Thursday 5 May 2011

Gilded Romance vs. Eroticism and Sexuality: The two sides of Gustav Klimt

Klimt is one of my favourite artists; and I think it's a feminine thing. Let's be honest - I have yet to come across a girl/woman who doesn't love him!
There's something about his golden canvases that draw in women like magpies to a shiny objects; they are mesmerising, higly romanticised, sensual - particularly because most of his subjects are women. Maybe that's why women love his paintings; they can relate to them, identify with them.
Water Serpents II c. 1907

Judith and the Head of Holofernes, 1901
But little did I know about his drawings of male and female nudes and sexually inspired themes:






"Several of the works, including two of women masturbating, would be hard to hang on a domestic wall. "They were made for the artist's pleasure, and kept for the collector's private pleasure," Mr Pylkkanen said. Some of them are preparatory drawings for known paintings, but most are works in their own right. They include a coloured chalk drawing of Ria Munk, a Viennese society beauty. Klimt painted her several times, completing a portrait that was commissioned by her parents, and another of her lying on her death bed - made in 1912, a year after she committed suicide at the age of 24. "
(The Guardian, 10th October 2001)

Indeed, Klimt has addressed the taboo of sex and pleasure quite clearly; these works are exposed, striking. The exquisite delicacy of his execution he conveys, better than any other book, that image fragile and complex, but deeply expressive, that Klimt built of women, their theme par excellence.

Louisa Chase/Disney's 'Fantasia', 1940/The Futurists/Kandinsky

What do they all have as common ground?
Music.

I'll explain in the form of a flow chart:

LOUISA CHASE, 'EMERALD SEA'
(photo from book)
I described this painting as an 'orchestra of colours and marks', which then led me to...

WALT DISNEY'S 'FANTASIA' 1940 (FILM STILLS)

Galaxy


Violin bows
The orchestra in this selection of stills (the rest are in my book) are visualised through similar marks found in 'Emerald Sea' - franticly organised, like the notation of music itself.
This then led me to...

FUTURISM: 'MUSICA', RUSSOLO

Like musical notation, the orthogonals are almost like staves, ribboning and meandering across the canvas in the form of a blue line. The title 'Musica' is so called because Futurists were obssessed and gripped by the notion of evoking sound in their paintings.
This finally led me to...

'IMPROVISATION 28', KANDINSKY

Kandinsky was also known for his interest in combining music and art: it is no wonder why his pieces like 'Improvisation 28' were also called compositions. Kandinsky is one of my favourite artists because of this (as a musician), his works are almost like graphic scores, bursting with a sensation of freedom and deep expression.

My Kandinsky page (from Guggenheim gallery page, part of New York pages from my book)

RCA Workshop: Helen Murgatroyd, 4th February 2011



"Inspired by Royal Mail sorting offices, kitchen utensils and the ideals of cottage industries, I invent tools and workstations to allow the duplication of my drawings. Motivated by a search for self-sufficient printmaking my practise combines the home kitchen with the print workshop, attempting mass-production on a domestic scale. Repetition is my subject yet the humanness of the processes I invent ensures that each picture is unique. I am interested in the space between drawing and printmaking where editions of one-offs are a possibility.
My practice is driven by a compulsion to make, while being firmly rooted in observational drawing."

----->  http://www.helenmurgatroyd.co.uk/

Helen's low-key method of printing goes to show that you don't need state-of-the-art, artsy-farsty, wishy-washy technology to get down-to-earth, great-looking prints. In fact, doing it with your own hands is more satisfying than to have a machine laser-cut it out for you.
We started out with quick, 10-second sketches of batches of vegetables to base our prints from; it was 'go, go, go' from the second the charcoal glided onto the paper. Then, using card, cardboard and some stanley knives, VOILA: in about 15mins we were ready for printing.
Printing = pressure via hands. It was great.


(Based on an onion), making the print board

Testing prints

Combination prints: joint with the prints of two other people

(from left to right) Me, Indy and Suzanna w/ our composition 



April 2010
'French bar', April 2010, Helen Murgatroyd
'Fruit bowl' , Helen Murgatroyd


'Teapot', Helen Murgatroyd

Dec 2009
'A tool made for duplicating an image of a bowl of fruit. Made of a series of removeable templates and instructions the image is built up colour by colour.'
Helen Murgatroyd

Tuesday 3 May 2011

The Big Apple, April 2011

So on 4th-9th, I went on an Art History trip to NYC with Westminster School.

Never has the phrase 'words cannot describe' rung more true about New York. I mean it's one heck of a city - bearing in mind we only stayed in Manhattan (sad face).

So, if I can't describe, I take photos. I figure I can share my experience so much easily through visuals.
I took my film Canon, and I only had 3 rolls (do the math: 33 x 3 = 99, but I still haven't developed the last roll).

(It's no where near enough to capture the atmosphere of New York, but hey)



Here's a selection of some bits (unseen in the book):

Dr Cockburn with Rodin sculpture @ The Met

The Met

Mr Street with a de Kooning @ The Met

The Met

Times Square


*Law and Order theme tune*

It's fun to stay at the YMCA


MoMA

Lil bit o' Duchamp@ MoMA

Drawing in Central Park

Signpost in SoHo