Hello everyone! welcome to another Saturday blog post.
For this post I want to share what I saw in THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO, my favorite pieces during the visit, so get ready for a long time looking art.
Starting with Marc Chagall stained glass “America Windows” which celebrated the United States and its culture, it was amazing to see Chagall stained glass as I gave a video about his biography and I talked about his work with strained glass. π
Another piece is the painting from Chagall that I saw was “Birth” a cubist piece from 1912 where we see the birth of Chagall’s brother David in the family home around 1892, an especially powerful memory from the artist’s early life. I think here we can see all about Chagall’s passions: Family, Circus, surrealism, cubism, colors and shapes as stained glass.
Then ai jumped to Greeks, Romans and Byzantine art. I like very much some sculptures and here some favorites:
-Abduction of Persephone
-Bound roster mosaic
-Fish on a platter mosaic
-Marine life mosaic
I had the chance to see American Gothic by Grant Wood with the farmers posed stiffly and dressed as if they were, as the artist put it, They stand outside their home, built in an 1880s style known as Carpenter Gothic. Wood had seen a similar farmhouse during a visit to Eldon, Iowa and I confirmed it, I never visited but it’s a well-known place.
𦴠Cow’s Skull with Calico Roses by Georgia O’ Keeffe, she collected a lot of skulls and bones in New Mexico and even she took some to New York. She noted, “To me they are as beautiful as anything I know... The bones seem to cut sharply to the center of something that is keenly alive on the desert.”
πΊ Red Hills with Flowers, 1937 also by Georgia O'Keeffe.
She loved the contrasts in scale, she said "All the earth colors of the painter's palette are out there in the many miles of badlands. The light Naples yellow through the ochers orange and red and purple earth even the soft earth greens." And I'm agree.
πͺ¨ Fragment of a Funerary Lekythos
4th century BCE, only prominent families would have had the means to immortalize their loved ones by having their names set in stone.
πΊ Water Jar Hydria, Created by an artist known as the Leningrad Painter, the front of this vessel shows intimate scenes of couples, they are unusual in Greek art.
πͺ Byzantine mosaics with tiny cubes from the 5th century with details of camels, giraffes and dogs, they have flowers and hearts. They were found in the Mediterranean
π§Icon with the Virgin and Child from by Cretan School c. 1500
Painted with tempera and golden leaf over wood panel, it takes my attention the little perforations it has to make the patterns. I don't know why I always like to see Virgin with child paintings as they are so they portray the same image.
π€ Eye detail of a Portrait Bust of a Woman
Craved by a very talented sculpture, I noticed she has the hearts on her eyes just like David by Michelangelo π love it!
π Fragment of a Portrait Statue of a Man, Perhaps a Roman Emperor with a stunning ceremonial armor suggests that he was a general or even the emperor, as the latter held the role of commander of the Roman army. I love the little faces!
Art of the Americas, here a favorites.
Twilight c. 1926 by Hale Woodruff it’s so beautiful because the messy brushstrokes and bright and warm colors. π₯°
Nighthawks 1942 by Edward Hopper,
This is the second painting that I have the privilege to see. “unconsciously, probably, I was painting the loneliness of a large city.”
It was discovered or revealed by his wife that before making the painting he made a full detailed script about how this painting had to be done. ✍π»
Untitled c. 1938–41 by Jackson Pollock
Pollock became engaged in an intense dialogue with the work of the Mexican muralists JosΓ© Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros; he was inspired by their social commitment and use of primitive, archetypal imagery. And of course we can notice how similar style has from Picasso. π¨
Portrait of Marevna, c. 1915 by Diego Rivera
Here we can see when Diego Rivera enjoyed a brief but sparkling period as a Cubist painter. He made the portrait of one of his lovers and we can see all the elements like a puzzle. π§©
Love of Winter 1914 by George Wesley Bellows.
In January 1914 George Bellows wrote to a friend, "There has been none of my favorite snow. I must always paint the snow at least once a year." Soon after, on February 13, a major blizzard hit New York City, inspiring the artist to paint Love of Winter.
Imagine to dress that nice during a blizzard in the Midwest π
The Milliners, 1921 by Theresa F. Bernstein.
"In The Milliners, Theresa Bernstein depicted a group of women sewing accessories on hats, exploring the aesthetic qualities of community and concentration. The window at upper left suggests that they are in a city apartment, perhaps undertaking piecework at home to earn extra income." That's what the people who wrote this think. I like the way some looks so focused and some others looking other women. π
No comments:
Post a Comment