Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Naum Gabo
Naum Gabo was associated with the Constructivists at the time of the Russian Revolution of 1917. They saw an artistic renewal as part of the revolution and embraced new scientific theories and industrial materials. A method known as 'stereometric construction' was central to Gabo's work, by which form was achieved through the description of space rather than the establishment of mass. He declared in 1920: 'we take four planes and we construct with them the same volume as of four tons of mass.' In 1915-20 Gabo used planes to construct heads and figures that demonstrated the application of this method to traditional subjects. 'Head No.2' is a later enlargement of the most dramatic of these models.
(From the display caption August 2004)From - Tate Modern Collection.
American sculptor of Belorussian birth. He was brought up in the Russian town of Bryansk, where his father owned a metallurgy business. Early paintings display his romantic and literary spirit, for example Self-portrait (c. 1907–10; artist’s family priv. col., see 1986 exh. cat., pl. 128), but in 1910 he went to the University of Munich to study medical and scientific subjects (1910–12), then philosophy and history of art (1912–14). The lectures of Heinrich Wölfflin and the writings of Henri Bergson were significant influences on him at this time. Gabo also studied engineering at the Technische Hochschule, Munich (1912–14), where there was a large collection of mathematical models. During World War I he took refuge in Norway (1914–17) and started working with his ‘stereometric method’ of construction, one of several techniques he adopted from such models, and through which he made a significant contribution to the development of the language of Constructivism. This enabled him to make images from sheet materials such as cardboard, plywood and galvanized iron, incorporating space in the body of the work and thereby denying the solidity of matter. Around this time he adopted the surname Gabo to distinguish himself from his brother, the artist antoine Pevsner.
Gabo’s first constructed works were figurative (e.g. Constructed Head No. 2, 1916; London, artist’s family priv. col., see 1986 exh. cat., p. 92), but following his return to Russia in 1917 he started to make non-figurative reliefs and towers from transparent plastic and glass. Column (144 mm; London, Tate), his most important architectonic sculpture of this period, was conceived in the winter of 1920–21 as a celluloid model. As he intended with most of his works, Gabo enlarged this construction several times. (There is a 1.05 m version in New York, Guggenheim, and a 1.93 m version in Humlebæk, Louisiana Mus.; both measurements include an integral base.) In 1920, in conjunction with an open-air exhibition on Tverskoy Boulevard, Gabo, together with his brother, published his Realistic Manifesto, summarizing his views on art. As with all Gabo’s writings this manifesto is poetically forceful and was highly influential. Rejecting Cubism and Futurism Gabo called for an art for a new epoch, a public art recognizing space and time as its basic elements and espousing construction and kineticism. These ideas are embodied in Kinetic Construction (Standing Wave, 1919–20; London, Tate).
In 1922 Gabo travelled to Berlin in connection with the Erste Russische Kunstausstellung, held at the Van Diemen Gallery, in which he was well-represented with about ten works. There he met Katherine S. Dreier, his first important patron, and he soon came into contact with many artists and architects, such as Hans Richter, Kurt Schwitters, Hugo Häring, the brothers Hans and Wassili Luckhardt and artists of the Bauhaus. Throughout the 1920s Gabo continued to employ glass, metal (sometimes painted black or white) and plastics in his works, which remained architectonic or monumental in conception (for illustration see Plastic). He also designed a stage set for Diaghilev’s ballet La Chatte (model in London, Tate), first performed in Monte Carlo in 1927, and in 1931 he submitted plans to the competition for the Palace of the Soviets in Moscow. In 1930 he had an important one-man show at the Kestner-Gesellschaft in Hannover, and in 1931 he became a member of the group Abstraction–Création in Paris.
By 1933 Gabo had moved to Paris, but in 1935 he made a brief visit to London, where he settled in 1936. There he made friends with Herbert Read, and with Leslie Martin and Ben Nicholson, with whom in 1937 he edited Circle. Through Dr John Sisson, Gabo was introduced to perspex, the new plastic developed by Imperial Chemical Industries that he employed in some of his best-known works, such as Translucent Variation on Spheric Theme (1937; New York, Guggenheim) and Spiral Theme (1941; London, Tate). Gabo made over 20 free-standing variations on the basic ‘spheric’ theme, differing in size and materials. More elaborate developments include Model for ‘Spheric Construction: Fountain’ (1937/8; London, artist’s family priv. col.), Bas-relief on a Circular Surface, Semi-spheric (1938; Paris, priv. col.) and Construction in Space, with Net (1952; London, artist’s family priv. col.). During World War II Gabo lived in Cornwall (1939–46), and there he started using nylon monofilament as in his works entitled Linear Construction in Space (e.g. Linear Construction in Space No. 1 (variation), 1942–3; London, Tate). Materials were in short supply during the war, but Gabo was able to continue to paint and carve. In 1943 he was commissioned through the Design Research Unit to design a car for the Jowett Car Company. In 1946 Gabo moved to the USA, where he became a close friend of Lewis Mumford. Following a major exhibition of his works in New York in 1948, he began to receive commissions for public projects. The first of these, for the Esso Building at the Rockefeller Center (1949), New York, remained unexecuted, but in 1951 he completed his Construction Suspended in Space for the Baltimore Museum of Art. There followed an important commission for the Bijenkorf Construction in Rotterdam (h. c. 25 m, 1956–7), through which Gabo intended to celebrate the reconstruction of the city following World War II. Ultimately related to the ‘spheric theme’, this work was developed directly from his entry to the international competition for which he submitted a Model for a Monument to the Unknown Political Prisoner (410 mm, 1952; London, Tate), which gained one of the five second prizes. In the early 1950s Gabo took up wood-engraving, which he used until the mid-1970s to explore the same concepts as his sculpture (see 1986 exh. cat., p. 190).
Gabo’s work does not fit simply into the machine aesthetic. As he wrote in 1957: ‘Not the Machine—the creative spirit of man is my inspiration’. An artist of diverse interests, Gabo was fascinated and influenced by scientific and mathematical images, whether visually or verbally described, and particularly by the enigmas of science. While he valued supremely the autonomy of the artist, he also sought to integrate not only sculpture, architecture and design but also art and science. Thus he felt that his ‘constructive idea’ could serve as a philosophy not only for art but for life in general.
Colin C. Sanderson
From Grove Art Online
© 2007 Oxford University Press
Wednesday, 21 January 2009
About Joaquín Torres García
Joaquín Torres-García
Montevideo, 1874 - Montevideo, 1949
Painter, muralist, illustrator, sculptor, theorist and teacher, Joaquín Torres-García was born on 28 July 1874 in Uruguay where he spent his childhood and adolescence before moving to Spain in 1891. His family resided temporarily in Mataró and shortly afterwards settled in Barcelona where Joaquín registered both at the Academia de Bellas Artes and at the Academia Baixas. His early training was held in the traditional manner of Neoclassical studies which probably spurred him to abandon his academic apprenticeship in search of a more autodidact experience. From 1893 he independently devoted himself to a personal artistic quest often reinvigorated by the debates engaged in with Pijoan, Zulueta and Marquina at the Cercle de Sant Lluc and from 1897 with the members of the bohemian café Els Quatre Gats. Highly influenced by the graphic works of Toulouse-Lautrec that he had observed during the 1896 exhibition at the Sala Parés (Barcelona), Torres-García began to contribute as an illustrator to a number of books and periodicals, including Revista popular, Barcelona Comica and Jacinto Benavente's La Vida Literaria. In 1897 the artist exhibited a few drawings at the Vanguardia gallery and in 1901 a series of romantic landscapes, which he had executed for Utrillo's magazine: Pèl i Ploma, were presented at the Parisian Salon. At the turn of the century he had become a talented muralist and painter as emphasised by Eugeni d'Ors in his 1905 article published in El Poble Català. The flourishing artistic milieu that distinguished Barcelona and its peculiar Modernism led Torres-García to collaborate with Antoni Gaudí in the Cathedral of Palma de Mallorca and in the Sagrada Familia for the execution of a series of stained glasses (1903-1904). In 1910, while he was working on two major mural panels for the Exposition Universelle in Brussels, Joaquín Torres-García admired for the first time the monumental classicism of Pierre Puvis de Chavannes. The following year he was defined by the critics as one of the most significant members of Noucentisme on the occasion of the VI Exposició d'Art de Barcelona. In 1912 the artist was commissioned the frescoes for the decoration of the Saló Sant Jordi in the Palau de la Generalitat, whose execution sparked numerous debates among the critics. Retired in Tarrassa, Torres-García created the Escola de Decoració (Tarrassa) where he taught and published Notes on Art in 1913 followed by Diàlegs in 1915. On a more personal artistic base he concentrated on executing paintings that, on account of their accentuated geometrical organisation, foreshadowed his mature Constructivist style. Meanwhile, the exhibitions of his works progressively increased both in Spain and abroad. The artist and his family moved to New York in 1920 where he temporarily designed toys. Back in Europe, Torres-García met Piet Mondrian in Paris in 1928 and founded the group Cercle et Carré that he nevertheless left few years later. In 1934 the artist decided to return to Uruguay where he spent the rest of his life introducing the European avant-garde and developing his Constructive Universalism through the founding of the Asociación de Arte Constructivo and of the Taller Torres-García. Around the same time he executed the Cosmic Monument (1938, Montevideo) and published his most influential theorist work in 1944: Universalismo Constructivo. Joaquín Torres-García died in Montevideo on 8 August 1949.
Dominique Lora
About Sol Lewitt
(An article from the New York Times - press the title of the post to read the whole article)
An installation of wall paintings in the artist’s retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 2000. His method was to paint directly on the walls, creating works that might not outlast the exhibition
Correction Appended
Sol LeWitt, whose deceptively simple geometric sculptures and drawings and ecstatically colored and jazzy wall paintings established him as a lodestar of modern American art, died yesterday in New York. He was 78 and lived mostly in Chester, Conn.
The cause was complications from cancer, said Susanna Singer, a longtime associate.
Mr. LeWitt helped establish Conceptualism and Minimalism as dominant movements of the postwar era. A patron and friend of colleagues young and old, he was the opposite of the artist as celebrity. He tried to suppress all interest in him as opposed to his work; he turned down awards and was camera-shy and reluctant to grant interviews. He particularly disliked the prospect of having his photograph in the newspaper.
(...)
A Dry Humor
To grasp his work could require a little effort. His early sculptures were chaste white cubes and gray cement blocks. For years people associated him with them, and they seemed to encapsulate a remark he once made: that what art looks like “isn’t too important.” This was never exactly his point. But his early drawings on paper could resemble mathematical diagrams or chemical charts. What passed for humor in his art tended to be dry. “Buried Cube Containing an Object of Importance but Little Value” (1968), an object he buried in the garden of Dutch collectors, was his deadpan gag about waving goodbye to Minimalism. He documented it in photographs, in one of which he stands at attention beside the cube. A second picture shows the shovel; a third, him digging the hole.
(...)
“Conceptual art is not necessarily logical,” he wrote in an article in Artforum magazine in 1967. “The ideas need not be complex. Most ideas that are successful are ludicrously simple. Successful ideas generally have the appearance of simplicity because they seem inevitable.”
(...)
He added, “A life in art is an unimaginable and unpredictable experience.”
An installation of wall paintings in the artist’s retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 2000. His method was to paint directly on the walls, creating works that might not outlast the exhibition
Correction Appended
Sol LeWitt, whose deceptively simple geometric sculptures and drawings and ecstatically colored and jazzy wall paintings established him as a lodestar of modern American art, died yesterday in New York. He was 78 and lived mostly in Chester, Conn.
The cause was complications from cancer, said Susanna Singer, a longtime associate.
Mr. LeWitt helped establish Conceptualism and Minimalism as dominant movements of the postwar era. A patron and friend of colleagues young and old, he was the opposite of the artist as celebrity. He tried to suppress all interest in him as opposed to his work; he turned down awards and was camera-shy and reluctant to grant interviews. He particularly disliked the prospect of having his photograph in the newspaper.
(...)
A Dry Humor
To grasp his work could require a little effort. His early sculptures were chaste white cubes and gray cement blocks. For years people associated him with them, and they seemed to encapsulate a remark he once made: that what art looks like “isn’t too important.” This was never exactly his point. But his early drawings on paper could resemble mathematical diagrams or chemical charts. What passed for humor in his art tended to be dry. “Buried Cube Containing an Object of Importance but Little Value” (1968), an object he buried in the garden of Dutch collectors, was his deadpan gag about waving goodbye to Minimalism. He documented it in photographs, in one of which he stands at attention beside the cube. A second picture shows the shovel; a third, him digging the hole.
(...)
“Conceptual art is not necessarily logical,” he wrote in an article in Artforum magazine in 1967. “The ideas need not be complex. Most ideas that are successful are ludicrously simple. Successful ideas generally have the appearance of simplicity because they seem inevitable.”
(...)
He added, “A life in art is an unimaginable and unpredictable experience.”
Tuesday, 13 January 2009
Examples of great pages from great artists
All students who hadle Art sketchbooks as part of their course should have a look at these pages.
Keith Tyson
Sol Lewitt
Ian Hamilton Finlay
Keith Tyson
Eduardo Paollozzi
Max Ernst
Hannah Hoch
Christopher Wool
Leonardo Davinci
Dieter Roth
Dieter Roth
Christopher Wool
Max Ernst
William Blake, Illuminated books
William Blake, Illuminated books
Leonardo Davinci
Keith Tyson
Sol Lewitt
Ian Hamilton Finlay
Keith Tyson
Eduardo Paollozzi
Max Ernst
Hannah Hoch
Christopher Wool
Leonardo Davinci
Dieter Roth
Dieter Roth
Christopher Wool
Max Ernst
William Blake, Illuminated books
William Blake, Illuminated books
Leonardo Davinci
IB and Printmaking
We have just changed our printmaking equipment to another, much more suitable room, with natural light. IB are developing etchings.
Friday, 9 January 2009
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