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Category Archives: Art

Urban Scene

23 Sunday Nov 2014

Posted by pat in Art, Art Museums & Exhibitions, paintings, sketching, Uncategorized

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Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Gustave Caillebotte, oil painting, Paris Street;Rainy Day

When I first entered this particular gallery at the Art Institute of Chicago, the large painting across from the entrance made me smile. And then I sat down on the bench across from it to contemplate the gorgeous urban scene. The rainy day vista was a snapshot of a Paris long gone. And it was beautiful.

Image 1The museum had just finished a major restoration and cleaning of Paris Street; Rainy Day by the French artist Gustave Caillebotte. One of Caillebotte’s best known works, the 1877 painting depicts what was then known as Carrefour de Moscou, a road east of the Gare Saint-Lazare in north Paris, now called Place de Dublin.

Image 13When you first walk in to the room, the painting immediately grabs your attention.  The blue-gray walls push it off the wall, and you feel like you could actually enter the boulevard itself with madam and monsieur.

I used a lavender pink underlay to set the cool, soothing tones of the rainy streets before putting the strong, deeper blue layer on top.

IMG_1604I was afraid that when I put the actual blue-gray color of the gallery walls in, it would overwhelm the painting and the figures.

Image 1But, as is the case in the actual room, it works. And the cool underlying tones do push  through and the blue on the walls draws out the figures and their umbrellas in the painting.

Image 19I sat across from this picture for a long time, watching the people come into the room.  Like me, they were immediately snapped to attention by the charismatic figures on the Parisian street.

I loved these two women looking at the work, possibly a mother and daughter.  One is lining up her photos, while the other leans in to stare at the painting.

Image 2Their detachment from each other mirrors the isolation of the figures on the Paris street.  They seem to be together, and yet each is in their own world.

Maybe things have not changed so much.

“Urban Scene” oil on linen, 30 x 24″

Watching

10 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by pat in Art, Art Museums & Exhibitions, paintings, sketching, Uncategorized

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Art Institute Chicago, Munch, oil painting, pastel, The Girl By the Window

There is something about the way people view art in museum galleries that fascinates me.  Each person has their own way of circling and then approaching a piece. Some gaze, some study with great intensity. What are they trying to see? The content, the technique…?

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Some people dash by, and take a quick pic on their phone.  But others linger, like this couple who put their heads together and peered at this mesmerizing Edvard Munch pastel “The Girl by the Window” (1893) at the Art Institute Chicago for many long moments.

Image 14Munch’s piece is special.  The young woman in the painting is looking out her window. We are not sure at what but it is mysterious and hidden by the night.  Obscured by the art lovers is a dark shape which could be a chair, or another person looking at the girl in the lower right hand corner of Munch’s painting.

ImageOur viewers have taken its place to add to the complexity of watching going on. It is a piece that is many layered and takes a long time to view and try to figure out the whole scenario.  Our couple is trying.

“Watched”, oil on linen, 14 x 11″

Victory at the Louvre

05 Sunday Oct 2014

Posted by pat in Art, Art Museums & Exhibitions, paintings, sketching, Travel, Uncategorized

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Louvre, Winged Victory

It has been a long, hot and humid summer. Finally, I am happy to say, we are moving in to autumn.  For the last few months, I have been working in the studio on two canvases that I think of as companion pieces.  The inspiration for both was taken from my last visit to The Louvre in Paris and the most dramatic entrance to a museum wing ever…the steps leading up to the Winged Victory.

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The smaller of my two canvases (Wings 24 x 18″ in oil) is a close up of the torso and wings of the dramatic sculpture. The winged goddess of Victory, who stands on the prow of a ship, overlooked the Sanctuary of the Great Gods on the island of Samothrace.

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It was unearthed in 1863 on the small Aegean island. Nike (the goddess of Victory in Greek) is facing in to the wind which is blowing her garments against and behind her.  This was one of my favorite parts to paint.  To concentrate on the delicate folds cut from stone, was to admire the fantastic skill of a long gone artist.

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I loved doing this piece.  Revisiting another artists’ work in detail is one of the most challenging and enjoyable parts of this series of museum galleries in my “Cities” series.

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Accompanying this canvas is the 24 x 36″ canvas, Ascent. I worked back and forth between the two pieces using the same color palette for each.  Obviously Wings was more monochromatic, but it still felt at home with the palette of Ascent.

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The original statue can be dated back to the second century BC.  It is just as impressive today, centuries later, as you approach it up the massive stone staircase in the Louvre, as I imagine it was when approached in Hellenistic times.

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To me, it creates an almost church like approach for the masses of tourists entering the staircase.

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Each individual hurrying towards or away from the classical work cannot ignore it.

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The very theatrical approach allows the Winged Victory of Samothrace to dominate the entire scene. Every time I have seen it, I have been in awe.

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Studying van Gogh

17 Wednesday Sep 2014

Posted by pat in Art, Art Museums & Exhibitions, paintings, sketching, Uncategorized

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art museums, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Van Gogh

On a wintry morning at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, I went from gallery to gallery looking at art. I was looking at the people as much as the paintings.  I was on a mission to find a new subject or subjects for my own paintings.Image 2

I have recently been fascinated with museum visitors.  Generally speaking, they seem to be so intrigued and at peace with their surroundings.  It was so nice to see people happily disappear into the art in a room. Museums were a refuge.

In a small gallery in the contemporary section of the Metropolitan (gallery 826) there was a room of Van Gogh’s.

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I came across this small group of people looking intently at the “Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat”.  It was painted by van Gogh in 1887, on the reverse side of a painting he had done earlier “The Potato Peeler”.  He was known to do these studies back-to-back to save money on canvas. It was an educational exercise in technique for him to do these self-portraits.  He is quoted saying “I purposely bought a good enough mirror to work from myself, for want of a model.”

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This group of four seemed to be together, and spent a long time studying this one painting as others moved through the gallery.

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It was their only interest.  I found myself getting caught up in their observation, asking my own questions.  The group speaks for itself. The small painting is like a magnet. Art is a wonderful thing.  It can bring out the best of ourselves, even as just observers.

 

 

Overture: The Met

02 Tuesday Sep 2014

Posted by pat in Art, Art Museums & Exhibitions, paintings, sketching

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forsythia, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

The Metropolitan Museum of art has been a place I’ve returned to again and again over the years. I grew up on Long Island and escaped whenever possible in to the city. The Met, MOMA, Central Park…lucky girl. They all still feel like home.

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No matter how short the train ride from where I lived on the north shore to Penn Station, the anticipation would build to full, blown out excitement.

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I still feel that anticipation. And a visit last winter to the Metropolitan gave me the same feeling.  This time the trip was longer, and I took a plane rather than the train. It was absolutely frozen outside.  But inside it was golden. Huge boughs of forsythia were everywhere in the main lobby.

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The crowds shed their coats  and strolled under the yellow petals waiting for the day to begin.  It was like hearing an orchestra tune up before the concert starts.

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After plotting the course of the day throughout the museum and lingering for a few moments more under the spring flowers…

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finally they moved into the hallowed halls.

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What a perfect introduction to a magnificent museum.  This is “Overture: The Met” which I completed this summer.  It never gets old. The museum and painting in my studio are both wonderful.

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Poppies

29 Tuesday Jul 2014

Posted by pat in Art, Art Museums & Exhibitions, England, London, Uncategorized, United Kingdom

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Blood-Swept Lands and Seas of Red, Tower of London. Poppies, World War I

There is an incredible art installation going in at the dry moat of The Tower of London to commemorate the outbreak of the First World War in 1914 and the allied victims who fell in that global conflict.

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The ceramic artist who conceived the project is Paul Cummins, and the title of the piece is “Blood-Swept Lands and Seas of Red”.

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More than 800,000 ceramic poppies will be placed by over 8,000 volunteers from across the UK over the next three months with a formal beginning August 5th. The last of the ceramic blooms will be symbolically placed in the field on November 11, Armistice Day.

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The flowers will have a life even after the exhibition at The Tower. The poppies are actually being sold to the public with proceeds going to six service charities in the United Kingdom, including the Royal British Legion.

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The field of poppies will grow over the remainder of the summer and autumn and become massive–888,246 to be exact.  So many lives commemorated in such a visual way.

The Art Institute of Chicago

14 Saturday Jun 2014

Posted by pat in Art, Art Museums & Exhibitions, paintings

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Art Institute of Chicago

I’ve decided I am most definitely an urban animal.

After weeks of glorious nature as we travelled west through the most spectacular scenery known to man, I am in Chicago and in love with this big city. I go to a large Metropolis, and I feel like I am home again.

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Even though I have not been back in Chicago in decades, I felt comfortable and right at home.

We’ve done all the traditional tourist things, but yesterday I left My Beloved Brit to fend for himself walking along the lakeside marinas and spent literally an entire day at the stellar Art Institute of Chicago.

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Looking out from the Modern Wing of The Art Institute of Chicago

Not only is it a magnificent setting along the shores of Lake Michigan on the edge of Millennium Park…

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surrounded by beautiful gardens, architecture and monumental sculptures…

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But inside, it is grand and intimate at the same time.

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There are two sections to the museum.  I attacked the Modern Wing first and spent most of the morning observing the art, and of course with my interest in my own recent museum series of paintings, also observing the art lovers observing the art.

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This Modern Wing is not huge by New York standards, but the contemporary collection is wonderful.

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Pablo Picasso, Mother and Child

I saw works of Matisse that I was not even familiar with…and some that had been favorites of mine for my entire art-conscious life.

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Henri Matisse, Bathers by a River

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Henri Matisse, The Geranium

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Henri Matisse, Lorette with Cup of Coffee

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Henri Matisse, Woman before an Aquarium

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Henri Matisse, Apples

I stood before a David Hockney piece that I always thought was of modest size.  It is 83 7/8 x 120 inches and dominates the gallery. The detail that disappears in reproductions was exquisite.

David Hockney, American Collectors (Fred and Marcia Weisman)

David Hockney, American Collectors (Fred and Marcia Weisman)

detail

detail

There were so many favorites, from Alex Katz to Cy Twombly to Richter …

Alex Katz, Vincent and Tony

Alex Katz, Vincent and Tony

Gerhard Richter

Gerhard Richter, Mrs. Wolleh with children

I took the time to visit an exhibit of the Lower Level that a friend and Chicago resident mentioned to me as a must see.  The Thorne Miniature Rooms by Mrs. James Ward Thorne (of Montgomery Ward fame) were amazing in their scope.  There were dozens of them, each done with the most exquisite attention to detail.  Such variety of period and social order.  They were truly enchanting.  You could spend a day just viewing these.

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Finally after a short lunch break back on the streets of Chicago with MBB, I re-entered to the older classical wing, and headed for the Impressionist section.  I had recently read in the newspaper that they had just finished cleaning this striking canvas.

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Caillebotte, Paris Street; Rainy Day

It was bright and stunning, well worth the six month restoration effort. Turning a corner and going through a few more galleries I was in awe once again.

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Georges Seurat, A Sunday on La Grande Jatte

There were smaller gems I was not even aware of, like a Munch painting that was delicate and ethereal.  It almost looked like pastels, but it was done in oils.

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Edvard Munch, The Girl by the Window

That is the beauty of a museum you are not familiar with.  Around every corner is a stunning surprise.  Hopefully I will be back again to meet up with them as old friends.

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John Philip Simpson, The Captive Slave

Ansel Adams, The Grand Tetons and Lake McDonald

05 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by pat in Art, Uncategorized

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Ansel Adams, Glacier National Park, Grand Teton, Lake McDonald, Snake River

We’ve been driving cross-country for weeks now. The lack of posts has been due to this grand adventure.

We spent several days driving from the flat plains of South Dakota and Wyoming, covered with antelope and prairie dogs, to the edge of Grand Tetons National Park. The Grand Tetons are just south of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming and they are incredible.

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Me at the Snake River and Grand Tetons. Photo by My Beloved Brit.

I had remembered seeing a photograph by Ansel Adams years ago. The Tetons and the Snake River (1942) was taken at almost this exact same spot before I was born by the famous photographer I had always admired.

749px-Adams_The_Tetons_and_the_Snake_River

Ansel Adams, Grand Tetons and the Snake River

I realized that not only was I following in the footsteps of nature lovers and tourists of past generations, but also that I was following the same path of one of the most famous photographers of all times…Ansel Adams.

Days later, as we drive in to Glacier National Park on our way to Lake McDonald, I realized Adams had probably driven this same road over 50 years before.

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Evening McDonald Lake, Glacier National Park

We will be staying in one of the historic National Park properties on Lake McDonald to celebrate my birthday. There is no TV (usually a deal breaker for My Beloved Brit). But we hope to see what Adams saw.

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Evening McDonald Lake, Glacier National Park

Adams shot Lake McDonald many times.  Each time it was so different, and yet in many ways it never changes.

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Ansel Adams, Lake McDonald, Glacier National Park

And for all Glacier National Park’s panoramic renown, Adams still understood the glory in the details. A fern seemed to have a comparable presence.

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Ansel Adams, In Glacier National Park

I can’t wait to explore his famous scenes for myself.

Dylan Thomas

23 Friday May 2014

Posted by pat in sketching, Travel, Uncategorized, United Kingdom

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Dylan Thomas, Laugharne, Wales

This year is the centenary year of the poet Dylan Thomas’s birth.  The Welsh poet lived his last 4 years in Laugharne, Wales before he died in 1953 at the young age of 37. The author of “Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night”, the work he was probably most known for, walked the coastal paths of Wales often in his lifetime. He was also a fairly good amateur painter.

Paths follow the coastline in Wales.

Paths follow the coastline in Wales.

Last summer we visited this part of Wales, and I walked the coastal paths that Thomas so eloquently wrote about.  His themes of life vs. death, our desire to stop time, and nature as an expression of our internal world all are vividly evident in this dramatic countryside.

"Coastal Path", pastel drawing by me from  my walk in Wales

“Coastal Path”, pastel drawing by me from my walk in Wales

I tend to have a cheerier view of Wales (and life) than he did.  The sunny lanes and cool breezes off the sea were invigorating and delightful for a fair weather traveler.

Entering Wales.

Entering Wales.

But the isolated area must have given Thomas many hours of deep reflection about our desire to slow the progression of time, and contemplation of the idyllic vs. reality.

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Wales may just be the place to have these monumental conversations with ourselves.

 

Monet, Gallery Nine and MOMA

17 Saturday May 2014

Posted by pat in Art, Art Museums & Exhibitions, paintings, sketching, Uncategorized

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MOMA, Monet

The gallery paintings I have been doing this spring all came from my trip to NYC in the depth of the February winter.  It was soooo cold.

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But when I entered the lobby of the Museum of Modern Art, everything was warm and cozy.  Just fine for a day of walking through the galleries and searching for that perfect moment.

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I have spent the last month or so working on a new painting that came from this trip to MOMA in February.

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Gallery 9 is always a crowd pleaser, and I love it too.

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It is not just the spectacular Monet’s in the room (Agapanthus on the back wall, and Water Lilies stretching the entire length of the room).

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It is like entering a sacred space…quiet and reflective.

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But, in addition, the floor to ceiling window at the end of the room with its shadowed view of a New York City Street just seems to accent the serenity of the gallery.

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The scene is stunning, and people enter with a reverence reserved for a very special place of contemplation and renewal.  It is hushed and dim in the room, no matter how many people drift along the edges, or finally settle on one of the long black benches to contemplate this tableaux.

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Always someone goes over to the window to stare out at the street.  But soon returns to see Monet’s masterpieces. I was going through some of my art books this afternoon as I often do when contemplating new work, and came across this image in one of my David Hockney books. It’s an early picture of his, but it reminded me in some ways of these paintings I have been working on this year of art and art lovers.

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In this piece I am working on now, I want the rhythm of the people moving through the room to be the dominant view, but the viewer to be very aware of a strong source of light coming from the outside world.

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It is interesting to me that there is the same intense meditation whether looking out the window, or staring into the drifts of paint on canvas. I checked that the figures read dominantly in gray tones.

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The strong diagonal of viewers brings you into the room to the various objects of interest and emphasizes the pattern of light and shadow on the floor, and on the two paintings.

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People react with awe to the beauty. This is Gallery 9, Adagio.

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