independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Art, Podcasts, & Fan Content > Other Peoples Art
« Previous topic  Next topic »
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Author

Tweet     Share

Message
Thread started 10/25/07 10:24am

Girdle

avatar

Other Peoples Art

(particularly Visual)

In another thread,

obsessed said:

Get out of my thread and take this painting with you:



She also said:
I don't find this particular painting at all isolating.....to me it celebrates
precious time to oneself to contemplate....nothing isolating about that...I
love to go out to coffee shops and even restaurants by myself. I get alot of
my thinking done in those situations, and in the meantime you get to enjoy
food and drink and people-watching, which really is a favorite pastime of mine.

Now then, where is that thread?? lol
I enjoy time alone, also. in coffee shops etc...but Hopper's work is usually a celebration of loneliness, at most. I always got that feeling from them...even as a child.
I don't know if I called it lonely, then, but I knew it was foreign. There's an emptiness and stillness to all his work that isn't really inviting. With this woman, you don't sense that there is other life around to observe. I do like his work, though.
I am not my Girdle.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 10/25/07 10:47am

Girdle

avatar

Girdle said:

In another thread,

obsessed said:

Get out of my thread and take this painting with you:...
What she really said is here.
I am not my Girdle.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 10/25/07 4:24pm

obsessed

Chop Suey....at least there's some socializing goin on. lol
What I like about Hoopers paintings is the simplicity of his work
and the ordinary everyday people making it easy, I think, to relate.
I can see we're not agreeing on the way we see him, but that's what
makes it interesting....

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 10/25/07 5:02pm

Girdle

avatar

obsessed said:

Chop Suey....at least there's some socializing goin on. lol
What I like about Hoopers paintings is the simplicity of his work
and the ordinary everyday people making it easy, I think, to relate.
I can see we're not agreeing on the way we see him, but that's what
makes it interesting....


We're not supposed to agree. It's art and subjective. Right...that's what makes it interesting. This piece, though, is a little different. At least it's flooded with natural light. That always adds a layer of life to a picture. Still, notice the scale of the people to their environment. This, in combination with much of his other work, says much about him and his view of life.
I am not my Girdle.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #4 posted 10/25/07 8:12pm

obsessed

Girdle said:

obsessed said:

Chop Suey....at least there's some socializing goin on. lol
What I like about Hoopers paintings is the simplicity of his work
and the ordinary everyday people making it easy, I think, to relate.
I can see we're not agreeing on the way we see him, but that's what
makes it interesting....


We're not supposed to agree. It's art and subjective. Right...that's what makes it interesting. This piece, though, is a little different. At least it's flooded with natural light. That always adds a layer of life to a picture. Still, notice the scale of the people to their environment. This, in combination with much of his other work, says much about him and his view of life.


I already said that's what makes it interesting....

I disagree that we're not supposed to agree, however....I may actually have felt the
same way about this art as you do....it's certainly not wrong to agree, if it's
sincere. But in this particular case I do disagree.

Art, of course is subjective...music, poetry, paintings, whatever the art
medium....

So what you're saying is that the environment is more important to him than
the people....the people have little meaning...is my synopsis correct?

I never read anything of his life, so fill me in if you have knowledge of this,
or are you too making a conclusion from his artwork alone?
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #5 posted 10/25/07 9:15pm

Girdle

avatar

obsessed said:

Girdle said:


We're not supposed to agree. It's art and subjective. Right...that's what makes it interesting. This piece, though, is a little different. At least it's flooded with natural light. That always adds a layer of life to a picture. Still, notice the scale of the people to their environment. This, in combination with much of his other work, says much about him and his view of life.


I already said that's what makes it interesting....

I disagree that we're not supposed to agree, however....I may actually have felt the
same way about this art as you do....it's certainly not wrong to agree, if it's
sincere. But in this particular case I do disagree.

Art, of course is subjective...music, poetry, paintings, whatever the art
medium....

So what you're saying is that the environment is more important to him than
the people....the people have little meaning...is my synopsis correct?

I never read anything of his life, so fill me in if you have knowledge of this,
or are you too making a conclusion from his artwork alone?
I knew when I wrote that line, "we're not supposed to agree" that it was wrong, but I thought you would get the point anyway. Of course I meant, the POINT is not to agree...but to be true in the experience.

And no I don't know very much about his personal life. I've read and heard that he was very private, anyway. I know bits about his married life and that he used his wife as subject for nearly all his female figures but not much more.

Most conclusions are from his artwork...and just visual language in general. Even in a film when a person is really small in a shot, it's to say something about their insignificance...or how small they feel etc...

Whether he was aware of this or not, it's pretty consistent in his work. I don't think he felt the environment was more important...it seems his environments reflected the emotion (either his, or the emotion of those times). But they are very often ominous...as if his subjects could easily be lost in them. Perhaps that's how he felt.

Yes, you did already say "that's what makes it interesting" that's why I then said "Right". I agreed with you. Hope that's not a problem.

But really, I find reactions and first reactions to pieces or art interesting. Our personal experiences will cause us to find comfort/discomfort in things that others don't. Sometimes it's very personal...like the colors remind us of something happy, from childhood, even though the subject is a sad one. There are no real absolutes.
I am not my Girdle.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #6 posted 10/25/07 9:21pm

Girdle

avatar


Do you remember your first reaction to this Wyeth?
This is one I always believed to be dramatic and almost fantasy like. I was a teen when I learned the story behind it. It changed my entire perception. I still liked it, but for different reasons. Now I'm back to liking it for the same reasons, I did, as a child.
I am not my Girdle.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #7 posted 10/26/07 8:27am

applekisses

Girdle said:


Do you remember your first reaction to this Wyeth?
This is one I always believed to be dramatic and almost fantasy like. I was a teen when I learned the story behind it. It changed my entire perception. I still liked it, but for different reasons. Now I'm back to liking it for the same reasons, I did, as a child.


It's so imagination evoking. I've never heard the story behind it, though.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #8 posted 10/26/07 9:17am

Girdle

avatar

applekisses said:


It's so imagination evoking. I've never heard the story behind it, though.
It really is.

Her name was Christina Olson (Christina's World - title.). She was paralyzed from polio, and would drag herself across the field. Knowing this, changes everything. The picture is still dramatic, but in an entirely different way.
I am not my Girdle.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #9 posted 10/28/07 1:55pm

tony23k

avatar

Girdle said:


Do you remember your first reaction to this Wyeth?
This is one I always believed to be dramatic and almost fantasy like. I was a teen when I learned the story behind it. It changed my entire perception. I still liked it, but for different reasons. Now I'm back to liking it for the same reasons, I did, as a child.


Knowing the story, did change the dramatic effect for me.

I like it for it's starkness
my phone is heavy
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #10 posted 10/28/07 2:04pm

emile57

This is Lucian freud painting.
Some I like..some I don't.
His grandpa is Sigmund Freud.
At artschool where I went to some paint teachers demanded their students to copy this..
Some did..some didn't.
I went to Venice to look at the old stuff.
But I do like some of Lucians work.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #11 posted 10/28/07 2:08pm

emile57

Edvard Munch.
Dead mother.

He has great paintings..the scream being very popular..but some of his less promoted are really great.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #12 posted 10/28/07 2:08pm

tony23k

avatar

Did you?

It does take a moment to settle in...
my phone is heavy
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #13 posted 10/28/07 2:10pm

tony23k

avatar

emile57 said:

This is Lucian freud painting.
Some I like..some I don't.
His grandpa is Sigmund Freud.
At artschool where I went to some paint teachers demanded their students to copy this..
Some did..some didn't.
I went to Venice to look at the old stuff.
But I do like some of Lucians work.

Did you?
my phone is heavy
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #14 posted 10/28/07 2:13pm

emile57

One of my favorite self portraits.
Albrecht Duhrer. 1500

Hailed in Italy at the time..called an amateur in Germany at the time.
His work rox!

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #15 posted 10/28/07 2:19pm

emile57

tony23k said:

Did you?


I looked at his work.Never listened to my teachers when telling me what to paint....(they liked that about me..LOL)
always went my own way.
But went for the old Italian masters and van gogh.
But was always open for anything..same with music..always listen to as much as possible..but get inspired by what touches me..or where I feel force.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #16 posted 10/28/07 2:25pm

tony23k

avatar

emile57 said:

tony23k said:

Did you?


I looked at his work.Never listened to my teachers when telling me what to paint....(they liked that about me..LOL)
always went my own way.
But went for the old Italian masters and van gogh.
But was always open for anything..same with music..always listen to as much as possible..but get inspired by what touches me..or where I feel force.

that's the key.
my phone is heavy
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #17 posted 10/28/07 2:26pm

emile57

Freud also made a painting of Kate Moss.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #18 posted 10/28/07 2:27pm

emile57

tony23k said:

that's the key.


cool
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #19 posted 10/30/07 6:43am

emile57

emile57 said:

This is Lucian freud painting.
Some I like..some I don't.
His grandpa is Sigmund Freud.
At artschool where I went to some paint teachers demanded their students to copy this..
Some did..some didn't.
I went to Venice to look at the old stuff.
But I do like some of Lucians work.




Wow..of all the filth and hardcore porn on the net..this painting is banned by photobucket..LOL
Thats weird.
Anyway..the painting is here at this site:

http://homepage.mac.com/h...nFreud.jpg
[Edited 10/30/07 6:45am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #20 posted 11/04/07 1:01pm

obsessed

Speaking of nudes, this is my fav nude work of art...let's see what photobucket does
with this... lol If they don't recognize that this is an art piece, they
really need a few lessons over there! lol

Michelangelo's Statue of David...I was fortunate enough to see the original
in Florence, Italy in the Galleria dell'Accademia...the unfortunate part
is that there was scaffolding around it on three sides, I believe, at the
time...(I'll have to see if I can dig up the picture I took).

Anyway, the main school of thought is that Michelangelo sculpted this as
David would have looked before the fight with Goliath, but there are
scholars who feel it was sculpted the way he looked after the victory...any
thoughts on this? I have more I'd like to post, but only if discussion would
lead to it.....

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #21 posted 11/05/07 12:05pm

emile57

The only thing I don't like about this sculpture is that the head and hands are to big.Never seen it in real life..only pics.
I don't remember why he did it..had art history classes but I forgot.
But the head and hands are to big.
I like his paintings.
He was super gay I think and I like that in his work.
He is a genious but when it comes to sculptures I like Rodin alot.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #22 posted 11/05/07 8:37pm

obsessed

I remember something about his head being big....I guess that he didn't
know for certain where the statue would be placed, and thinking it may end
up on the top of a building (like so many statues did at the time), he felt
looking at it from the ground it would be in proportion then...which I guess
would make sense.

I can't remember either about why the hands were so big...but disregarding
all that, I really love the work...it's beautiful, and even more so in
person.

Btw, I found my shot with the scaffolding....it was the fall of 2003, and they
were almost finished cleaning it for the very first time ever...it took them
roughly 2 years, as they worked on it only when the museum was closed.

Anyway, I won't post the pic....it was somewhat blurred and wouldn't do it
justice anyway.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #23 posted 11/06/07 7:31am

tony23k

avatar

Other Peoples Art-- that I find interesting, is artwork by the courtroom sketch artist.
I've always wondered what happens to the "famous case" sketches...



my phone is heavy
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Art, Podcasts, & Fan Content > Other Peoples Art