and forward this letter to a friend. This does not mean that they will automatically be subscribed to the Twice-Weekly Letter. They have to do it voluntarily and can find out about it by going to The Painter's Keys website.
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(c) Copyright 2012 Robert Genn. If you wish to copy this material to other publications or mail lists, please ask for permission by writingrgenn@saraphina.com. Thanks for your friendship. 

Tuesday 26 June 2012

Frida Kahlo in a hospital bed, drawing on her cast with the help of a mirror, 1951.


Frederic Edwin Church, Twilight in the Wilderness, 1860


Incredible colour!

Amedeo Modigliani, Portrait of Madame Kisling


What digital photography isn't


Greetings!

Several artists have written to suggest that the massive growth of digital photography might be de-popularizing fine art. While reports of the decline of painting are suspect, protestors have a point. "Digital photography," said one writer, "is using up everyone's creative energy."

The stats are impressive. Last year, one billion mobile phones with cameras were sold around the world. One third of the world's population now owns a digital camera. Facebook alone reports 300 million uploaded photos per day. The recent Queen's Diamond Jubilee resulted in the production of more than 1.3 billion photos. Fact is, people are snapping at unprecedented rates and not taking much time to look and see. "The medium has eclipsed the moment," says journalist Erin Anderssen. Unlike the scrapbooks of old, the tsunami of imagery remains, for the most part, ephemeral. Its commonality contrasts with the relative scarcity of paintings.

Paintings are handmade. Unlike the old Kodak ad, "You press the button, we do the rest," paintings take hours or even days of contemplation and hard-won private process. The art of painting can be an "event" that is felt by the viewer. 

Paintings are distinguished by texture. Texture is a mark of integrity and passion that the digital world has not yet mastered. Fine artists abandon texture at their peril.

Paintings are tangible. They don't float in clouds. Paintings have pride of place in prestigious museums and noble homes. Framed for strategic walls and inner sanctums, paintings become the love-objects of our lives.

Paintings, like bars of gold, are assets of investment and hoarding; a treasury that may span generations. "Artists," noted Salvador Dali, "are manufacturers of wealth."

Unlike the grinning and contrived poses snapped at barbeques, or the mug-shot of an uncle whose schnoz is memorable but whose name you've forgotten, paintings are true connections with a singular and real person. That person is you. When people collect art, they also collect the maker.

Best regards,

Robert

PS: "The irony is that having a photo doesn't mean you're going to remember. It only feels like you have a vast repository of memories. A number of photos prompt a certain kind of forgetting." (Martin Hand, sociologist, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada--author of "Ubiquitous Photography")

Esoterica: Paintings can convey the slowing down, the trance and miracle of human life. Collectors love this understanding. As a perpetrator of both the reality and the illusion, it's lovely for you too. Recently, one of my staunchest collectors had me to his home as a guest, along with many others. While admiring the human scenery, controlling my desire to distantly snap digitals of some of the more rococo faces, I overheard our host confide to another guest, "I've actually got the best work he ever did. He did this one while freezing in a tent at ten thousand feet." While the guy was mildly wrong on both counts, I couldn't help being impressed with the brilliance of our profession.


Current Clickback: "Your easel, your altar" looks at how we feel standing or sitting before our easels. Your comments will be appreciated.
  
Read this letter online and share your thoughts about digital photography and painting. Live comments are welcome. Direct, illustratable comments can be made at rgenn@saraphina.com
  
The Art Show Calendar: If you or your group has a show coming up, put an illustrated announcement on The Painter's Keys site. The longer it's up, the more people will see it. Your announcement will be shown until the last day of your show.
  
The Workshop Calendar: Here is a selection of workshops and seminars laid out in chronological order that will stimulate, teach, mentor, take you to foreign lands or just down the street. Many of these workshops are recommended by Robert and friends. Incidentally, if you are planning a workshop and have photos of happy people working, feel free to send them to us and we'll include a selection in the workshops feature at no extra charge.
  
The Painter's Post: Every day new material is going into this feature. Links to art info, ideas, inspiration and all kinds of creative fun can be found in this online arts aggregator.
  
If a friend is trying to subscribe to the Twice-Weekly Letter via Constant Contact, please let her or him know that confirmation is required and to reply to Constant Contact's confirmation email.
  
You can also follow Robert's valuable insights and see further feedback on Facebook and Twitter
  
Featured Responses: Alternative to the instant Live Comments, Featured Responses are illustrated and edited for content. If you would like to submit your own for possible inclusion, please do so. Just click 'reply' on this letter or write to rgenn@saraphina.com

Monday 25 June 2012

From time to time I am reminded of my journey with unhealthy thinking patterns.  It seems we have to spend a lot of time re programming ourselves and deleting the old tapes that run amok sometimes in our heads to claim some happiness in this world.  I have learned a thing or two from our cat, Mr. Bingley, a creature of 'pure being'.  He just eats, sleeps, grooms and hunts for amusement all day.  Of course he has what I presume is little self-awareness and no sense of his own mortality...and does not ask himself existential questions, so he has little need for worry or anxiety.  


I am reminded of the Scripture passage... 

Do Not Worry

25 “Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? 26 Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? 27 Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life[a]?


28 “And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. 29 Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these. 30 If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith? 31 So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ 32 For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. 33 But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. 34 Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own."



Matthew 6:25-34

New International Version (NIV)


It seems that Mr. Bingley can show me a thing or two about living....