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Thread started 11/19/08 1:00am

HamsterHuey

Your Favourite Art Piece!

Be it a painting, a statue, an installation, a building or whatever!
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Reply #1 posted 11/19/08 1:01am

HamsterHuey

Here's one of mine;

View Of Delt by Johannes Vermeer, 1659-60



Signature: Signed with monogram, below left on the boat.

Provenance: This, the most famous painting by Vermeer, was part of the Amsterdam sale of 1696, no. 31: "The town of Delft in perspective, to be seen from the south, by J. van der Meer of Delft; fl 200." Sale S. J. Sinistra et al., Amsterdam; 1822, no. 112. For F 2,900 to de Vries. Purchased by the state of the Netherlands.

Topographic views of cities had become a tradition by the time Vermeer painted his famous canvas. Hendrik Vroom was the author of two such works depicting Delft, but they are more archaic because they followed the traditional panoramic approach that we remember from the two cityscapes by Hercules Seghers at the Berlin museum. The latter artist was one of the first to make use of the inverted Galilean telescope to transcribe the preliminary prints and their proportions (more than twice as high as wide) into the more conventional format of his paintings.

Vermeer executed his View of Delft on the spot, but the optical instrument pointed toward the city and providing the artist with the aspect translated onto canvas, which we admire for its conciseness and special structure, was not the camera obscura but the inverted telescope. It is only the latter that condenses the panoramic view of a given sector, diminishes the figures of the foreground to a smaller than normal magnification, emphasizes the foreground as we see it in the picture, and by the same token makes the remainder of the composition recede into space. The image thus obtained provides us with optical effects that, without being unique in Dutch seventeenth-century painting, as often claimed, convey a cityscape that is united in the composition and enveloped atmospherically into glowing light.

We admire the town, but it is not a profile view of a township, but a painting, an idealized representation of Delft, with its main characteristics simplified and then cast into the framework of a harbour mirroring selected reflections in the water, and a rich, full sky with magnificent cloud formations looming over it. This is chronologically the last painting by Vermeer that was executed in rich, full pigmentation, with colour accents put in with a fully loaded brush. The artist outdid himself in a rendition of his hometown, which stands as a truly great interpretation of nature.
[Edited 11/19/08 1:02am]
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Reply #2 posted 11/19/08 1:02am

HamsterHuey

I am going to look at this painting tomorrow, I think. I feel like going out.
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Reply #3 posted 11/19/08 1:16am

Serious

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I don't feel paintings, statues, installations and art like that boxed. Don't know why, but it does very little for me. When I am at a vernissage I feel like a complete fool lol. I have been to a Van Gogh exhibition this week and I couldn't believe how packed the place was. For me it was rather boring to look at the pictures boxed.
With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #4 posted 11/19/08 1:18am

HamsterHuey

Serious said:

I don't feel paintings, statues, installations and art like that boxed. Don't know why, but it does very little for me. When I am at a vernissage I feel like a complete fool lol. I have been to a Van Gogh exhibition this week and I couldn't believe how packed the place was. For me it was rather boring to look at the pictures boxed.


That's okay. We need to have people like you as well. I am not into midget throwing myself.

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Reply #5 posted 11/19/08 1:19am

Serious

avatar

HamsterHuey said:

Serious said:

I don't feel paintings, statues, installations and art like that boxed. Don't know why, but it does very little for me. When I am at a vernissage I feel like a complete fool lol. I have been to a Van Gogh exhibition this week and I couldn't believe how packed the place was. For me it was rather boring to look at the pictures boxed.


That's okay. We need to have people like you as well. I am not into midget throwing myself.


falloff
With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #6 posted 11/19/08 1:21am

Flowers2

I don't have a favorite, but right now I like these 2 paintings.. they're very abstract


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Reply #7 posted 11/19/08 1:23am

garganta

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Serious said:

I don't feel paintings, statues, installations and art like that boxed. Don't know why, but it does very little for me. When I am at a vernissage I feel like a complete fool lol. I have been to a Van Gogh exhibition this week and I couldn't believe how packed the place was. For me it was rather boring to look at the pictures boxed.


so glad to know I am not the only one to feel that way! lol

I can appreciate some paintings and scultures, sure but they rarely manage to move me like a great piece of music (any genre) or a good book or film do. Don´t know why! shrug

sorry hamster! don´t want to spoil your arty thread! wink
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Reply #8 posted 11/19/08 1:36am

Gimmesomehorns

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I have no favourites, but i like this very much
Freedom is to trust that you're doing what you must according to your lust
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Reply #9 posted 11/19/08 1:36am

HamsterHuey

garganta said:

paintings and scultures rarely manage to move me like a great piece of music (any genre) or a good book or film do.


Then spill! Tell us about your favourite scene in a movie or what your fave book is and WHYYYY!

I am currently studying old decks of tarot cards.
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Reply #10 posted 11/19/08 1:38am

PANDURITO

avatar

garganta said:

Serious said:

I don't feel paintings, statues, installations and art like that boxed. .


so glad to know I am not the only one to feel that way! lol


Are you a vegetarian too?
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Reply #11 posted 11/19/08 1:42am

HamsterHuey

sigh.

Jackers.
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Reply #12 posted 11/19/08 1:42am

garganta

avatar

PANDURITO said:

garganta said:



so glad to know I am not the only one to feel that way! lol


Are you a vegetarian too?


no...why you ask?
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Reply #13 posted 11/19/08 1:44am

evenstar3

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i go through phases. i'm still obsessed with francis bacon at the moment. i'd give an arm to see this in person.

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Reply #14 posted 11/19/08 1:45am

PANDURITO

avatar

garganta said:

PANDURITO said:


Are you a vegetarian too?


no...why you ask?

There goes another theory pout
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Reply #15 posted 11/19/08 1:47am

Serious

avatar

garganta said:

Serious said:

I don't feel paintings, statues, installations and art like that boxed. Don't know why, but it does very little for me. When I am at a vernissage I feel like a complete fool lol. I have been to a Van Gogh exhibition this week and I couldn't believe how packed the place was. For me it was rather boring to look at the pictures boxed.


so glad to know I am not the only one to feel that way! lol

I can appreciate some paintings and scultures, sure but they rarely manage to move me like a great piece of music (any genre) or a good book or film do. Don´t know why! shrug

sorry hamster! don´t want to spoil your arty thread! wink

highfive
With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #16 posted 11/19/08 1:49am

garganta

avatar

PANDURITO said:

garganta said:



no...why you ask?

There goes another theory pout


what theory? smile
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Reply #17 posted 11/19/08 1:52am

PANDURITO

avatar

garganta said:

what theory? smile

It's obvious.
The effect of vegetarianism on art perception lol
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Reply #18 posted 11/19/08 1:58am

ZombieKitten

Gimmesomehorns said:

I have no favourites, but i like this very much

hey that really appeals to me too! love
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Reply #19 posted 11/19/08 1:59am

ZombieKitten

I love bunny giggle


it makes me grin from ear to ear
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Reply #20 posted 11/19/08 2:15am

Mara


Saint Francis of Assisi in Ecstasy (Caravaggio) [thought to date 1595]

I love the mixture of spirituality and eroticism through the human male in this work. It has and continues to inspire me.

All of a sudden there was a dazzling light. It was as though the heavens were exploding and splashing forth all their glory in millions of waterfalls of colours and stars. And in the centre of that bright whirlpool was a core of blinding light that flashed down from the depths of the sky with terrifying speed until suddenly it stopped, motionless and sacred, above a pointed rock in front of Francis. It was a fiery figure with wings, nailed to a cross of fire. Two flaming wings rose straight upward, two others opened out horizontally, and two more covered the figure. And the wounds in the hands and feet and heart were blazing rays of blood. The sparkling features of the Being wore an expression of supernatural beauty and grief. It was the face of Jesus, and Jesus spoke. Then suddenly streams of fire and blood shot from His wounds and pierced the hands and feet of Francis with nails and his heart with the stab of a lance. As Francis uttered a mighty shout of joy and pain, the fiery image impressed itself into his body, as into a mirrored reflection of itself, with all its love, its beauty, and its grief. And it vanished within him. Another cry pierced the air. Then, with nails and wounds through his body, and with his soul and spirit aflame, Francis sank down, unconscious, in his blood.
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Reply #21 posted 11/19/08 2:18am

Mara

HamsterHuey said:

Here's one of mine;

View Of Delt by Johannes Vermeer, 1659-60



Signature: Signed with monogram, below left on the boat.

Provenance: This, the most famous painting by Vermeer, was part of the Amsterdam sale of 1696, no. 31: "The town of Delft in perspective, to be seen from the south, by J. van der Meer of Delft; fl 200." Sale S. J. Sinistra et al., Amsterdam; 1822, no. 112. For F 2,900 to de Vries. Purchased by the state of the Netherlands.

Topographic views of cities had become a tradition by the time Vermeer painted his famous canvas. Hendrik Vroom was the author of two such works depicting Delft, but they are more archaic because they followed the traditional panoramic approach that we remember from the two cityscapes by Hercules Seghers at the Berlin museum. The latter artist was one of the first to make use of the inverted Galilean telescope to transcribe the preliminary prints and their proportions (more than twice as high as wide) into the more conventional format of his paintings.

Vermeer executed his View of Delft on the spot, but the optical instrument pointed toward the city and providing the artist with the aspect translated onto canvas, which we admire for its conciseness and special structure, was not the camera obscura but the inverted telescope. It is only the latter that condenses the panoramic view of a given sector, diminishes the figures of the foreground to a smaller than normal magnification, emphasizes the foreground as we see it in the picture, and by the same token makes the remainder of the composition recede into space. The image thus obtained provides us with optical effects that, without being unique in Dutch seventeenth-century painting, as often claimed, convey a cityscape that is united in the composition and enveloped atmospherically into glowing light.

We admire the town, but it is not a profile view of a township, but a painting, an idealized representation of Delft, with its main characteristics simplified and then cast into the framework of a harbour mirroring selected reflections in the water, and a rich, full sky with magnificent cloud formations looming over it. This is chronologically the last painting by Vermeer that was executed in rich, full pigmentation, with colour accents put in with a fully loaded brush. The artist outdid himself in a rendition of his hometown, which stands as a truly great interpretation of nature.
[Edited 11/19/08 1:02am]


Herman, I have this painting on my bedstand as I type this. I have a compilation book of his art entitled Vermeer: The Complete Works.

I'm actually looking to put his paintings encircling the walls of my bedroom. All of the landscapes and topographic scenes.
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Reply #22 posted 11/19/08 2:28am

ImAKawak

Gimmesomehorns said:

I have no favourites, but i like this very much

I Like It Also
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Reply #23 posted 11/19/08 2:32am

ImAKawak

I Like The Ones That Capture Facial Expressions And I Can Never Again Find The One I Liked The Best


[Edited 11/19/08 2:38am]
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Reply #24 posted 11/19/08 2:46am

HamsterHuey

Mara said:

I'm actually looking to put his paintings encircling the walls of my bedroom. All of the landscapes and topographic scenes.


confuse

He only did two outdoor paintings, you'l be done real quick!
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Reply #25 posted 11/19/08 3:04am

dawntreader

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yes SIR!
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Reply #26 posted 11/19/08 3:13am

PANDURITO

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You might get into troble if you keep showing off your skull radiography neutral
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Reply #27 posted 11/19/08 3:14am

ZombieKitten

PANDURITO said:

You might get into troble if you keep showing off your skull radiography neutral

I should think it won't bother someone as hard-headed as him
nod
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Reply #28 posted 11/19/08 3:15am

PANDURITO

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Nice smile, by the way smile
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Reply #29 posted 11/19/08 3:21am

ZombieKitten

PANDURITO said:

Nice smile, by the way smile

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