Showing posts with label Impressionist period. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Impressionist period. Show all posts

August 24, 2012

Summer Art...Visual Chicken Soup for the Soul!


Fishing Boats on the Beach at Saintes-Maries
Vincent Van Gogh June 1888
Now and then I like to post about art because I think art, along with music and laughter, are chicken soup for the soul. And who can't use some chicken soup? So before summer turns to fall, some visual chicken soup for your viewing pleasure.

Summer Paintings from Impressionist Artists

Impressionism began in France in the mid-19th century. This art movement emphasized free flowing brushstrokes and use of light and color, as opposed to the traditional approach of using somber tones, and following more exacting lines and contours. I think Impressionist art has a dreamy quality and many of my favorite paintings are from this period.
"Merely think, here is a little square of blue, here an oblong of pink, here a streak of yellow, and paint it just as it looks to you." ~Claude Monet
Garden at Sainte-Adresse
Claude Monet 1867

Monet painted this colorful, lively image of people enjoying a lovely day by the water while spending a summer at the resort town of Sainte-Adresse in France. In the foreground, we see Monet’s father, Adolphe, and his cousin, Sophie, looking out toward the sea. His cousin, Jeanne, and her father, Dr. Adolphe Lecadre are at the fence.

Bathers at La Grenouillère
Claude Monet 1869
In this painting depicting the working class French resort at La Grenouillère on the Seine River, Monet used broader, more flowing brushstrokes than his earlier work at Sainte-Adresse. He was friends with Pierre-Auguste Renoir and they worked side-by-side during this period.



La Grenouillère
Pierre-Auguste Renoir 1869
Monet and Renoir were friends and both painted similar scenes at this French resort in the summer of 1869. Renoir used tighter brushstrokes and a more refined style portraying the figures in the scene, especially in such details as the clothing. Looks like a lovely place to spend the summer.

Garden in Rue Carcel
Paul Gauguin 1881

Paul Gauguin, a friend of Van Gogh, is best known for his colorful paintings of French Polynesia after he left France and moved to Tahiti. But I found this peaceful scene of his family enjoying a summer day at the Garden in Rue Carcel from his Paris collection. 

"Painting as it is now, promises to become more subtlemore like music and less like sculptureand above all, it promises color." ~Vincent Van Gogh (in a letter to his brother, Theo)
Farmhouse in Provence
Vincent Van Gogh 1888
Painted at the height of Van Gogh’s career, the vivid colors in Farmhouse in Provence portray the bright summer sun and blooming flowers amid the scorching heat in the beautiful countryside of southern France.

Couples in the Voyer d'Argenson Park at Asnières
Vincent Van Gogh 1887
Among the first paintings Van Gogh exhibited in Paris, he applied a technique of small dots and expressive dashes of color, giving the painting an almost woven fabric texture. One can only imagine how Vincent, ever the romantic, wistfully observed the couples as he painted them, perhaps dreaming of walking along with a sweetheart one day. Sad it was not to be but by channeling that passion through art, he created stunning paintings! 

Roses Trémières
Berthe Morisot 1884

Considered the "Grande Dame" of the French Impressionist art movement, Berthe Morisot was one of the leading female Impressionist artists, along with American painter, Mary Cassatt. This painting of roses and hollyhocks in a garden used thick yet delicate brushstrokes giving the flowers the impression of swaying in the summer breeze.

Hanging Laundry Out to Dry on a Summer Day
Berthe Morisot 1875
Using a subtle palette of colors, delicate brushstrokes and creative splashes of light, Berthe Morisot  took the oh, so boring task of hanging out the laundry and made it an interesting subject of art. The painting received high praise in art circles and was considered one of her best early works. I love that she made such a common chore the focus of her canvas. (Who paints laundry?! Really, I think it's great!) And those whites are so crisp and bright! 

Children Playing on the Beach
Mary Cassatt 1864
Acclaimed American Impressionist painter, Mary Cassatt, began studying painting at the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts when she was 15. At the age of 22, she traveled to Paris to study under such masters as Edgar Degas. In Children Playing on the Beach, she captures the cherubic innocence and intent focus of children playing in the sand unaware of the world around them. I especially love the way she painted the child's hands clumsily holding onto the shovel the way young children often do.

Summertime
Mary Cassatt 1894
Mary Cassatt created this painting in the summer of 1894 while staying at a cottage in the Paris countryside. Her painting was praised for its flowing brushstrokes and deft use of light and color. The young woman and child are gazing into the rippling water and the image easily depicts a carefree summer day. 

Summer of 1909
Frank Weston Benson
Famous for his realistic portraits, American Impressionist artist, Frank Weston Benson, used colorful brushstrokes and luminous light to create his paintings. His favorite models were his family and friends. In Summer of 1909, the artist painted his three daughters and their friend at the family's summer house in Maine. I particularly like the way he painted the willowy white summer dresses, complimenting the fluffy white clouds and contrasting with the bright blue sky. Like the hat in the foreground too. Easy to see why his artwork was so popular.

Hope you enjoyed the art...visual chicken soup for the soup!

©2012 JerseyLil’s 2 Cents
Images are in public domain via WikiPaintings and Wikipedia sources.

April 3, 2012

159 Candles for that Birthday Cake!


Van Gogh Self Portrait

March 30th was Vincent Van Gogh’s 159th birthday. Happy (belated) birthday, Vincent! Today Van Gogh is the most famous artist of the Impressionist period, his paintings sell for millions at auction, but he died alone and penniless in Arles, France in 1890 at age 37. But did he, in fact, kill himself as has always been the theory? Perhaps not.

Bedroom in Arles
A new book published in Oct 2011, "Van Gogh, The Life," presents an intriguing counter theory that Van Gogh did not kill himself but was accidentally murdered by a teenage French punk visiting the scenic town of Arles with his friends, who thought it great sport to tease the eccentric painter. The teenager was playing with a gun, teasingly pointing it at Van Gogh, then bang...Van Gogh was fatally shot and the kid fled the scene! Fascinating, huh?

Still Life with Sunflowers
This sensational theory is not just wishful thinking (or a ploy for book sales and a movie deal!). The authors, Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith, previous Pulitzer Prize winners for a biography they wrote on the painter, Jackson Pollack, spent years researching Van Gogh. They uncovered notes by the physician treating Van Gogh suggesting that the fatal wound could not have been self-inflicted, and references to the teenagers (sons of well-to-do parents...hmm...) visiting the town and harassing Van Gogh as he painted. And here's a fact not widely known: although Van Gogh's gunshot wound was thought to be self-inflicted, no gun was ever found near his body. What, was Van Gogh a magician as well as an artist?! How does someone fatally shoot himself and then lose the gun? Smells fishy to me.  
Wheatfield with Crows
I won't do an entire book review here but check it out if you're interested. At 953 pages (whew, heavy reading!), the book covers Van Gogh's life, not just his death. It has excerpts from letters he wrote and lovely color photos. And really, how can you have a book on Van Gogh without lots of color?! 
The Night Cafe

Although Vincent Van Gogh never made a dime in his life, and he may or may not have actually killed himself in a moment of tortured passion, he sure left us some beautiful paintings!
Seems that many talented artists are right on the edge of sanity/insanity. Perhaps that’s what makes them so brilliant.
Wheatfield with Cypresses
Now I understand what you tried to say to me
How you suffered for your sanity, how you tried to set them free
They would not listen they did not know how,
Perhaps they'll listen now.” ~Vincent (Starry Starry Night) by Don McLean

Starry Night
Vincent, I understand!

Video of Don McLean’s song with a slideshow of Van Gogh’s work done for patients at Mississippi State Hospital. Complied by artist Anthony DiFatta, who teaches art to adults suffering from mental illness. 


Dedicated to Mom.
©2012 JerseyLil’s 2 cents.