How does Symbolism relate to art?
There were several, rather dissimilar, groups of Symbolist painters and visual artists. Symbolism in painting had a large geographical reach, reaching several Russian artists, as well as American. The closest to Symbolism was Aestheticism. The Pre-Raphaelites, also, were contemporaries of the earlier Symbolists, and have much in common with them. Symbolism had a significant influence on Expressionism and Surrealism, two movements which descend directly from Symbolism proper. The work of some Symbolist visual artists directly impacted the curvilinear forms of the contemporary Art Nouveau movements in Europe and Les Nabis. (late 19th century)
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minae ,
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Saturday, March 13, 2010
11:15 PM
Artists use their personal aesthetic to transfrom reality to create meaning in the body of work.
Michael Zavros and Lucien Freud have incorportated this technique so that they many challenge many aspects of the modern world.
LUCIEN FREUD uses his personal aesthetic to challenge what is considered to be beautiful (e.g the images used in magazines for marketing purposes)...he intentionally gives the complexion of the human figure a 'rawness' and he had exadurated this by using the elements tonal contrast, directional brush stokes and creating texture with oil paints.
The Lucien Freud painting of supermodel Kate Moss. -->
"It might seem incongruous for Kate Moss to end up in a Freud painting: His aesthetic, so redolent of the miserabilist, earnest, existentialist postwar period in which he came artistically of age, seems a far cry from the slick, trashy, ephemeral pop culture epitomized by the cult of celebrity models. But Mr.Freud is ever the slumming lord of high art, socializing with teenagers and all the while vying with the old masters." Art News Blog
This painting is challenging the ideology that supermodels are flawless; this almost life size painting of a pregnant Kate moss is social-cultural protest against materialistic lifestyle everyone craves these days.
MICHAEL ZAVROS- 'I do always seek to create something that is unashamedly
beautiful to look at, to behold. I also consider beauty as a concept. My recent drawings of models with their ideal features erased manipulates the notion of 'surface' beauty - the currency of the model having been removed. But surface is important not just as a metaphor but literally in terms of the treatment of the drawing material on paper. The portrait having been lovingly rendered in charcoal is then aggressively removed but the features can't quite be erased - the charcoal stains the paper permanently. It is always important to me that what I am painting or drawing is reflected in how I am creating it; technique and subject somehow mirror each other.' In the Real Art World.
beautiful to look at, to behold. I also consider beauty as a concept. My recent drawings of models with their ideal features erased manipulates the notion of 'surface' beauty - the currency of the model having been removed. But surface is important not just as a metaphor but literally in terms of the treatment of the drawing material on paper. The portrait having been lovingly rendered in charcoal is then aggressively removed but the features can't quite be erased - the charcoal stains the paper permanently. It is always important to me that what I am painting or drawing is reflected in how I am creating it; technique and subject somehow mirror each other.' In the Real Art World.Just as Lucien Freud has transformed reality, so has Zavros although he has used his personal aesthetic to try and communicate a different message to the public. He has removed the most valuable aspect of a model, their 'currency' so that we are forced to look at and appreciate the finer details whilst wondering why the face has been removed.
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minae ,
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The artists work that most appeals to me
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Tuesday, February 16, 2010
1:13 AM
Kibong Rhee
"Kibong Rhee South Korea b.1957 There is no place – Shallow cuts 2008 Glass, fog machine, artificial leaves, wood, steel, sand, motor, timer Installation view, Kukje Gallery, Seoul Images courtesy: The artist and Kukje Gallery, Seoul
b.1957 Seoul, South KoreaLives and works in Seoul, South Korea
"In the installations of Kibong Rhee, audiences encounter dreamlike scenarios in which everyday objects and images are made extraordinary through the illusion of movement and transformation. Using water and light to manipulate form and matter, Rhee plays on our expectations of the possible and impossible, offering metaphysical speculations that provide his work with a contemplative quality. In one of his recent works, books magically swim within translucent water tanks, a mesmerising act inspired by the artist accidentally dropping a book into the water of his bathtub while reading. In his installation at APT6, There is no place – Shallow cuts 2008, Rhee employs light and vapour to conjure a sublime impression of morning fog as it shrouds and obscures the silhouette of a vast willow tree. A powerfully physical work, it also suggest traditional landscape painting, forming a connection between experience and representation."-APT6 website
"Kibong Rhee South Korea b.1957 There is no place – Shallow cuts 2008 Glass, fog machine, artificial leaves, wood, steel, sand, motor, timer Installation view, Kukje Gallery, Seoul Images courtesy: The artist and Kukje Gallery, Seoul
b.1957 Seoul, South KoreaLives and works in Seoul, South Korea
"In the installations of Kibong Rhee, audiences encounter dreamlike scenarios in which everyday objects and images are made extraordinary through the illusion of movement and transformation. Using water and light to manipulate form and matter, Rhee plays on our expectations of the possible and impossible, offering metaphysical speculations that provide his work with a contemplative quality. In one of his recent works, books magically swim within translucent water tanks, a mesmerising act inspired by the artist accidentally dropping a book into the water of his bathtub while reading. In his installation at APT6, There is no place – Shallow cuts 2008, Rhee employs light and vapour to conjure a sublime impression of morning fog as it shrouds and obscures the silhouette of a vast willow tree. A powerfully physical work, it also suggest traditional landscape painting, forming a connection between experience and representation."-APT6 website
Posted by
minae ,
,
Monday, February 15, 2010
1:46 AM
"A labyrinth is an ancient symbol that relates to wholeness. It combines the imagery of the circle and the spiral into a meandering but purposeful path. It represents a journey to our own center and back again out into the world. Labyrinths have long been used as meditation and prayer tools. A labyrinth is an archetype with which we can have a direct experience. Walking the labyrinth can be considered an initiation in which one awakens the knowledge encoded within their DNA."- crystalinks.com
A beautiful and meaningful way to express the symbolic significance of a labyrinth...A spiritual process; On the journey in, towards the center, one cleanses the dirt from the road. On the journey out, one is born anew to consciously dwell in a human body, made holy by having got a taste of the Infinite Center.
A beautiful and meaningful way to express the symbolic significance of a labyrinth...A spiritual process; On the journey in, towards the center, one cleanses the dirt from the road. On the journey out, one is born anew to consciously dwell in a human body, made holy by having got a taste of the Infinite Center.
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