Sunday, 16 December 2012

Concept [2]


Many artists may have seen Cubism as a revolutionary visual language, since the paintings are very descriptive. It would be also interesting to create a poster representing the revolutionary art movement. A revolution, by itself is a great change in the society; therefore transformation. Otherwise it should present the image of a historic revolution, which took place at the same time when Cubism was born. The idea was certainly inspired from the fine-art inspired adverts and works related to the same team. I would use Cezanne’s techniques and then shift to Cubism, including some portraiture influenced from Picasso. I will use some paintings of Picasso which I mentioned before to help create these portraits. The text of the poster should be placed on, like a collage with newspaper text. The joiner which I composed shown in the previous blog post, will certainly help me in the development of such idea.  These images are some early ideas about how I should handle this concept.


The layout of the poster.

A contour drawing of a portrait inspired form Picasso.

Concept [1]



As part of the research to help me create my final concept, I conducted research in the 3 categories; Art, Design and Film. The final visual product concept, can take various forms such as dummy/pilot/poster/sketch and more.  I’m not sure in what form I would like to represent my ideas yet but I have two different ideas that can fit for the final concept. The first idea is to portray the transformation from Post-Impressionism to Cubism. Pablo Picasso, the leader of the Cubist period refers to Cezanne as the “the father of us all”. Having said that, I would rely on these two artists to give me the help I need to finish such concept. In the concept, I also would like to make a reference to the film which I reviewed ‘The four feathers’ and also the transformation of Picasso’s portraiture. I would most definitely use red as the main colour, since it is suggesting the film ‘The four feathers’. 


The poster shown here created by Andrew Nawroski, shows a contribution to two different periods, Cubism because of its collage and how the text is placed in the poster. In the middle, the image presents Vincent Van Gogh, a Post-Impressionist artist.

Living Parision Poster of Van Gogh Aged 13 [Number 8.7 Billion].




References:

Nawroski Andrew, 2011. Living Parisian Poster of Van Gogh Aged 13 [Number 8.7 Billion], [blog] 11 April.
Available at:- <http://nawroski.wordpress.com/2011/04/09/living-parisian-poster-of-van-gogh-aged-13-number-8-7-billion/> [Accessed on 16 December 2012].

Wednesday, 12 December 2012

Developing Ideas


Cubism, Picasso and other designs inspired from Cubism stimulated me to start developing my thoughts and ideas for the final concept. One can look at the Cubist period from various angles, since it challenged and improved a lot of visions in the 20th century. 

“Artists are in some sense neurologists, studying the brain with techniques that are unique to them”
                                           Semir Zeki



Original Photo
David Hockney inspired me to create an image holding various Cubist techniques in it. I took an image from a scene in the film ‘The Four Feather’, in which Heath Ledger appears. Using the formal techniques in Cubism I created an abstract structure of this photograph. I simply distorted the photo by cutting down the image to simple squares. When I was arranging these cuttings, I also duplicated a few parts to place different views in the photo, as Hockney did in the work portraying his mother. One could instantly notice this from the face.  The geometric shapes such as cubes and angles are very visible, although I didn't use any bold lines. I wanted the weapon to be more exposed in the photograph therefore I made it pointing to the center of the photo and it looks as if the image has been distorted due to this weapon. Most of the paintings during the Analytical part of Cubism had a limited colour palette, but different shades throughout. I did the same to my work by sorting the opacity of the squares.


All in all, it was an enjoyable experience creating such work, which will help me develop my final concept which will be related to Cubism.





References:-

PhotoGavin, 2009. Mosaic, montage or joiner effect from one photo. [video online]
Available at: <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QVxlFtrHPTM> [accessed on 11 December 2012].

Original Photo

Jaap Buitendijk, 2002. The Four Feathers. [photograph]
Available at: <http://www.imdb.com/media/rm60922112/tt0240510> [accessed on 11 December 2012].

Picasso's Portraiture; Transformation


Pablo Picasso, who is celebrated as perhaps to be the greatest artist of the 20th century, sought to find various ways how to represent the human face. He created most of his portraiture by arranging shapes and colours. The transformation found in his portraits through the latest half of the 20th century is impeccable. Most of them are intimate posters representing relatives, friends, fellow workers and his passion to the women he loved.
Image 1

He represented the same sitter in various styles ranging from African art to Cubism to Surrealism. Starting from his earliest works in 1905, when he painted ‘The portrait of Gertrude Stein’ ( Image 1) . Their friendship was of a great importance to him. This classical portrait shows Gertrude sitting in a brown velvet blouse in a dark, strange setting. She posed for this portrait for about 90 times in the same position and it is also known that he had her head repainted for 3 times. Looking at the head and the rest of the body separately, one can see that the head is very contrasting, using masses of colour where the facial features are very expressive (jaw lines). Her face looks like a mask; this work can be seen as an inspiration to his later works in the Cubist style.


Image 2





Moving on to Picasso’s love life, the Russian ballerina Olga was his first wife and she full filled his works from 1917 to 1920. The painting ‘Woman in an Armchair’ (1920; Image 2), shows the connection between the Cubist style & Neo-Classical These Neo-Classical paintings were then used for his finished Cubist works. I mostly like the line found in his painting which guides us and also the use of colour palette.








Image 3


When their marriage started deteriorating, her portraits where then more harsh, he even transformed Olga’s head into a skull in the ‘Seated Bather’ (1930; Image 3). Olga represented as an insect with different human and animal forms. In his new relationship with Marie-Therese Walter, he created a twin painting named ‘Bather with beach ball’ (1932; Image 4). The use of colour is less harsh, with a rounder and softer figure, which seems weightless. Although they have the same background, the transformation in the presentation of the figure between one other is huge.





Image 4





In the 1930’s, Picasso exploited sexuality. Most of his erotic paintings include Marie Theresa in them, done in the 1930’s. ‘Girl before a Mirror’ ( Image 5), has to be one of my favourite art pieces by Picasso. It shows a woman holding a mirror within which she is reflected in her dead body. It represents the concerns of the woman depicted with her own inner self. Her body is not portraying beauty, since Picasso wants to show that perception changes everything.

Image 5

When Dora Maar took place in Picasso’s life, he started involving her in his passion to portraiture. He depicted Marie-Therese with a sentimental expression, with her blue eyes dominating her curvy face. Dora’s portraits show a lot of energy and passion, with the use of bold colours and exaggerated face make-up.  Most of Dora’s portraits display a lot of emotion due to the war. He also referred to her as the ‘weeping woman’. The painting ‘Weeping Woman’ (1937; Image 6) shows a lot of pain. Half of her face is in white bones, which the corrosive tears made it reveal.

Personal Comments


Image 6
The transformation found in these 40 years of Picasso’s Portraiture is huge.  Through these portraits, one can read Picasso’s life, his troubles and pleasures expressed in colour on a canvas. In his earliest works he used dark colours, but later paintings became more vivid and bold. The Figures became more abstracted, using simplified forms; geometric and curvy ones. In the 20’s he veiled all of his paintings, but Marie- Therese seemed to be an inspiration to be more sexual and start painting the nudes (1930’s).  Although the Bather’s paintings are said to be twins, in the ‘Seated Bather’ he represented the body with bones, while the other one with balloons. In the ‘Girl before a mirror’, I think that he is trying to show 2 different parts of her, both day-self and night-self, her tranquility and her vitality, showing also the change from an innocent girl to a woman aware of her sexuality. The hand is representing unity, trying to unite the different selves. Moving on to Dora Maar’s portraits which are more conflicting then the others, showing a lot of emotion but he using bold colours.




References


MOMA, 1996. Picasso and Portraiture: Representation and Transformation. [online]
Available at: <http://www.moma.org/docs/press_archives/7424/releases/MOMA_1996_0019_19.pdf?2010> [accessed on 11 December 2012].

Art Net, 2012. The Muses are Women: Picasso at the Museum of Modern Art by Berta Sichel. [online]
Available at: <http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/features/sichel/sichel5-31-96.asp> [accessed on 11 December 2012].

JSTOR, 2002. In the name of Picasso. [online]
Available at: <http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/778371uid=3738632&uid=2&uid=4&sid=21101553596817> [accessed on 12 December 2012].

Timothy Hilton, 1976. Picasso. Thames and Hudson, Pgs 220-225.


Images

Image 1:- Picasso, 1905. Portrait of Gertrude Stein. [image online]
Available at: <http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/210008443> [accessed on 11 December 2012].


Image 2:- Picasso, 1920. Woman in an armchair. [image online]
Available at: <http://www.wikipaintings.org/en/pablo-picasso/woman-sitting-in-an-armchair-1920> 
[accessed on 11 December 2012].



Image 3:- Picasso, 1930. Seated Bather. [image online]
Available at: <http://www.moma.org/collection/object.php?object_id=78721> [accessed on  11 December 2012].

Image 4:- Picasso, 1932. Bather with Beach Ball. [image online]
Available at: <http://www.moma.org/collection/object.php?object_id=80262> [accessed on 11 December 2012]



Image 5:- Picasso, 1932. Girl before a mirror. [image online]
Available at: <http://www.moma.org/collection/object.php?object_id=78311>  [accessed on  12 December 2012].


Image 6:-  Picasso, 1937. Weeping Woman. [image online]
Available at: <http://www.inminds.com/weeping-woman-picasso-1937.html> [accessed on 12 December 2012].



Thursday, 6 December 2012

Cubism; a source of inspiration


Cubism paved the way to modern art. They were the group of artists that rejected the traditional techniques and created illusions. I've come across some artists work inspired from Cubism; from collages to fine art inspired adverts.
                                                                                                   

Mazda,
Mazda Sposorship of Picasso Exhibition,
2006
Lipton, Lipton Yellow Label Tea, 1998


A few years ago, the automobile company Mazda connected its product with the artworks of Pablo Picasso. The line at the bottom of the advert says “Be prepared to see everything differently after visiting the Picasso exhibition”. There is no reference to text, the imagination through these messages make it clear enough for one to understand. As the cubists did; placing different viewpoints in one composition, this advert seems to represent the same idea. In my opinion, it is a great ad, but it looks very simple, yet more viewpoints should have been added to this advert. An interesting print advert fro Lipton Yellow Label Tea was also inspired from Picasso. It is in a form of a painting with the brands logo distorted using a limited colour palette. Honestly, I think that Cubism art and the way the advert was presented worked out great together.




David Murray, an illustrator and designer uses the cubist style to create a versatile range of prints of different brews. In this image, we can see the beer can of Lowenbrau. The logo isn't distorted very much and unlike the cubists, there is a lot of white in the composition. The simplification of the can is like someone encroached it.


David Hockney 'Mother I, Yorkshire Moors, August 1985 No.1' 1985


 Picasso’s portrait ‘Portrait of Ambroise Vollard’, motivated Hockney when creating ‘Mother I, Yorkshire Moors, August 1985 No.1’. Both portraits are fractured into different viewpoints. Picasso uses a lot of geometric planes while Hockney places different views in a way that makes her face look as if she was in front of us. The main difference between the two portraits must be the colour palette. Hockney’s composition is amusing; his work is very appealing to me. The different tones and forms cut to create this work make it unique. I mostly like his work because of the space found in his work. Space is guiding us through his work. 
                                                          

Another work which also struck me has to be the grid-like compositions were he’s joining Polaroid photos of different body gestures or parts in the same composition. His joiners are images made out of 1000s of different photographs, another influence from the Cubism.

   
David Hockney 'Pearblossom Highway, 11th to 18th April 1986 No.2'


Cubism may have left a great influence on such artists, which helped them create modern artworks which left a huge impact. I simply like these transformations because of their simplifications but also because of the imagination running through these works.



References:-


AdMe Group, 2004. "PICASSO" Print Ad for Lipton Yellow Label Tea by JWT Russia [online]
Available at:- http://www.coloribus.com/adsarchive/prints/lipton-yellow-label-tea-picasso-808605/ [Accessed on 5th December 2012]

PSFK, CUBISM-INSPIRED BEER PRINTS [online]
Available at:- http://www.psfk.com/2011/08/cubism-inspired-beer-prints.html [Accessed on 5th December 2012]

Jfkturner, The Delight of Seeings; Cubism, Joiners and The Multiple Viewpoint [online]
Available at:- http://thedelightsofseeing.blogspot.com/2011/03/cubism-joiners-and-multiple-viewpoint.html [Accessed on 5th December 2012]

Web Media Brands, Mazda: Picasso Exhibition [online]
Available at:- http://adsoftheworld.com/media/print/mazda_picasso_exhibition [Accessed on 5th December 2012]