Thursday 19 November 2015

Pop Art

Pop Art
1955-1970

Pop art is now most associated with the work of New York artists of early 1960s such as Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, James Rosenquist and Claes Oldenburg, but artists who drew on popular imagery were part of an international phenomenon in various cities from the mid-1955s onwards. Following the popularity of the Abstract Expressionists, Pop's reintroduction of identifiable imagery (drawn from mass media and popular culture) was a major shift for the direction of modernism. the subject matter became far from traditional 'high art' themes of morality, mythology and classic history; rather, Pop artists celebrated commonplace objects and people of everyday life, in this way seeking  to elevate popular culture to the level of fine art. Perhaps owing to the incorporation of commercial images, Pop art has become one of the most recognizable style of modern art. 

American Artists:

Andy Warhol

He was an American artist who was a leading figure in the visual art movement known as pop art. His works explore the relationship between artistic expression, celebrity culture, and advertisement that flourished by the 1960s. After a successful career as a commercial illustrator, Warhol became a renowned and sometimes controversial artist. He is also notable as a gay man who lived openly as such before the gay liberation movement. His studio, The Factory, was a famous gathering place that brought together distinguished intellectuals, drag queens, playwrights,Bohemian street people, Hollywood celebrities, and wealthy patrons.
 Warhol's art used many types of media, including hand drawing, painting, printmaking, photography, silk screening, sculpture, film, and music. Warhol has been the subject of numerous retrospective exhibitions, books, and feature and documentary films. 

Marilyn Monroe - 1962
Campbell’s Soup Can (Tomato), 1965
Michael Jackson
Coca-Cola 5 bottles,1962
Roy Lichtenstein

 He was an American pop artist. During the 1960s, along with Andy WarholJasper Johns, and James Rosenquist among others, he became a leading figure in the new art movement. His work defined the basic premise of pop art through parody. Favoring the comic strip as his main inspiration, Lichtenstein produced hard-edged, precise compositions that documented while it parodied often in a tongue-in-cheek manner. His work was heavily influenced by both popular advertising and the comic book style. He described pop art as "not 'American' painting but actually industrial painting."

Whaam!, 1963
 Girl with Hair Ribbon
Women Tears
Edward Hopper


 He was a prominent American realist painter and printmaker. While he was most popularly known for his oil paintings, he was equally proficient as a watercolorist and printmaker in etching. Both in his urban and rural scenes, his spare and finely calculated renderings reflected his personal vision of modern American life.
Hopper derived his subject matter from two primary sources: one, the common features of American life (gas stations, motels, restaurants, theaters, railroads, and street scenes) and its inhabitants; and two, seascapes and rural landscapes. Regarding his style, Hopper defined himself as "an amalgam of many races" and not a member of any school, particularly the "Ashcan School". Once Hopper achieved his mature style, his art remained consistent and self-contained, in spite of the numerous art trends that came and went during his long career.


Nighthawks 1942


Western Motel, 1957
Early Sunday Morning, 1930

Jasper Johns

He is an American painter and printmaker.
Johns is best known for his painting Flag (1954–55), which he painted after having a dream of the American flag. His work is often described as Neo-Dadaist, as opposed to pop art Still, many compilations on pop art include Jasper Johns as a pop artist because of his artistic use of classical iconography.
Flag
Details of Flag

Map 1961.

Claes Oldenburg

Claes Oldenburg is an American sculptor, best known for his public art installations typically featuring very large replicas of everyday objects. Another theme in his work is soft sculpture
 versions of everyday objects. Many of his works were made in collaboration with his wife, Coosje van Bruggen. Oldenburg lives and works in New York.



On the Eve of Claes Oldenburg's MoMA Show






Shuttlecocks, 1994
Robert Rauschenberg

He was an American painter and graphic artist whose early works anticipated the pop art movement. Rauschenberg is well known for his "Combines" of the 1950s, in which non-traditional materials and objects were employed in innovative combinations. Rauschenberg was both a painter and a sculptor and the Combines are a combination of both, but he also worked with photographyprintmakingpapermaking, and performance. He was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 1993. He became the recipient of the Leonardo da Vinci World Award of Arts in 1995 in recognition of his more than 40 years of fruitful artmaking.

Buffalo II, 1964

Umpire c1965
Robert Rauschenberg Collection 1954 mixed mediums

British Artists:

Edouardo Paolozzi

British sculptorcollagistprintmaker, filmmaker and writer. Born of Italian parents, he attended Edinburgh College of Art in 1943 with a view to becoming a commercial artist. 
After brief military service, in 1944 he attended St Martin's School of Art in London, and from 1945 to 1947 he studied sculpture at the Slade School of Fine Art. In the late 1940s he made various sculptures inspired by Surrealism, and also produced a number of collages, which blend the incongruous juxtapositions of Surrealism with Paolozzi's interest in images of modern machinery.
Paolozzi's I was a Rich Man's Plaything (1947) is considered the first standard bearer of Pop Art and first to display the word ‘pop’.
I was a Rich Man's Plaything (1947)

You can't beat the real thing (1972)

1948 Dr Pepper

1948 Sack-o-sauce

Richard Hamilton

He was an English painter and collage artist. His 1955 exhibition Man, Machine and Motion (Hatton GalleryNewcastle upon Tyne) and his 1956 collage, Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing?, produced for the This Is Tomorrow exhibition of the Independent Group in London, are considered by critics and historians to be among the earliest works of pop art. A major retrospective of his work was at Tate Modern until May 2014.

Just What Is It That Makes Today's Homes So Different, So Appealing?

Interior II (1964)

Peter Blake

Sir Peter Blake is one of the leading figures in the art world, often referred to as the Godfather of British Pop Art. Best known for the iconic album cover he produced for the Beatles 'Sergeant Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band', Blake's work is inspired by his love affair with icons and the ephemera of popular culture. He is continuing to produce a prolific output of work from his studio in west London maintaining his reputation and popularity with every artistic piece he creates. Peter Blake was born in 1932 in Dartford, Kent. He studied at Gravesend School of Art before earning a place at the prestigious Royal College of Art London in 1956. His love of art flourished as he built up a respectable portfolio of work through extensive travels across Europe and beyond. Inspiration was drawn from his surroundings influencing much of his work and he began to produce collages incorporating iconic figures. Alongside these Blake also worked with found objects such as photographs, cigarette packets and matchboxes. The concept of found art was an aspect that excited Blake and the notion of finding beauty within banal everyday objects greatly appealed. In 1983 Peter Blake became a CBE and in 2002 received a knighthood for his services to art. His long and respected career is admirable and his contribution to the art world is truly inspiring. Even today, Blake's work retains their popularity and a contemporary aesthetic is maintained with every new piece created.

the Beatles 'Sergeant Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band'

Love Me Do (The Beatles)
One Man Show - Limited Edition with Roxy 2 Screenprint 1962




Monday 9 November 2015

Socialist Realism

Socialist Realism

 "To me propaganda is a holy word."
Ben Shahn


The Social Realist political movement and artistic explorations flourished primarily during the 1920s and 1930s, the time of global economic depression, heightened racial conflict, the rise of fascist regimes internationally, and great optimism after both the Mexican and Russian revolutions.

Social Realists created figurative and realistic images of the "masses" , the term that encompassed the lower and working classes, labor unionists, and the politically disenfranchised. American artists became dissatisfied with the French avant-garde and their own isolation from greater society, which led them to search for a new vocabulary and a new social importance; they found their purpose in the belief that art was a weapon that could fight the capitalist exploitation of workers and stem the advance of international fascism.  

Key Ideas

Social Realism , an international art  movement, refers to the work of painters, printmakers. photographers and filmmakers who draw attention to the everyday conditions of the working class and the poor; socialist realists are critical of the social structures which maintain these conditions. 

Theme 1 

Social Realists envisioned themselves to be workers and laborers, similar to those who toiled in the field and factories, often clad in overalls to symbolize unity with the working classes, the artists believed they were critical members of the whole of society, rather than elites living on the margins and working for the upper crust. 

Theme 2

While there was a variety of styles and subjects within Social Realism, the artists were united in their attack on the status quo and social power structure. Despite their stylistic variance, the artists were realists who focused on the human figure and human condition. Social Realists built on the legacies of Honore Daumier, Gustave Courbet and Francisco Goya in their politically changed and radical social critiques. 

Theme 3

While modernism is most often considered in terms of stylistic innovation. Social Realists believed that the political content of their work made it modern. Social Realists turned away from the painterly advancements of the School of Paris. 


William Gropper

Committed to Marxism and communism, William gropper drew vast numbers of illustrations for such radical publications as the New Masses and the Communist Party's Workers. Wanting to reach the greatest number of working people, Gropper and others created prints and graphics for radical magazines, which were easy to distribute. Here, Gropper engaged the revolutionary visual rhetoric of the monumental, triumphant worker who both ideologically and physically dominates the puny clerics and capitalists in the lower left corner. 

Cover image for the New Masses
1933.
William Gropper
Aaron Douglas


Song of the Towers
1934
Aaron Douglas

A member of the Communist Party, this is Douglas's fourth panel from a serie covering the transition between human slavery and modern industrial enslavement; the final, fifth panel was to show Karl Marx amongst African- American workers leading them to a better proletarian future. Yet his triumph is fleeting, as the industrial cog on which he stands will carry him back into the depths of the city and society; industrialism and mechanization are not friends of the American worker. 
Beyond the man's reach, in the far distance, stands the Statue of Liberty symbolizing the unfulfilled promises of universal freedom. Song of the Towers showcases Douglas's signature style of concentric, radiating circles that are punctured by bold silhouetted figures.


Isamu Noguchi


Death (Lynched figure)
1934
Isamu Noguchi
Isamu Noguchi's early sculptural works dedicated to social concerns, which align with the artistic Left, art often overlooked in deference to his abstract statuary and furniture design. As compared to other Social Realist, Noguchi employed a more modernist vocabulary instead of particularizing the figure and its facial features. Considered a major early piece by Noguchi, Death testified to the artist's progressive racial views and strong social commitment, which position the sculpture within the concerns of Social Realism. In terms of form, the sculpture is unusual since Noguchi suspended the figure above the ground on a metal armature. Noguchi created this sculpture for a 1935 exhibition organized by the NAACP to protest the national rise in lynching and also to pressure President Franklin D. Roosevelt to enact legislation prohibiting such vigilante violence; Roosevelt did not. Cuncurrently, the communist arts and cultural organization known as the John Reed Club held its own anti- lynching exhibition. While Noguchi's sculpture was well received, some critics reacted harsly to it, revealing their own racism by claiming the artist was not native born and, in one instance, referring to the "a little Japanese mistake. "


Hugo Gellert

The Working Day; Struggle for a Normal Day Repercussion of the English Factory Acts on Other Countries
1934
Hugo Gellert
Lithoghraph


By reproducing Marx in mass-distributed magazines, Hungarian-born Hugo Gellert sough to grain a wider audience among the working class and perhaps rattle the nerves of upper class society. Social Realists most often romanticized and idealized the figure of the male worker; Gellert's is a prime example of this trend. Here, Gellert renders a Caucasian laborer and an African-American laborer standing back to back. The men stand strong, fused together as if a unit, and are shown wearing workers' overalls, which reveal their muscular arms. Their taut bodies, their position of being pressed together, along with their rather phallic tools, a pick and a wrench, create a homoerotic quality to the image. Images of physically strong working men were prevalent throughout Social Realist works in order to present labor as invincible against Capital.



L. S. Lowry






Laurence Stephen "L. S.Lowry  was an English artist. Many of his drawings and paintings depict Pendlebury, Lancashire, where he lived and worked for more than 40 years, and also Salford and its surrounding areas.
Lowry is famous for painting scenes of life in the industrial districts of North West England in the mid-20th century. He developed a distinctive style of painting and is best known for his urban landscapes peopled with human figures often referred to as "matchstick men". He painted mysterious unpopulated landscapes, brooding portraits and the unpublished "marionette" works, which were only found after his death.
Due to his use of stylised figures and the lack of weather effects in many of his landscapes he is sometimes characterised as anaïve (art) "Sunday painter", although this is not the view of the galleries that have organised retrospectives of his works.
A large collection of Lowry's work is on permanent public display in The Lowry, a purpose-built art gallery on Salford Quays named in his honour. Lowry rejected five honours during his life, including a knighthood in 1968, and consequently holds the record for the most rejected British honours. On 26 June 2013 a major retrospective opened at the Tate Britain in London, his first at the Tate, and in 2014 his first solo exhibition outside the UK was held in Nanjing, China.


Equally you could say contemporary film directors such as Shane Meadows (he was born in England. He is a director and writer, known for This Is England (2006), Dead Man's Shoes (2004) and 24 7: Twenty Four Seven (1997)) and Ken Loach (he is an English film and television director. He is known for his naturalistic, social realist directing style and for his socialism, which are evident in his film treatment of social issues such as homelessness (Cathy Come Home) and labour rights (Riff-Raff and The Navigators)) document a social realism in modern day.









Sunday 1 November 2015

The Bauhaus

The Bauhaus

The Bauhaus, a german word meaning "house of building ",was a school founded in 1919 in Weimar, Germany by architect Walter Gropius. The school emerged out of late-19th-century desires to reunite the applied arts and manufacturing, and to reform education. These had given birth to several new schools of art and applied art throughout Germany, and it was out of two such schools that the new Bauhaus was born.

Gropius called for the school to show a new respect for craft and technique in all artistic media, and suggested a return to attitudes to art and craft once characteristic of the medieval age, before art and manufacturing had drifted far apart. Gropius envisioned the Bauhaus encompassing the totality of all artistic media, including fine art, industrial design, graphic design, typography, interior design and architecture. 

Lyonel Feininger
Cathedral
(woodcut, 1919.)


This woodcut by Lyonel Feininger was included by Walter Gropius in the Bauhaus's founding manifesto and programme in 1919. It shows a cathedral with a tower whose tip is surrounded by the three stars- standing for the three arts of painting, sculpture and architecture- with the craft and arts had already worked together on an equal basis even in the stonemasons' lodges of medieval cathedrals. 

The Bauhaus

The Bauhaus building in Dessau, Germany (1919-1925)
Artist: Walter Gropius

Gropius's complex for the Bauhaus at Dessau has come to be seen as a landmark in modern, functionalist design. Although the design seems strongly unified from above each element is clearly divided from the next, and on the ground it unfolds a wonderful succession of changing perspectives.






The Idea

The Bauhaus only existed for 14 years; from 1919 to 1933. Despite this, it became the 20th century's most important college of architecture, design and art. For political reasons, fresh starts had to be made repeatedly in Weimar, Dessau and Berlin, but under its three directors- Walter Gropius, Hannes Meyer and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe-  the college continued to develop further. The intention to rethink design from the buttom up and not to accept any traditional certainties not only opened the way to a fresh start in modern art, but also enabled the influence of the 'Bauhaus experiment' to continue right down to the present day.


The Building

This conceptual diagram showing the structure of teaching at the Bauhaus was developed by Walter Gropius in 1922. The programme places 'building' (Bau) at the centre of all the activities but a regular course in architecture was only introduced at the Bauhaus in 1927. Only the most talented students were admitted to the architecture course.

At the start of their studies, they received a year of basic training in the so-called preliminary course, in which they were able to experiment with colour, shape and materials with no specific goals. Depending on their individual suitability, this was followed by practical work in the workshops and accompanying disciplines. The students entered the workshops as 'apprentices' and were to sit their 'apprenticeship' exams within a given time period.




The original conceptual diagram
Education:

Educational courses with this type of structure were unprecedented and had to be completely newly developed by Gropius initially. The choice of teachers was all the more decisive for the development of the Bauhaus's viewpoint. Gropius succeeded in gainly the support of renowned avant-garde artists for the purpose. In Weimar, they carried out teaching as 'form masters' together with the 'work masters'- trained craftsmen. 


Beyond the preliminary course, Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky , among others, supervised and supplemented the teaching work on form and colour theory, and Oscar Schlemmer taught the analysis and depiction of the human body. In addition, classes were taught in non-artistic disciplines such as mathematics and building materials.


Johannes Itten
Colour sphere in 7 light values and 12 tones.
1921. Lithograph on paper
Bauhaus- Archiv Berlin
Paul Klee

He is a giant of 20th-century art and one of the great creative innovators of the time. Witty, inventive, magical, his exquisite paintings resist easy classification. He is mentioned in the same breath as Matisse, Picasso and his Bauhaus contemporary Kandinsky. He cuts a radical figure in European modernism. His influence on abstraction can be seen in the works of Rothko, Miro and beyond. And yet,for an artist of such stature, there is still so much to discover about him.

Paul Klee
Cat and bird
1928.
Oil on canvas

Wassily Kandinsky

He was a Russian-born painter, wood-engraver, lithographer, teacher and theorist; pioneer of abstract art. He was born in Moscow. He studied law and economics at Moscow University; declined in 1896 at offer of a chair at the University of Dorpat and moved to Munich to study painting.

Kandinsky viewed music as the most transcendent form of non-objective art- musicians could evoke images in listeners' minds merely with sounds. He strove to produce similarly object-free, spiritually rich paintings that alluded to sounds and emotions through a unity of sensation.

"Kandinsky was trying to create the same effect on a viewer of his paintings as a beautiful piece of music has on a listener. When you listen to Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, for example, you don’t see snow or swirling fall leaves, or a muddy spring garden after a rain storm. You feel the seasons happening but you don’t actually see them. This is what Kandinsky was trying to do in his paintings..."


Transverse Line
1923.
Composition VIII 
1923; Oil on canvas


Yellow, Red, Blue 
1925; Oil on canvas

Painting was, above all, deeply spiritual for Kandinsky. He sought to convey profound spirituality and the depth of human emotion through a universal visual language of abstract forms and colours that transcended cultural and physical boundaries.

Farbstudie Quadrate
1913.