Three different attempts to figure out just how far to go. |
Tuesday, December 26, 2023
THE END OF 2023
Tuesday, December 19, 2023
A TRIP TO THE SOCIETY OF ILLUSTRATORS
Every time I visit Manhattan I make a beeline for the Society of Illustrators which, pound for pound, remains one of the most interesting galleries to visit in the city. Many pictures there are not to my taste, but I never fail to learn from and be inspired by their varied assortment of art on display.
Here are some particularly excellent images I want to point out to the world:
This huge, juicy watercolor by the talented Bill Joyce reminded me that I don't revisit his work nearly enough. Up close the painting just glows in ways that printed books-- or your computer monitor-- can't capture.
You want those figures drawn from above? Yeah, Juhasz can do that too. |
How would that shadow work from a different angle? Under control. |
Another extreme perspective: a knife's eye view of the situation. |
In a different vein, an exhibit of children's book illustrations displays, among others, the joyful work of Christian Robinson. His inventive designs are always refreshing to the eye. He is, in my view, this generation's successor to the greatest designer/illustrators, such as the Provensens.
And for one more example in a different category, kudos to whoever at the Society figured out that this mask by illustrator Wladislaw Benda needed to be lit from below, with a red background.
Saturday, December 02, 2023
ARTISTS IN LOVE, part 23
After last week's arguments over politics and war, we are overdue for another report on the curious doings at the intersection of art and love:
Norman Lindsay and Rose Soady |
Artist Norman Lindsay said that he usually began his complex pictures by drawing a single female form, then built the rest of his composition around that central image. Starting in 1902, the central figure in Lindsay's life was his favorite model (and later wife) Rose Soady.
Sketch of Rose, 1905 |
The partition was only thin wood, which made entry from room to room easy-- just by cutting a trap door. A saw and two hinges were all that was necessary for the job. It was cut out just above floor level and the drawing table placed against the trapdoor; a chair, a mat, and a scatter of papers and books made it look just right to callers.
A country that fails to understand that the moral value of Art has nothing to do with the ethics of suburban back parlours is not worthy of being given an art....[N]ot one specimen of the Moral Lion who is at present roaring at my work has the faintest perception of its moral intention, or could, in a single instance, explain the meaning of one of the works he is making such a fuss about.