Main      Site Guide    
Message Forum
Re: I dont know art, but I know what I like...
Posted By: Howard, on host 67.33.154.157
Date: Thursday, September 19, 2002, at 13:08:55
In Reply To: Re: I dont know art, but I know what I like... posted by Sosiqui on Thursday, September 19, 2002, at 07:40:49:

> > Impressionism is probably my favorite era in painting -- Renoir, Degas, Manet, Monet, etc, are all artists whose work I adore. I'm not crazy about Van Gogh, but I like some of it.
> >
> > And then all the "neo-impressionists" came and munged it up. Gauguin, who paints awkward, depthless, lifeless, clumsy crap. Matisse is the worst. Devolve much from Matisse, and it's just that pseudo-intellectual psycho "art."
>
> I adore Impressionism... Van Gogh is my favorite artist from that period, actually (specifically, I LOVE his cypress/starry sky paintings), and you really HAVE to see a lot of Impressionist paintings in person to see the true rulingness of the painting technique. When I went to Europe in 2001, I hit as many art museums as I could (being an art major and lover of art history) and saw a TON of amazing, amazing works of art from Assyrian wall-carvings (British Museum) to 'Irises' (Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam; the largest single collection of Van Gogh paintings in the world). Fascinating stuff.
>
> Interestingly, I'm taking a History of Photography class right now, and we were just talking about the Impressionists the other day. They do relate to photography... owe quite a lot to it, in fact. The invention of photography freed up a lot of artists from painting strict realism, and the Impressionists in particular were inspired by photography to capture the essence, the 'impression' of a single moment in paint. Not necesarily realistically, but quickly and with feeling, so that the absolute essence of the scene was held in the work. Pretty cool stuff.
>
> Sosi"art history is awesome"qui

If everybody is going to list their favorite artists, I guess I will too. I'm hooked on tropical islands, so I like Paul Gauguin. Fredrick Remington is another one I like. His early black and whites are best. And then there is Winslow Homer. His "Breezing Up" is one of my all time favorites. The jury is still out on Vincent Van Gogh, as far as I'm concerned. I know he broke new ground and all that, but I never saw a sky with all those swirls in it. I really thing he was on something. (Note: I said "on something" not "on to something.")
Howard

Post a Reply

RinkChat Username:
Password:
Email: (optional)
Subject:
Message:
Link URL: (optional)
Link Title: (optional)

Make sure you read our message forum policy before posting.