Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Vivaldi and More



While I was doing research on the Net, I listened to
Best of Vivaldi
at YouTube.
2 hours long.

Blogged Previously

Here's a
1001 list for more classical music.
Vivaldi listed 5 times on the list:
Antonio Vivaldi - Gloria, RV 589 (Taverner Consort: Gloria, Magnificat)
Antonio Vivaldi - Concerto for Two Trumpets (Mark Bennett, Michael Harrison & Trevor Pinnock: Mad About Vivaldi)
Antonio Vivaldi - L'estro armonico (Federico Guglielmo & Christopher Hogwood)
Antonio Vivaldi - Stabat mater (The King's Consort: Vivaldi Sacred Music)
Antonio Vivaldi - Juditha triumphans (The King's Consort)

Supposedly based on the book of same name?

There are tons of these "1001" lists.
More:
listology
amazon

I also liked the 1001 list for paintings.
listology paintings part 1
listology paintings part 2
pinterest

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Hewlett-Packard Laptop Wallpapers

I love some of the Hewlett-Packard desktop wallpapers I got with my new laptop.
My fav:


It is signed by an Illustrator artist named Laura Barnard.



She gives info on other artists, yay:
HP Artist Wallpaper Series
"I was proper delighted to be asked to design a set of desktop wallpapers for HP to be shipped with their 2010 range of laptops, and was even more delighted when I discovered I was in splendid and esteemed company with three other great illustrators:

Alex Eben Meyer,


Julie West


and Amy Ruppel. . ."


"...available for download here. . ."

Also I noticed a few of the HP wallpapers mimic the design etched on my laptop.


I wonder who created it and if there is a story behind that?

Friday, May 07, 2010

Old Friend From Far Away - Book

Just started reading
Old Friend From Far Away
By Natalie Goldberg

Was skipping around in the book and liked this writing entitled Cezanne (no accent) on page 134.
I decided to post it to my blog, giving a taste of what the book is like.
I've always enjoyed Goldberg's writing.
I might have more to say about the book after I've read more.
Links on Cézanne and Pissarro art follow the excerpt. (I didn't notice what Goldberg noticed.)

Cezanne:
"Ten years ago I saw a big Cezanne show in Philadelphia.
The lines to get in were long. The galleries were crowded. You viewed a painting behind six other people. You bent your head this way and that to see portions of the pictures between people’s arms, torsos, and heads.

I liked the paintings but I knew I was missing something.
Printed matter said Cezanne influenced generations of artists, that all subsequent famous painters had looked to him.
Cezanne painted mountains and streams, some portraits.
Other artists before him did that.
What was the big deal?

When I went home to New Mexico I asked my painter friend to explain. She tried. I didn't understand, but I held the question inside.

Then just recently I attended a show of Pissarro and Cezanne, side by side.
The two painters had been friends, often going out to the country together and setting up easels next to each other.

I was jet-lagged and groggy when I entered the museum after again waiting in a long line where I spoke to a man from Las Vegas. He'd brought his eight-year-old mother to Paris and she was too tired. He left her back in the hotel.

The minute I saw Pissarro next to his friend Cezanne
the answer from ten years ago sprang at me,
looming large,
barefaced in the room.

Pissarro's paintings were well-done, but he followed an old idea of perspective. They receded the way we were taught in grammar school that a picture should move away to a distant point to give it depth.

Next to Pissarro,
Cezanne's came right at you.
There was no distance.
If it was a water scene, the water came to the edge of the canvas.
You were in the water.
You were included.

Two paintings of bouquets hung side by side. Pissarro showed the edge of the table and divided us from the bouquet.

Cezanne stuck the flowers right in my face.
I could almost smell them.

Before I’d seen Cezanne only by himself and since so many painters after him followed his way, I could not tell the new thing he had done.
But compared to his contemporary
I could see how he’d stepped right through the old manner of seeing and broken open perspective.

The experience was exhilarating.

The show centered on their friendship. How they both painted the same bridge together; then a bunch of apples in a still-life. What conviviality.

But I wondered what it must have been like for the two of them standing side by side, glancing over at the other's easel.

"Has Cezanne lost his mind? He needs to go back to school and learn to draw." Pissarro was the older.

And Cezanne, whose dedication, suffering, and loneliness are famous, must have felt sure of himself in the way changing reality can free you but also make you insecure. No one else had done this. And no one was going to applaud. Pissarro's work standing next to him must have only intensified the difference.

I notice Cezanne used looser, larger strokes, brought out the intensity of one color, did not soften the blow, was angular, took more chances.
I'd waited ten years to see what I was seeing.
I took a breath. I knew this also applied to writing.

Can you do the same? Bring your experience forward. Don't bog down in long introductions or explanations. Crash through what holds you back.
Also know sometimes you have to wait a long time for understanding.
Let's try this: Tell me what stifles you. Throw in everything that might even be a possibility. Go. Ten minutes.
Now that you've cleared the way, what is it you want to say? Step forward. Speak it upfront with no explanations. Go. Another ten minutes.
What must you be patient about? Make a list to remind yourself."



LINKS:

Taking risks side-by-side: Pissarro and Cezanne were close friends for twenty years...

Museum of Modern Art
Pioneering Modern Painting: Cézanne and Pissarro 1865–1885
June 26–September 12, 2005
NOTE: Click on art images at right.
Then TWO links.
1) Enter the site >
Then click on Paired Paintings at top to view Cezanne and Pissarro side-by-side


2) "Cézanne and Pissarro: Seeing Through Paint" >
Is a text presentation.

Paul Cezanne: Pity Poor Paul Cezanne
An essay contributed by: John Sheridan
"His sense of composition was highly arbitrary, and was no doubt often done completely from imagination, (one of the first artists to do this) with no consideration given for the then-mandatory use of mathematical perspective, and very little aerial perspective."

Paul Cézanne
(Tons of links here.)

Book at Amazon
Pioneering Modern Painting: Cezanne and Pissarro, 1865-1885
Joachim Pissarro (Great-grandfather is Camille Pissarro. See findarticles.com link above.)

Wiki Cezanne
Wiki Pissarro
Google Images Pissarro
Google Images Cezanne

Flickr User has tons of pics from Metropolitan Museum of Art.
(See a Pissarro there.)

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Bing Appreciation

Bing links and recent discoveries.

xrank (What's hot.)

community

Travel:

Storybook Villages
America's Coolest Small Towns
Otherworldly Landscapes
More Bing Travel Slideshows
Travel Articles

Images: (Always features the startup image info.)
New Years 2010

I love the startup images and the mouse hover popup links attached to them.
Hover over the copyright symbol bottom right gives you image info.



This image led me to explore Sa paper art:


I went to Bing, then Images and selected popup "find computer wallpaper."
Saw some glass apples and pursued the artist info. (Creative Commons image.)



Found out what kind of 3D software was used and then discovered other 3D artists there as well.
fudiiduf
zigshot82

Really liked the 3D Interior Design stuff (zigshot82).

Tacky is Good





This painting I picked up at a garage sale years ago for like a dollar.
I love it and never get tired of it.

I don't know the name of the reproduction I have. I'd have to take the back off and I didn't want to fiddle with it. I could not find a picture of it on the Net. But I did find info on Robert Wood Reproductions.

How to Tell a Reproduction
Reproductions
There are millions of Robert Wood reproductions across America and around the world...Today people inherit Wood reproductions from their relatives, and find them in thrift stores and swap meets. Unfortunately, because of the large quantities that were published, these inexpensive reproductions do not have significant value.

He was in California 1941-1962 so perhaps this scene is from that state?

This is what Robert Wood looked like in 1956.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Calendar

I love the art on this calendar I bought at Barnes and Noble.




Thich Nhat Hanh 2010 Wall Calendar
Paintings by Nicholas Kirsten-Honshin

Links:
barnesandnoble
amazon

Bigger/better backside images:
wisdom-books (England)
amberlotus (USA)



Artist Website

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Self-Portrait Art



Wow. This is the most fabulous self-portrait I've ever seen.
Watercolor.
Almost inspires me to try that medium again.
Almost. lol

via
A View In Your Mirror a self-portrait blog.

Artist's Blog
(Larger image and poem there.)

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Soap Bubble Photography



Wow.
These are beautiful.

akindofmagic.eu

Via ColourLovers.com

I adore the one that looks like a dolphin.