How wonderful these are, United States as seen by Soviet artist Orest Vereisky (1960s)










From Russia ICC.Com
Orest Vereisky was born into the family of the artist Georgy Vereisky and Yelena Vereiskaya, who was the daughter of the historian Nikolay Kareyev. Till 1922 Orest lived in Anosovo Village near the town of Smolensk.


From 1936 to 1938 he was an auditor of the Leningrad Arts Academy. It was in Leningrad where the creative buildup of Vereysky as an artist took place. Here the artist and teacher Alexander Osmerkin was Orest’s second mentor after his father. In 1940 Orest Vereisky moved to Moscow to live and work there.
During the Great Patriotic War he worked in the editorial board of the Krasnoarmeyskaya Pravda (Red Army Truth) newspaper, where he got acquainted and made friends with Aleksandr Tvardovsky. He was a full member of the USSR Arts Academy (1983) and a corresponding member of the USSR Arts Academy (1958).
 Vereisky is known for his book graphic art illustrations, but easel graphic art also took an important place in his creativity. He is the author of a series of drawings, water colors, and autolithographs, created as a result of his world traveling and diverse in subjects.

Orest Vereisky died on January 2, 1993 and was laid to rest in the Kuntsevsky Cemetery in Moscow.



Consecration of the herm, 1874, Fyodor Bronnikov


A Herm is usually a head statue of the god Hermes aiming to show the way since Hermes is the patron deity of directions, or with apotropaic function aiming to dispel evil.

The oath of Brutus

I had to look up the oath of Brutus, I didn’t know what it was. Apparently, Brutus' first act after the expulsion of Lucius Tarquinius Superbus (The seventh and final king of Rome and a notorious tyrant) was to bring the people to swear an oath never to allow any man again to be king in Rome. There is no scholarly agreement that the oath actually took place.

The Oath of Brutus before the statue, Fyodor Bronnikov

François-Joseph_Navez

Leonardo Da Vinci’s $450M painting of Jesus Christ set for Abu Dhabi museum missing: report

Leonardo Da Vinci’s $450M painting of Jesus Christ set for Abu Dhabi museum missing: report


It's the most expensive painting ever sold -- and no one seems to know where it is.
A painting of Jesus Christ attributed to Leonardo Da Vinci, that became the most expensive painting ever sold when it was purchased in 2017 for $450 million by a close ally of the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, the "Salvator Mundi" was set to be displayed at the Louvre Abu Dhabi. But the painting is conspicuously absent among the works by Rembrandt, Vermeer, Monet and van Gogh that already hang on display at the museum.
The New York Times reported the Abu Dhabi culture department touted the news that the painting would be displayed at the museum just a month after the auction. However, when it was scheduled to be unveiled at the local Louvre last September, the event was canceled without explanation.
The culture department is refusing to answer questions and staff at the Louvre Abu Dhabi have said they have no knowledge about the painting’s whereabouts.
Additionally, an official at the Louvre in Paris, which licenses its name to the Abu Dhabi museum, told the Times the museum has not been able to locate “Salvator Mundi.”
Both museums declined to provide an official comment to the Times.
The painting was purchased on auction in November 2017 by Prince Bader bin Abdullah bin Farhan Al Saud, who is believed to have acted as a proxy for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. He was named the new Saudi Culture Minister in 2018.
Believed to have been painted around 1500, “Salvator Mundi” was one of two similar works listed in an inventory of the collection of King Charles I of England after his execution in 1649, the Times reported, citing Oxford art historian Martin Kemp. The painting disappeared from the historical record in the late 18th century.
But the painting later turned up in the collection of a 19th-century British industrialist, heavily painted over and attributed at the time to one of Da Vinci’s followers.
The claim that the painting was actually that of the renowned Italian painter originated after a pair of dealers spotted it at an auction in New Orleans and took it to Dianne Modestini, a professor at New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts and a conservator, the Times reported.
Modestini, who called the unknown whereabouts of the painting “tragic,” stripped away overpainting, repaired damage to the wood panel and restored details.
“To deprive the art lovers and many others who were moved by this picture — a masterpiece of such rarity — is deeply unfair,” she said.
Russian billionaire, Dmitry E. Rybolovlev, bought it for $127.5 million in 2013 after it was displayed at the National Gallery in London. He then auctioned it off via Christie’s in New York four years later for the record $450.3 million.
Rumors in the art world swirled that the painting had been taken to Europe after the completion of payment and Modestini said she heard from a restoration expert that he had been asked by an insurance company to examine the painting in Zurich last fall before further shipping.
The examination was canceled, however, the Times reported.

“The trail goes completely cold,” Modestini added.

Great Photography present by John William Tuohy: At the Bar, Bourbon Street, New Orleans, Photo by ...

Great Photography present by John William Tuohy: At the Bar, Bourbon Street, New Orleans, Photo by ...: George S. Zimbel (born July 15, 1929) is an American-Canadian documentary photographer. He has worked professionally since the late 1940...

Hermann Nitsch



Hermann Nitsch is an Austrian avant-garde artist who works in experimental and multimedia modes.


Born in Vienna, Nitsch received training in painting when studied at the Wiener Graphische Lehr-und Versuchanstalt, during which time he was drawn to religious art.
He is associated with the Vienna Actionists—a loosely affiliated group of off-kilter and confrontational Austrian artists that also includes Günter Brus, Otto Muehl, and Rudolf Schwarzkogler.
Nitsch's abstract 'splatter' paintings, like his performance pieces, are inspired by his neutral perspective on humanity and being human. In the 1950s, Nitsch conceived of the Orgien Mysterien Theater (which roughly translates as Theatre of Orgies and Mysteries or The Orgiastic Mystery Theater), staging nearly 100 performances between 1962 and 1998.

Having grown up during the World War II, Nitsch reveals his fascination with the intensity of religious feelings for life in his artwork with excessive means such as taboo images, nudity, bloody scenes and more. For this, he received several court trials, being charged with gross public indecency and sentenced to three prison terms. It is often suggested that his work may exemplify cultures' fascination with violence.


Blue II, 1961, Joan Miro



Joan Miró i Ferrà was a Spanish painter, sculptor, and ceramicist born in Barcelona. A museum dedicated to his work, the Fundació Joan Miró, was established in his native city of Barcelona in 1975, and another, the Fundació Pilar i Joan Miró, was established in his adoptive city of Palma de Mallorca in 1981.


Earning international acclaim, his work has been interpreted as Surrealism, a sandbox for the subconscious mind, a re-creation of the childlike, and a manifestation of Catalan pride. In numerous interviews dating from the 1930s onwards, Miró expressed contempt for conventional painting methods as a way of supporting bourgeois society and declared an "assassination of painting" in favor of upsetting the visual elements of established painting. 

Blue I, II, III is a triptych created in 1961. It is a set of three-part display abstract oil paintings by the Spanish modern artist Joan Miró. The paintings are named Blue I, Blue II, Blue III and are similar. All are large paintings of 355 cm x 270 cm each and are currently owned by the Musée National d'Art Moderne in the Centre Pompidouin Paris.
As an up-and-coming artist in Paris during the 1920s, Miró was influenced heavily by Cubism and Art Nouveau, particularly the works of artists like Picasso. During this time he painted works similar to Bleu I, II and III such as Maternity (1924), Painting (1927), and Catalan Peasant with a Guitar (1924). Many of these works used the same spacious, blue field. Miró held a special significance with this color; to him this blue was a symbol of a world of cosmic dreams, an unconscious state where his mind flowed clearly and without any sort of order. 


This blue was the color of a surreal, ethereal night, a night that embodied the only place where dreams could exist in their rawest state, untouched and uncensored by conscious, rational thought. Now its stalled in the Musee de Centre Pompidou

Miró completed the Triptych Bleu I, II, III on March 4, 1961, well into his artistic career. By this time he was an established artist with large exhibitions all over the world and saw this triptych as a summary of his works up to this point. Shifts in style and technique are apparent over the course of his artistic career, ranging from busy landscapes and portraits at the beginning of his career to his famous abstract paintings of nearly empty space and stark, primary colors, the style in which Bleu II was created. 

Miró’s abstract paintings conveyed his dreams and subconscious, and he often spoke of painting freely without truly being in control; rather, letting the free-flowing thoughts and shifts of his mind move the brush across the canvas, a technique referred to as “psychic automatism”. Bleu II exemplifies his distinct style; the artist uses sparse, uniform brushstrokes all across the canvas, giving the enormous expanse of the painting an even more empty feeling, which is emphasized even further by the distinguishable dreamy blue of the background.

Bleu II is probably the painting in Miró’s portfolio that most definitively expresses his obsession with dreamscapes and vacant, infinite space. In 1958, during which he was working on the Bleu I, II, III triptych and similar abstract murals in Paris, he was quoted saying: “The spectacle of the sky overwhelms me. I’m overwhelmed when I see, in an immense sky, the crescent of the moon, or the sun. There, in my pictures, tiny forms in huge, empty spaces. Empty spaces, empty horizons, empty plains—everything which is bare has always greatly impressed me.” (Twentieth Century Artists on Art, 1958). Bleu I and Bleu III are nearly identical to Bleu II with exactly the same backgrounds of matching color and simple lines and shapes.


To animate the sparseness of Bleu II's canvas, Miró includes the dynamic red line on the left side of the painting, conveying a sharp shock in the calm blue surface. He also employs the series of bold, defined black dots radiating out from the red line in a horizontal flow to transmit the motion of the line through the whole expanse of the canvas. With these shapes, Miró creates an energetic, powerful piece, a bold work brought to life by the precise (but by intention very free) placement of geometric shapes and bright colors, allowing the viewer a glimpse into the unspoiled subconscious of the artist and truly embodying the unique style for which Miró is well known for today.



MY WRITERS SITE: Landscape with Pumpkin, 1979

MY WRITERS SITE: Landscape with Pumpkin, 1979: Yayoi Kusama is a Japanese contemporary artist who works primarily in sculpture and installation but is also active in painting, perfo...

Franklin Park, Boston, 1897, Maurice Prendergast



Franklin Park, a partially wooded 527-acre parkland in the Jamaica Plain, Roxbury, and Dorchester neighborhoods. Considered a country park when it was formed in the 19th century, Franklin Park is the largest and last component of the Emerald Necklace created by Frederick Law Olmsted. Although often neglected in the past, it is considered the "crown jewel" of Olmsted's work in Greater Boston


Maurice Brazil Prendergast (October 10, 1858 – February 1, 1924) was a Post-Impressionist artist who worked in oil, watercolor, and monotype. He exhibited as a member of The Eight, though the delicacy of his compositions and mosaic-like beauty of his style differed from the artistic intentions and philosophy of the group.


The Ashcan school is sometimes linked to the group known as "The Eight", though in fact only five members of that group (Henri, Sloan, Glackens, Luks, and Shinn) were Ashcan artists. The other three – Arthur B. Davies, Ernest Lawson, and Maurice Prendergast – painted in a very different style, and the exhibition that brought "The Eight" to national attention took place in 1908, several years after the beginning of the Ashcan style. However, the attention accorded the group's well-publicized exhibition at the Macbeth Galleries in New York 1908 was such that Ashcan art gained wider exposure and greater sales and critical attention than it had known before.
The “Ashcan school” is sometimes linked to the group known as "The Eight", though in fact only five members of that group (Henri, Sloan, Glackens, Luks, and Shinn) were Ashcan artists. The other three – Arthur B. Davies, Ernest Lawson, and Maurice Prendergast – painted in a very different style, and the exhibition that brought "The Eight" to national attention took place in 1908, several years after the beginning of the Ashcan style.
Prendergast exhibited at the Macbeth Galleries in 1908 with the short-lived association of artists known as "The Eight" because he supported their protest against the academic bias and restrictive exhibition policies of the powerful, conservative National Academy of Design. He believed in a "no jury, no prizes" openness that would allow independent or unconventional artists greater opportunities to find a wider, appreciative audience for their work. art.
Prendergast's work was strongly associated from the beginning with leisurely scenes set on beaches and in parks. His early work was mostly in watercolor or monotype, and he produced over two hundred monotypes between 1895 and 1902.

He developed early in his career and continued throughout his life to elaborate a highly personal style, with boldly contrasting, jewel-like colors, and flattened, pattern-like forms rhythmically arranged on a canvas. Forms were radically simplified and presented in flat areas of bright, unmodulated color. His paintings have been aptly described as tapestry-like or resembling mosaics.


The bull on the Elmer’s glue logo

The bull on the Elmer’s glue logo is the husband of Elsie, the cow on the Borden Milk logo.



Self Portrait, 1882, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec


Mysterious 'Nude Mona Lisa' may have been drawn by da Vinci

Mysterious 'Nude Mona Lisa' may have been drawn by da Vinci
By James Rogers

Mysterious ‘Nude Mona Lisa’ possibly drawn by da Vinci
A mysterious painting titled the ‘Nude Mona Lisa’ may have been drawn by Leonardo da Vinci.

A new analysis of a charcoal drawing that has puzzled experts for centuries suggests that it was likely created by Leonardo da Vinci.
The “Mona Vanna,” better known as the "Nude Mona Lisa," was long thought to be from da Vinci’s studio, AFP reports. However, analysis of the drawing at the C2RMF laboratory beneath the famous Louvre Museum in Paris indicates that the famous artist himself may have created the work.
The figure’s hands and body bear similarities to the "Mona Lisa," and may have been used in da Vinci’s preparations for the masterpiece. Citing microscopic exams of the work, AFP reports that the “Mona Vanna” was drawn from top left to bottom right, which indicates that it is the work of a left-handed artist such as da Vinci.
Purchased by the Duc d’Aumale in 1862, the drawing is in the collection of the Condé Museum at the Chateau de Chantilly, north of Paris.
 “The Italian master spent a lot of time perfecting his work,” explained the Domaine de Chantilly, in a statement emailed to Fox News. Laboratory analysis shows that the Chantilly drawing "was used as a tracing (to transfer the composition) for paintings probably created in his workshop,” it added.
The “Mona Vanna,” sketch is almost as large as the “Mona Lisa” itself. The famous painting is housed in the Louvre.
2019 marks the 500th anniversary of da Vinci’s death and the “Nude Mona Lisa” will feature prominently in a Condé Museum exhibition this summer. “In the manner of a police investigation, and in an immersive way, the visitor will discover the results of the scientific analyses,” explained the Domaine de Chantilly, in its statement
Da Vinci continues to be a source of fascination. Later this year, The British Library in London is set to showcase a number of Leonardo da Vinci's most important notebooks, all written in his famous “mirror-writing.”
The "Leonardo da Vinci: A Mind in Motion" exhibit will include notes and drawings from three of his most revered scientific and artistic notebooks, the "Codex Arundel," the "Codex Forster" and the "Codex Leicester."
In addition to using his own shorthand, da Vinci also wrote his personal notes starting on the right-hand side of the page. It is not clear whether this so-called mirror writing was a way to keep his notes private or simply a means to prevent smudging, as da Vinci was left-handed.
Last year, experts in Italy said they had found the earliest surviving work by da Vinci. The small glazed terracotta tile, described as a self-portrait of the artist as the Archangel Gabriel, was unveiled at a press conference in Rome.
However, the tile’s authenticity was questioned by noted Leonardo expert Martin Kemp, professor emeritus of the history of art at the University of Oxford.
There has even been some debate about the authenticity of Da Vinci’s “Salvator Mundi” painting, which sold for a record $450.3 million in 2017.
The painting grabbed headlines around the world when it was sold at Christie’s auction house in New York. "Salvator Mundi," Latin for "Savior of the World,” is one of fewer than 20 paintings by da Vinci known to exist and the only one in private hands.
The Associated Press contributed to this article. Follow James Rogers on Twitter @jamesjrogers


Cone Beaker

Cone Beaker, possibly England or Northern France or Germany, 400-599. 66.1.247.
This beaker was reportedly found at Acklam, Yorkshire, England, in 1892. Large conical beakers with pointed bottoms like this one could not stand on their own and were likely passed hand-to-hand among multiple drinkers.




Aestheticism


Aestheticism (also the Aesthetic Movement) is an intellectual and art movement supporting the emphasis of aesthetic values more than social-political themes for literature, fine art, music and other arts. This meant that art from this particular movement focused more on being beautiful rather than having a deeper meaning — "art for art's sake".

It was particularly prominent in Europe during the 19th century, supported by notable figures such as Walter Pater and Oscar Wilde, but contemporary critics are also associated with the movement, such as Harold Bloom, who has recently argued against projecting social and political ideology onto literary works, which he believes has been a growing problem in humanities departments over the 20th century.

In the 19th century, it was related to other movements such as symbolism or decadence represented in France, or decadentismo represented in Italy, and may be considered the British version of the same style.

The British decadent writers were much influenced by the Oxford professor Walter Pater and his essays published during 1867–68, in which he stated that life had to be lived intensely, with an ideal of beauty. His text Studies in the History of the Renaissance (1873) was very well regarded by art-oriented young men of the late 19th century.

Writers of the Decadent movement used the slogan "Art for Art's Sake" (L'art pour l'art), the origin of which is debated.

The artists and writers of Aesthetic style tended to profess that the Arts should provide refined sensuous pleasure, rather than convey moral or sentimental messages. As a consequence, they did not accept John Ruskin, Matthew Arnold, and George MacDonald's conception of art as something moral or useful, "Art for truth's sake". Instead, they believed that Art did not have any didactic purpose; it only needed to be beautiful. The Aesthetes developed a cult of beauty, which they considered the basic factor of art. Life should copy Art, they asserted. They considered nature as crude and lacking in design when compared to art. The main characteristics of the style were: suggestion rather than statement, sensuality, great use of symbols, and synaesthetic/Ideasthetic effects—that is, correspondence between words, colors and music. Music was used to establish mood.

Predecessors of the Aesthetics included John Keats and Percy Bysshe Shelley, and some of the Pre-Raphaelites who themselves were a legacy of the Romantic spirit. There are a few significant continuities between the Pre-Raphaelite philosophy and that of the Aesthetes: Dedication to the idea of ‘Art for Art’s Sake’; admiration of, and constant striving for, beauty; escapism through visual and literary arts; craftsmanship that is both careful and self-conscious; mutual interest in merging the arts of various media. This final idea is promoted in the poem L’Art by Théophile Gautier, who compared the poet to the sculptor and painter. Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Edward Burne-Jones are most strongly associated with Aestheticism. However, their approach to Aestheticism did not share the creed of ‘Art for Art’s Sake’ but rather “a spirited reassertion of those principles of colour, beauty, love, and cleanness that the drab, agitated, discouraging world of the mid-nineteenth century needed so much.”

This reassertion of beauty in a drab world also connects to Pre-Raphaelite escapism in art and poetry.

In Britain the best representatives were Oscar Wilde and Algernon Charles Swinburne, both influenced by the French Symbolists, and James McNeill Whistler and Dante Gabriel Rossetti. The style and these poets were satirized by Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera Patience and other works, such as F. C. Burnand's drama The Colonel, and in comic magazines such as Punch, particularly in works by George Du Maurier.

Compton Mackenzie's novel Sinister Street makes use of the type as a phase through which the protagonist passes as he is influenced by older, decadent individuals. The novels of Evelyn Waugh, who was a young participant of aesthete society at Oxford, describe the aesthetes mostly satirically, but also as a former participant. Some names associated with this assemblage are Robert Byron, Evelyn Waugh, Harold Acton, Nancy Mitford, A.E. Housman and Anthony Powell.

Artists associated with the Aesthetic style include Simeon Solomon, James McNeill Whistler, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and Aubrey Beardsley. Although the work of Edward Burne-Jones was exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery which promoted the movement, it also contains narrative and conveys moral or sentimental messages hence it falls outside the given definition.


The primary element of Decorative Art is utility. The maxim "art for art's sake", identifying art or beauty as the primary element in other branches of the Aesthetic Movement, especially fine art, cannot apply in this context. Decorative art must first have utility but may also be beautiful. Decorative art is dissociated from fine art.

Look at these wonderful faces...

Merry, 1893, John Everett Millais

Girl with the Cornflowers, Alexey Venetsianov

Family portrait, 1635, Frans Hals

Isn't this wonderful?

Santiago de Cuba, Street Scene, Winslow Homer

Painter

Young painter at his easel, Theodore Gericault

The Artist’s Studio, 1868, Camille Corot

Vase by Louis Comfort Tiffany, American Decorative Arts


Love it!


Polly Apfelbaum (American, b. 1955), Rainbow Park 2, 2006. Monoprint on Hiromi handmade Kozo triple

I see what you did there........


Five watercolors attributed to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler failed to sell at auction this weekend, possibly over fears they could be fakes.




The Nuremberger Nachrichten newspaper reported Sunday that no bids were received on the paintings, which had starting prices of between 19,000 euros ($21,500) and 45,000 euros ($50,900).
 Three days before Saturday's auction, prosecutors reportedly seized 63 other paintings attributed to Hitler from the auction house to investigate allegations they were fakes.
In Berlin last month, prosecutors seized three other Hitler watercolors after receiving a complaint questioning their authenticity.
As a young man, Hitler is thought to have painted a number of pictures as he unsuccessfully struggled to succeed as an artist in Vienna prior to World War I. He twice failed the entrance exam to the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts, in 1907 and 1908.
American and British soldiers found many Hitler drawings in the ruins of German government buildings after World War II, as Fox News previously reported. Sotheby’s in London offered Hitler drawings for sale in the 1960s. Over the years, several auctions have been conducted in England and Germany.
Fox News' Don Snyder and The Associated Press contributed to this report.





The Bay of Naples, Ivan Aivazovski


Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky (1817 –  1900) was a Russian Romantic painter who is considered one of the greatest masters of marine art. Baptized as Hovhannes Aivazian, he was born into an Armenian family in the Black Sea port of Feodosia in Crimea and was mostly based there.
Following his education at the Imperial Academy of Arts in Saint Petersburg, Aivazovsky traveled to Europe and lived briefly in Italy in the early 1840s. He then returned to Russia and was appointed the main painter of the Russian Navy. Aivazovsky had close ties with the military and political elite of the Russian Empire and often attended military maneuvers.
 He was sponsored by the state and was well-regarded during his lifetime. The saying "worthy of Aivazovsky's brush", popularized by Anton Chekhov, was used in Russia for describing something lovely. He remains highly popular in Russia.

One of the most prominent Russian artists of his time, Aivazovsky was also popular outside Russia. He held numerous solo exhibitions in Europe and the United States. During his almost 60-year career, he created around 6,000 paintings, making him one of the most prolific artists of his time.

The vast majority of his works are seascapes, but he often depicted battle scenes, Armenian themes, and portraiture. Most of Aivazovsky's works are kept in Russian, Ukrainian and Armenian museums as well as private collections.

Jeannette I, Henri Matisse


Crouching Boy, 1533, Michelangelo


At School Doors, Nikolay Bogdanov-Belsky

Ikolay Petrovich Bogdanov-Belsky (1868–1945) was a Russian painter born in the village of Shitiki in Smolensk Governorate in 1868. He studied art at the Semyon Rachinsky fine art school, icon-painting at the Troitse-Sergiyeva Lavra in 1883, modern painting at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture in 1884 to 1889, and at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg from 1894 to 1895. He worked and studied in private studios in Paris in the late 1890s.


Bogdanov-Belsky was active in St. Petersburg. After 1921, he worked exclusively in Riga, Latvia. He became a member of several prominent societies in including the Peredvizhniki from 1895, and the Arkhip Kuindzhi Society from 1909 (of which he was a founding member and chairman from 1913 to 1918).
Bogdanov-Belsky painted mostly genre paintings, especially of the education of peasant children, portraits, and impressionistic landscapes studies. He became pedagogue and academician in 1903. He was an active Member of the Academy of Arts in 1914. Since 1921, he lived in Riga. Bogdanov-Belsky died in 1945 in Berlin.


I believe it



O'Keefe