Saturday, May 18, 2013

Art Impressions Gallery

Art History Online- Final Exam


Art Impressions Gallery is located in downtown Redlands, California. The gallery is curated and run by Rachel Buiter. It is our goal to showcase impressionist art from all artists and time periods.

"Dreams and Impressions" Exhibition



 The "Dreams and Impressions" exhibition shows many variations on Impressionistic art. The thread that connects all of the following pieces of art is their connection with the dream world. Each piece shows the mood, setting, outcome, or hope of a dream. Impressionism fits well with this theme of dreams. We usually remember only impressions of the scenes in our dreams, and the Impressionist style of painting is a depiction of the general impression of a scene. Each artwork was picked based on its Impressionist style and its relevance to the dream world.

Contributing artists:
Claude Monet
Alfred Sisley
Berthe Morisot
Karen Tarlton
Edgar Degas
Iris Scott
Camille Pissarro
Pierre Auguste Renoir
Robert Hagan
Leonid Afremov

"Twilight, Venice" by Claude Monet




Media: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 28.7”x 36.2”
Date: 1908

 Claude Monet was one of the founders of French Impressionistic painting. In fact, the term Impressionism itself comes from one of his paintings, Impression, Sunrise. Monet spent most of his life in France, but also lived in England and the Netherlands. He lived at the turn of the century from 1840 to 1926.

 ”When you go out to paint, try to forget what objects you have before you, a tree, a house, a field or whatever” Monet explained to a fellow artist, “merely think here is a little square of blue, here an oblong of pink, here a streak of yellow, and paint it just as it looks to you, the exact color and shape, until it gives you your own naïve impression of the scene before you”.

 Twilight, Venice is also known as Dusk, Church of San Giorgio Maggiore by Twilight, or Crepuscule a Venice. Monet created this painting while staying at the Hotel Britannia in Venice in the autumn of 1908 with his wife Alice.

 I chose this painting because it has the dreamy impressionistic feeling that I was looking for in all of my choices. This painting could be a scene from a dream, with its vibrantly bright colors with hazy atmosphere.

"Bridge at Villeneuve-la-Garenne" by Alfred Sisley




Media: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 19.5”x 25.75”
Date: 1872

 Alfred Sisley, although of English parents, was born and spent most of his life in France. After an unsuccessful attempt at the business world, Sisley’s parents supported his artistic career. He studied art in Paris, painting with such artists as Renoir and Monet. Sisley was deeply influenced by the emerging Impressionist movement, eventually associating himself completely with Impressionism. After the wars destroyed his family’s fortune, Sisley became poor and remained so until nearly the end of his life, when he finally received some of the acknowledgment that his work deserved.

 Art historian Robert Rosenblum has judged Sisley’s work as “strongly invoking atmosphere and his skies are always very impressive,” compared to many of the Impressionist painters.

 The then state-of-the-art suspension bridge at Villeneuve-la-Garenne on the banks of the Seine River appears in two of Sisley’s paintings. The short flat brushstrokes are typical of Sisley’s paintings. He gives special attention to the sky, as he does in many of his works, also reflecting the blue of the sky in the glistening water of the river.

 Like most Impressionist paintings, the Bridge at Villeneuve-la-Garenne has a hazy dreamlike feeling to it. The view could be from the position of a person dozing on the riverbank, sleepily taking in the scene of passing water and clouds.

"At the Ball" by Berthe Morisot




Media: oil on canvas
Dimensions: 20.5”x25.6”
Date: 1875

 Berthe Morisot was a female leader of the Impressionist movement in the late 19th century. She displayed her work in the Salon de Paris and the exhibitions of the Impressionists. Her painting focused on domestic life and portraits. Morisot later married Eugène Manet and became the sister-in-law of the famous artist Édouard Manet.

 Morrisot’s teacher Camille Carot wrote of her and her sister, “With characters like your daughters, my teaching will make them painters, not minor amateur talents. Do you really understand what that means? In the world of the grande bourgeoisie in which you move, it would be a revolution. I would even say a catastrophe."

 Because Morrisot was a woman, she was restricted in the subjects she was allowed to paint. Ballroom scenes were one of the genres open to Morrisot. This painting is now held at Musée Marmottan in Paris, France.

 The subject of Morisot’s painting is not paying attention to her surroundings. She is slowly moving her fan, but mostly just daydreaming. Her dreams show in her eyes. This painting has both the dreamlike and impressionistic thread that ties all the art pieces in this exhibition together.

"Sailing Between the Pines" by Karen Tarlton




Media: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 20”x 24”
Date: 2000

 Karen Tarlton is originally from California. She has studied art at the University of California at Davis and the Corcoran School of Fine Art in Virginia. Tarlton travels extensively and still continues to study art. For the last ten years she has been a full time professional artist.

 “This original oil conveys a sense of light and air and the joys of a fantastic mountain lake, with expressive textured brush and palette knife work. I have many memories of Lake Tahoe, my childhood home, and its beauty never ceases to amaze me. . . A vibrant and sophisticated piece to add to any fine art collection, or the perfect stand out work of art to start one!”

 Karen Tarlton painted Sailing Between the Pines with oil paints in the palette knife method, like many of her other paintings. This method of applying several layers of paint causes a three dimensional appearance. This painting is available for sale as a print from Karen’s Fine Art online.

 Sailing Between the Pines is the artist’s fond recollection of her childhood memories. It is hazy, without distinct boundaries or features. It is the impression of a memory, of a dream from the past.

"The Star" by Edgar Degas





Media: Pastel on Paper
Dimensions: 23 5/8”x 17 3/8”
Date: 1878

 Edgar Degas was another key member of the French impressionism art movement. Like Monet, he also worked at the latter half of the 19th century and the first part of the 20th. Human figures are the main subject of Degas’ work. He is best known for his many studies on ballerinas, which comprise more than half of his artwork.

 Degas said, "People call me painter of dancing girls. It has never occurred to them that my chief interest in dancers lies in rendering movement and in painting pretty clothes."

 Edgar Degas’ model for The Star was Rosita Mauri, a talented young ballerina who debuted in 1878 at the Paris Opéra. Rosita was identified because Degas had described her features and gestures so accurately.

 There is a dreamlike quality to ballet, with the ballerinas floating and soaring across the floor in their light and airy clothing. Degas captures this quality well in his impressionistic piece, not only in the ballerina, but also in the blurring of the stage and bystanders.

"Colleen" by Iris Scott




Media: oil on canvas
Dimensions: 28”x 28”
Date: 2012

 Iris Scott is a 28 year old American painter. She graduated from Washington State University with a Bachelors of Fine Arts in 2009, and has been traveling the world and painting since. Scott developed a unique painting method- finger-painting with surgical gloves on her hands while living in Taiwan. Her paintings are inspired by her travels through Taiwan, Thailand, Nicaragua, and other parts of the world.

 The artist statement that Iris wrote for this paintings is as follows:“Stress is not my friend, I avoid it all costs. On the rare occasion that something comes up that truly shakes me I try hard to find my way to the studio. Smooshing colorful oils from a tube and smearing them on a white canvas with your fingertips is, by no surprise, a soothing pass time. “Colleen” is one of the only paintings which I can recall being made under such circumstances. This might explain the intensely bright “happy” colors I reached for that day.”

 This particular piece was created by Iris Scott during a period of stress. As Scott herself said, making this painted was a calming exercise. While painting, Iris Scott puts the oil paints directly on her fingers, and then uses all her fingers to spread the paint.

 Colleen is a spellbound autumn moment. Colleen walks down an idyllic path lined with deciduous trees and autumn leaves swirling around. This art piece shows the extent of the artist’s imagination.

"Landscape with Two Figures, Éragny, Autumn" by Camille Pissarro




Media: oil on linen on board
Dimensions: 10.75”x 8.5”
Date: 1902

 Camille Pissarro is known as the “Father of Impressionism.” He was the oldest of the French Impressionistic group, and mentored many other artists including Paul Cézanne and Paul Gaugin. For most of his life, Pissarro faced severe criticism for his innovative work, but today his works and style are recognized. Most of his paintings are outdoor, or en-plein-air.

 “Camille Pissarro has been a revolutionary through the revitalized working methods with which he has endowed painting,” wrote art critic Octave Mirbeau.

 Pissarro painted many pictures of the landscape, peasants, and buildings of Éragny. This is one of many that Camille Pissarro completed in his life.

 I chose this painting because of its peaceful atmosphere. The two figures wander the garden, surrounded by nature. The painting is an impression of the scene, without minute details, with more of a dreamlike intent.

"City Dance" by Pierre Auguste Renoir


Media: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 70.9”x 35.4”
Date: 1883

 Pierre Auguste Renoir was another French Impressionist artist. He was born in 1841 as the son of a working-class family. As a boy he painted designs on the china in a porcelain factory. He began studying art in Paris and eventually gained fame and recognition as an Impressionist artist. Renoir died in 1919 at his home in France.

 “The work of art must seize upon you, wrap you up in itself and carry you away. It is the means by which the artist conveys his passion. It is the current which he puts forth, which sweeps you along in his passion”

 Renoir painted City Dance and Country Dance as twin pieces. The first is sophisticated, with the elegance of city dancers in a ball room. Country Dance is more loose and disorganized, with a discarded hat and a table full of dirty dishes. But the composition of each is almost identical, with the two pairs of dancers in the same position as if dancing the same song.

 In City Dance, the lady seems to float in the arms of the gentleman as they dance. This dance, like the ballet of Edgar Degas, has a dreamlike quality. Dancing in each other’s arms is perhaps the fulfillment of the lady and gentleman’s dreams as well.




Study for "Thoughts" by Robert Hagan



Media: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 24”x24”
Date: 2011

 Robert Hagan is a native of Australia. He taught himself to paint, a process he describes as “the most frustrating period ever.” He has experimented in a wide variety of subjects, including beach, equestrian, western, romantic, and portrait painting, in the Impressionist style. Hagan has written several books on painting and appeared on a few televisions shows, most notably hosting his own show, the Splash of Color. Today Robert Hagan’s paintings are sold internationally.

 “In this one I really did push the color and seem to have got away with it...or did I? Lot of jump in there and proportionally the figure is less than in the previous two. That may have been a mistake. It may have let the color out of the bag. . . But I really DID explore the colors in a stream didn't I? And maybe that’s what it should have been! That’s the fun in fooling around with colors...," said Robert Hagan.

 This particular piece of art is a sketch, a study for another piece. As Robert Hagan stated, he was experimenting with color in this sketch, trying to get it just right for the finished product.

 In this painting, the focus is on the girl as she looks into the water. Like in our dreams, when we see and the thing we see and remember most is in clearer focus, the girl has the most detail. The surrounding vegetation and water are blurred and out of focus, merely an impression without every detail.

"When Dreams Come True" by Leonid Afremov



Media: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 30”x40”
Date: 2013

 Leonid Afremov is a modern impressionistic artist. He was born in the Soviet Union and lived there until he was 35. He then lived in Israel for 12 years and Florida for 8 and now resides in Mexico. His true success came when he started selling his paintings on eBay instead of through galleries. Afremov has developed his own distinct technique with a palette knife and oils and bright colorful style.

 Leonid Afremov said, “Kids know how to dream. Adults almost don’t. Grownups want to own many things but as soon as they get one, they start to dream about having another one. Kids can dream just for fun and it will be hard to find any grownup, which can be as happy as a kid. The kid happiness is like a Vulcan. The Vulcan of joy, laugh, emotions, screams, noises, sun and brightness. In one second the kid can dive into a fountain of smiles and fun and it can jump around you until it gets tired.
Let’s dream more like kids. This painting is full of children laugh, joy and happiness. When the magic road in the fairy forest leads the hero to his dream, the whole world stops for a while, letting the full taste of the fulfilled dream is filling every corner of the dreamer`s heart. The then whole Universe sings along.
The dreams are coming true. Let’s dream. Probably the more we will be dreaming, the faster our dreams will be fulfilled. Dream on and follow your dreams."

 This particular painting is a recreation of the first When Dreams Come True. Each of Afremov’s recreations is 100% hand painted by him with oil paints and a palette knife, just like the original. Each recreation is also slightly different than the first because of the difference in knife strokes, and so is one of a kind.

 This painting is the culmination of the exhibit. Leonid Afremov portrays a dream come true, a couple in love walking off toward the horizon holding hands. Dreams Come True inspires us to believe in dreams and believe that dreams can be fulfilled.

Conclusion


What I learned is that the process of organizing an exhibition is not an easy one. Although it may sound easy to find ten pieces of art that fit under one theme, it requires a tremendous amount of research to find connecting art pieces and all the information about them. There are many paintings online that may fit a theme, but many of them do not have even the basic information such as title and date.

The easiest part was finding potential painting that might work with the theme. There were many prospective choices, but further investigation knocked many paintings out of the running. The most challenging part was to actually choose individual paintings that connected with the theme. It was also difficult to describe my thoughts on how each piece of art connects to the theme and actually get what I mean across.

Curators have a difficult job. Organizing an exhibition of various works that are all unique and bring a different thing to the exhibition and yet all connect to the same theme is very challenging. Curators would have to be very knowledgeable about art in general and good at arranging art to be successful.

Many works of art have a connecting thread, but it is not always the most obvious thing about the painting. Many connections are more subtle. Finding these connections and then gathering the art pieces into an exhibition takes a tremendous amount of work.