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url 2021-10-05 15:48
The Great Wave

The Great Wave Learning from Van Gogh & Hokusai about 19th Century Art

 

Reconsidering Transcendence in Art Presence or Absence of divine Learning from Van Gogh & Hokusai by Nataša Pantović

The Starry Night Vincent Van Gogh, 1889 & Japanese print Hokusai Great Wave 1833 Starry Night (1889), was created while Vincet was a patient at Saint-Paul-de-Mausole Asylum in France

The late 1800s was the time of Impressionism as a radical art movement , centered around Parisian painters, the wave that rebelled against classical subject and gave respect to Mother Nature.

Travelling to their thought-form, Vincent van Gogh to the artist friend Emile:

 

Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Emile Bernard, Saint-Rémy, 1889

 

“But now look, ... you surely can't seriously imagine a confinement like that, in the middle of the road, with the mother starting to pray instead of suckling her child? Those bloated frogs of priests on their knees as though they're having an epileptic fit are also part of it, God alone knows how and why!

No, I can't call that sound, for if I am at all capable of spiritual ecstasy, then I feel exalted in the face of truth, of what is possible, which means I bow down before the study - one that had enough power in it to make a Millet tremble - of peasants carrying a calf born in the fields back home to the farm.

That, my friend, is what people everywhere, from France to America, have felt. And having performed a feat like that, can you really contemplate reverting to medieval tapestries? Can that really be what you mean to do? No! You can do better than that, and know that you must look for what is possible, logical and true.”

Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Emile Bernard, Saint-Rémy, 1889

 

“Now to enlighten you, my dear M. Van Gogh, ... I am searching for and at the same time expressing a general state of mind rather than a unique thought, to have someone else's eye experience an indefinite, infinite impression. To suggest a suffering does not indicate what kind of suffering: purity in general and not what kind of purity. Literature is one (painting also). Consequently, suggested and not explained thought.”

Letter from Paul Gauguin to Theo van Gogh. At this time, Vincent was 36 year old.

 

The Starry Night Vincent Van Gogh, 1889 & Japanese print Hokusai Great Wave 1833

 

First seen outside Japan in the 1880s, Van Gogh's brother was one of the first Europeans to collect Japanese prints and has admired Japanese art.

 

Starry Night (1889), was created while Vincent was a patient at Saint-Paul-de-Mausole Asylum in France 

 

"The artist always comes up against resistance from nature in the beginning, but if he really takes her seriously he will not be put off by that opposition, on the contrary, it is all the more incentive to win her over - at heart, nature and the honest draughtsman are as one.” Vincent Van Gogh to his brother” “The struggle with nature is sometimes a bit like what Shakespeare calls “the taming of the shrew””. Vincent van Gogh Letter to Theo van Gogh, 1881 in Etten, At this time, Vincent was 28 year old.

Source: www.artof4elements.com/entry/289/the-great-wave
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review 2019-08-06 15:32
Impressionism: Capturing Life, Jennifer Scott
Impressionism: Capturing Life - Jennifer Scott

A remarkable little exhibition of works by major and lesser known Impressionists held in smaller institutions across Britain. For me there were several notable things arising - not least that works by such Big Names exist outside the major galleries in London but still in Britain. The Impressionists are strongly associated with outdoor painting and therefore landscapes but here we are shown that portraiture was a bigger theme in their work than is commonly recognised and some of them even I recognise as excellent pictures! Finally, the Bath connection to Impressionism is stronger than I realised. As well as Sickert living and working nearby for several years, inspiring our contemporary plein air impressionist, Pete "the Street" Brown, the Victoria Art Gallery in the city held two Impressionist exhibitions in the early 20th Century, helping to establish the reputation of the founding Movement of "modern" art. I also discovered a second female Impressionist - Berthe Morisot. (I had already come across Mary Cassatt, also represented here.) It makes me wonder both whether there were more women in the mvement and whether this was the start of women being taken seriously as artists in the West? (The world?) Off-hand I can't think of a recognised female artist from before this era - would love to hear of any!
Little gem of a book about a little gem of an exhibition.

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text 2019-08-06 02:45
Reading progress update: I've read 29 out of 48 pages.
Impressionism: Capturing Life - Jennifer Scott

Shout out to Mary Cassatt, the first female 19th Century painter I ever came across, in The Met, NY, back in '99 and to Berthe Morisot, another female Impressionist that I first discovered at this exhibition.

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text 2019-08-05 17:53
Reading progress update: I've read 7 out of 48 pages.
Impressionism: Capturing Life - Jennifer Scott

There were fourteen reviews of the first Impressionist Exhibition: 6 positive, 3 mixed and 5 negative.

 

The point Scott is making being that they had a more positive reception than most realise. However, sales and popular interest didn't match the art critics' views and the establishment still frowned upon these radical new painters.

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review 2016-05-19 00:00
Impressionism: Reimagining Art
Impressionism: Reimagining Art - Norbert... Impressionism: Reimagining Art - Norbert Wolf Introduction & Acknowledgements

--Impressionism: Reimagining Art

Endnotes
Selected Bibliography
List of Works Illustrated
Index of Names
Photo Credits
Imprint
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