Monday, November 06, 2006

Genius of Goyo

Woman Washing Her Hair 1920 Goyo
Woman Washing Her Face 1920 Goyo
Here are two more wonderful images of women by Hashiguchi Goyo. I had read that his prints are very rare and he only did 8 prints of women on his own, but this website shows us more images:
(Thanks again Internet Weekly)

Friday, November 03, 2006

Always in Style- Japanese Prints

Hashiguchi Goyo 1915 Bathing
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi 1888 Shy Woman
Hashiguchi Goyo 1920 Thin Garment
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi 1888 Looking Delighted
I love these Japanese woodblock prints of women. The economy of the line and the elegance of the style. They are the same ones that inspired so many artists who came before me (Mary Cassatt, for instance). Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's 32 Aspects of Women Series and Hashiguchi Goyo's 8 prints of women- the only ones he did in his lifetime.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Bosch Action Figures

Tree Man
Devil on a Night Chair
These figures are from the Parastone Mouseion Collection . They were directly inspired by the painted masterpiece, "The Garden of Earthly Delights" by Hieronymus Bosch.
Thanks Internet Weekly for another great link.

Small is Big

"Nude Seated on a Rock" 1921 Pablo Picasso
The last time I went to the Museum of Modern Art, one painting seemed to stand out for me. It was teeny-tiny- measuring only 6 1/4"x 4 3/8"- but it simply glowed with color and feeling, dwarfing all of the large paintings around it. It's an oil on wood by Pablo Picasso done in 1921 - one of his best years in my opinion. He had a way of painting the human form that was so solid and peasant-like, almost sculptural. This painting was a magnet that pulled me in and held me there. Everyone wanted to stand in front of it and get personal with it. Small can be powerful.

Monday, October 30, 2006

Morris Hirshfield's "Overnight" Success

"Dog and Pups"
"Girl and Dog"
Morris Hirshfield1872-1946
"Four Cats"
"Morris Hirshfield came to the United States from eastern Europe at the age of 18. Like many other Jewish immigrants of this period, he found work in the garment industry, at first in a women's coat factory. Hirshfield soon opened his own coat factory with his brother, but after 12 years, they started a new company, the EZ Walk Manufacturing Company, which made women's "boudoir slippers," as Hirshfield called them. This business operated with great success until Hirshfield became ill and then retired.
In 1937, at the age of 65, Hirshfield began to paint, much to the bewilderment of his wife and family. The subjects he was immediately drawn to were women, animals, and occasionally themes from his Jewish heritage.
A record of Hirshfield's life and career as an artist was written by Hirshfield himself for Sidney Janis's 1942 book They Taught Themselves. Janis had come upon Hirshfield's paintings a few years earlier while organizing an exhibition called "Contemporary Unknown American Painters" for the Museum of Modern Art. Upon seeing Hirshfield's Angora Cat, he immediately included work from the new artist in the exhibition.
In 1941 Hirshfield was given a one-man exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art that included 30 paintings."
I love Morris Hirshfield. To think it only took him 4 years to have the show of a lifetime at MOMA with the 30 paintings he had done up until that point. He completed only 77 works of art before his death- 9 years after he started painting.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Ray Caesar

Here's Ray Caesar's art on the cover of the upcoming issue of Hi-Fructose magazine. He creates his art on the computer with a 3-d modelling program and scans in the fabric. Simply amazing how much soul he gets in his faces and the old-fashioned feel to his tableaus. They are every bit "paintings", but he uses the computer instead of a brush. Check out his unique sense of fashion design, too. Ray Caesar is a truly inspiring and creative modern-day Victorian surrealist. He's got the WOW factor.
P.S. If you like myspace and it doesn't crash your computer, check out Ray's fascinating page: Ray on myspace
(Thanks to VinylPulse and Wurzeltod , two cool blogs featuring Ray Caesar's art)

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Hungarian Nudes



Paintings by Molnar C., Pal
"Began his studies on the art teacher training faculty of the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts in 1915, later travelling to Geneva, where he trained himself autodidactically. He lived in Paris between 1921 and 1922. He participated on the exhibitions of KUT regularly from 1924 on. He switched to illustrating works of literature and in parallel to the techniques of wood engraving in 1930. Though next to illustration work he also designed posters through the thirties, his work as a painter came in to the foreground. He became a scholarship holder of the Collegium Hungaricum in Rome as early as 1928, later to become an individual creative voice of the Rome School. He received a number of significant commissions from the Church between 1933 and 1970. He summed up his technical knowledge in specialised textbooks, while his autobiography was published in 1994. His flat has now become a memorial museum." Text from the Kieselbach Gallery website
(Thanks to Internet Weekly for turning me on to this great Hungarian painter!)