April 30, 2012
Fidel Gudin. 19th century orientalist painter. Couldn’t find any further info….

Fidel Gudin. 19th century orientalist painter. Couldn’t find any further info….

February 2, 2012
Kandinsky, Wassily (1866-1944) - 1909 Arabs I (Hamburg Kunsthalle, Germany)

Oil on card; 71.5 x 98 cm.

Born in Moscow in 1866, Kandinsky spent his early childhood in Odessa. His parents played the piano and the zither and Kandinsky himself learned the piano and cello at an early age. The influence of music in his paintings cannot be overstated, down to the names of his paintings Improvisations, Impressions, and Compositions. In 1886, he enrolled at the University of Moscow, chose to study law and economics, and after passing his examinations, lectured at the Moscow Faculty of Law. He enjoyed success not only as a teacher but also wrote extensively on spirituality, a subject that remained of great interest and ultimately exerted substantial influence in his work. In 1895 Kandinsky attended a French Impressionist exhibition where he saw Monet’s Haystacks at Giverny. He stated, “It was from the catalog I learned this was a haystack. I was upset I had not recognized it. I also thought the painter had no right to paint in such an imprecise fashion. Dimly I was aware too that the object did not appear in the picture…” Soon thereafter, at the age of thirty, Kandinsky left Moscow and went to Munich to study life-drawing, sketching and anatomy, regarded then as basic for an artistic education.

Ironically, Kandinsky’s work moved in a direction that was of much greater abstraction than that which was pioneered by the Impressionists. It was not long before his talent surpassed the constraints of art school and he began exploring his own ideas of painting - “I applied streaks and blobs of colors onto the canvas with a palette knife and I made them sing with all the intensity I could…” Now considered to be the founder of abstract art, his work was exhibited throughout Europe from 1903 onwards, and often caused controversy among the public, the art critics, and his contemporaries. An active participant in several of the most influential and controversial art movements of the 20th century, among them the Blue Rider which he founded along with Franz Marc and the Bauhaus which also attracted Klee, Lyonel Feininger (1871-1956), and Schonberg, Kandinsky continued to further express and define his form of art, both on canvas and in his theoretical writings. His reputation became firmly established in the United State s through numerous exhbitions and his work was introduced to Solomon Guggenheim, who became one of his most enthusiastic supporters.

In 1933, Kandinsky left Germany and settled near Paris, in Neuilly. The paintings from these later years were again the subject of controversy. Though out of favor with many of the patriarchs of Paris’s artistic community, younger artists admired Kandinsky. His studio was visited regularly by Miro, Arp, Magnelli and Sophie Tauber.

Kandinsky continued painting almost until his death in June, 1944. his unrelenting quest for new forms which carried him to the very extremes of geometric abstraction have provided us with an unparalleled collection of abstract art.

Kandinsky, Wassily (1866-1944) - 1909 Arabs I (Hamburg Kunsthalle, Germany) Oil on card; 71.5 x 98 cm. Born in Moscow in 1866, Kandinsky spent his early childhood in Odessa. His parents played the piano and the zither and Kandinsky himself learned the piano and cello at an early age. The influence of music in his paintings cannot be overstated, down to the names of his paintings Improvisations, Impressions, and Compositions. In 1886, he enrolled at the University of Moscow, chose to study law and economics, and after passing his examinations, lectured at the Moscow Faculty of Law. He enjoyed success not only as a teacher but also wrote extensively on spirituality, a subject that remained of great interest and ultimately exerted substantial influence in his work. In 1895 Kandinsky attended a French Impressionist exhibition where he saw Monet’s Haystacks at Giverny. He stated, “It was from the catalog I learned this was a haystack. I was upset I had not recognized it. I also thought the painter had no right to paint in such an imprecise fashion. Dimly I was aware too that the object did not appear in the picture…” Soon thereafter, at the age of thirty, Kandinsky left Moscow and went to Munich to study life-drawing, sketching and anatomy, regarded then as basic for an artistic education. Ironically, Kandinsky’s work moved in a direction that was of much greater abstraction than that which was pioneered by the Impressionists. It was not long before his talent surpassed the constraints of art school and he began exploring his own ideas of painting - “I applied streaks and blobs of colors onto the canvas with a palette knife and I made them sing with all the intensity I could…” Now considered to be the founder of abstract art, his work was exhibited throughout Europe from 1903 onwards, and often caused controversy among the public, the art critics, and his contemporaries. An active participant in several of the most influential and controversial art movements of the 20th century, among them the Blue Rider which he founded along with Franz Marc and the Bauhaus which also attracted Klee, Lyonel Feininger (1871-1956), and Schonberg, Kandinsky continued to further express and define his form of art, both on canvas and in his theoretical writings. His reputation became firmly established in the United State s through numerous exhbitions and his work was introduced to Solomon Guggenheim, who became one of his most enthusiastic supporters. In 1933, Kandinsky left Germany and settled near Paris, in Neuilly. The paintings from these later years were again the subject of controversy. Though out of favor with many of the patriarchs of Paris’s artistic community, younger artists admired Kandinsky. His studio was visited regularly by Miro, Arp, Magnelli and Sophie Tauber. Kandinsky continued painting almost until his death in June, 1944. his unrelenting quest for new forms which carried him to the very extremes of geometric abstraction have provided us with an unparalleled collection of abstract art.

January 23, 2012
centuriespast:

Antonio TempestaItalian (Florence, Italy 1555 - 1630 Rome, Italy) Aesculapius as a Serpent, among the Romans, 1606
Series: Illustrations to Ovid’s “Metamorphoses”PrintEtching10.5 x 12 cm (4 1/8 x 4 3/4 in.) B. 786Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum,

Why are the Romans depicted in oriental costumes?

centuriespast:

Antonio Tempesta
Italian (Florence, Italy 1555 - 1630 Rome, Italy) 
Aesculapius as a Serpent, among the Romans, 1606
Series: Illustrations to Ovid’s “Metamorphoses”
Print
Etching
10.5 x 12 cm (4 1/8 x 4 3/4 in.) 
B. 786
Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum,

Why are the Romans depicted in oriental costumes?

January 6, 2012
art-mirrors-art:

Emil Nolde - Mulattin in Mirror (1913)

art-mirrors-art:

Emil Nolde - Mulattin in Mirror (1913)

December 25, 2011
loquaciousconnoisseur:

Édouard Manet
Young Man in the Costume of a Matador (c.1862)

loquaciousconnoisseur:

Édouard Manet

Young Man in the Costume of a Matador (c.1862)

September 1, 2011
The renowned printmaker Paul Jacoulet, born in France and raised in Japan, was dubbed the  “Frenchman of the woodblock print” by post war collectors. Known for a style that mixed the traditional ukiyo-e printmakingand lavish techniques developed by the artist himself, Jacoulet became famous after WWII. Queen Elizabeth II,Pope Pius XII,Greta Garbo were among his admirers and collectors.His draftsmanship and technique were of very high quality, he worked only with the very best engravers and printers, sometimes using up to 60 different blocks for a single print.

The renowned printmaker Paul Jacoulet, born in France and raised in Japan, was dubbed the  “Frenchman of the woodblock print” by post war collectors. Known for a style that mixed the traditional ukiyo-e printmakingand lavish techniques developed by the artist himself, Jacoulet became famous after WWII. Queen Elizabeth II,Pope Pius XII,Greta Garbo were among his admirers and collectors.
His draftsmanship and technique were of very high quality, he worked only with the very best engravers and printers, sometimes using up to 60 different blocks for a single print.

September 1, 2011
“The illustration shows Jang Bahadur with thescore of the Viennese polka written in his honour during his stay in Europe by one of the Strauss family.. The polka itself sounds to me very Viennese and distinctly un-Nepali, but you can listen and judge for yourselves:” at the original site…

“The illustration shows Jang Bahadur with thescore of the Viennese polka written in his honour during his stay in Europe by one of the Strauss family.. The polka itself sounds to me very Viennese and distinctly un-Nepali, but you can listen and judge for yourselves:” at the original site…

August 17, 2011
centuriespast:

SPRANGER, BartholomaeusVenus and Adonis1597Oil on canvas, 163 x 104,3 cmKunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

centuriespast:

SPRANGER, Bartholomaeus
Venus and Adonis
1597
Oil on canvas, 163 x 104,3 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

June 14, 2011
oldbookillustrations:

A large street in Cairo - Mosque of Sultan Baibars.
From L’Afrique pittoresque (picturesque Africa), selected passages by Victor Tissot, Paris, 1890.
(Source: archive.org)

oldbookillustrations:

A large street in Cairo - Mosque of Sultan Baibars.

From L’Afrique pittoresque (picturesque Africa), selected passages by Victor Tissot, Paris, 1890.

(Source: archive.org)

May 26, 2011
‘An Almeh’ by Jean-Leon Gerome, French. Oil, 1882.Almeh (Arabic عالمة `ālma, plural awālim, from علم ”to know, be learned”) was the name of a class of courtesans or female entertainers in Arab Egypt, women educated to sing and recite classical poetry and to discourse wittily, connected by musician Alain Weber (1997) to the qayna slave singers of pre-Islamic Arabia.[1] They were educated girls of good social standing, trained in dancing, singing and poetry, present at festivals and entertainments, and hired as mourners at funerals. (wikipedia)
In Islamic tradition, the awalim were linked to Aisha, wife of the prophet Muhammad, and to Aisha bint Talhah, who conversed with learned men at the court of Damascus, and who was nick-named “the flower of literature” because the poetry she authored.
In the 19th century, almeh came to be used as a synonym of ghawazi, the erotic dancers of Dom ethnicity whose performances were banned in 1834 by Muhammad Ali of Egypt. As a result of the ban, the ghawazi dancers were forced to pretend that they were in fact awalim. Transliterated into French as almée, the term came to be synonymous with “belly dancer” in European Orientalism of the 19th century.
[edit] 

‘An Almeh’ by Jean-Leon Gerome, French. Oil, 1882.Almeh (Arabic عالمة `ālma, plural awālim, from علم ”to know, be learned”) was the name of a class of courtesans or female entertainers in Arab Egypt, women educated to sing and recite classical poetry and to discourse wittily, connected by musician Alain Weber (1997) to the qayna slave singers of pre-Islamic Arabia.[1] They were educated girls of good social standing, trained in dancing, singing and poetry, present at festivals and entertainments, and hired as mourners at funerals. (wikipedia)

In Islamic tradition, the awalim were linked to Aisha, wife of the prophet Muhammad, and to Aisha bint Talhah, who conversed with learned men at the court of Damascus, and who was nick-named “the flower of literature” because the poetry she authored.

In the 19th century, almeh came to be used as a synonym of ghawazi, the erotic dancers of Dom ethnicity whose performances were banned in 1834 by Muhammad Ali of Egypt. As a result of the ban, the ghawazi dancers were forced to pretend that they were in fact awalim. Transliterated into French as almée, the term came to be synonymous with “belly dancer” in European Orientalism of the 19th century.

[edit]
 

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