Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Friday, 22 April 2011

The sacred and the profane






Keith Haring

 Museum of Contemporary Religious Art, Saint Louis University




The altarpiece, cast in bronze and covered with gold leaf, is rendered in the artist’s post-graffiti style. Sam Havadtoy, writing in May 1990, shared his recollection of Haring's work on the panels:

In 1989, Keith asked me to help him decorate his new Manhattan apartment. In his living room was an old brick fireplace which he hated, so I had it plastered over. The plaster was wet and I suggested that he draw into it. He thought it was a cool idea. It was as if the plaster were a three-dimensional textured canvas. He loved drawing in the plaster, and got very excited about the new medium. When he finished, it was very beautiful. I asked him if he wanted to make an edition of the fireplace and he loved the idea. Later, I asked him if he wanted to do other works in editions -- perhaps, panels and tables. He laughed. But he said he liked the idea -- he would do it.
Trays were made for the panels and tables. I also had a last-minute inspiration and had special trays made in the shape of a Russian icon, an altar piece, a large version of a miniature icon I saw in a shop in Geneva. All the trays were then laid out in a quiet, womblike room in the Dakota. Trays were filled with fresh clay. Keith arrived. He snapped a tape into the ghetto blaster, turned up the music, sipped a Coke and set to work.
Instead of a brush, for the first time, he used a loop knife. He handled the knife freely and spontaneously like he wielded his brushes. As he worked, he became more and more excited. He said that he couldn't believe it had taken him so long to discover this kind of sculpture. He made no preliminary drawings except for a quick sketch of the dancer on the third panel, which he made on a two-by-four piece of wood. Yet he was completely sanguine as he cut into the clay. The images came directly from his head. He placed the knife in the clay and carved a continuous running line, a quarter-of-an-inch deep groove, which wound like a swollen stream during the spring thaw. He never stopped to rethink the line; he never edited himself and never made corrections. The lines he carved in the clay were seamless, flawless.
Keith finished the panels and then, for the first time, saw the three altar piece sections. He stared at them and was silent. Then he set to work. He cut into the clay and began to carve freeflowing lines. The images that emerged were unlike the others. They were religious: an inspiration of the life of Christ; a baby held by a pair of hands; hands ascending toward heaven; Christ on the cross. On one side panel he depicted the resurrection. On the other, a fallen angel. When Keith finished, as he stepped back and gazed at this work, he said, "Man, this is really heavy."
When he stopped, he was exhausted, and it was the first time I realized how frail he had become. He was completely out of breath. He said, "When I'm working, I'm fine, but as soon as I stop, it hits me . . . "

The altar was Keith's final piece of work.

Haring died two weeks after completing the altarpiece. The uncharacteristically solemn altarpiece reflects the artist's coming to terms with his own mortality and his grief over the death of friends. The work is an expression of love and an affirmation of the sacred. 






Now playing: Mahalia Jackson - Calvary

Thursday, 31 March 2011

I am after reality...



painting impressed on the mind so hard that it recurs as a dream...




George Tooker (1920-2011)










George Tooker

 A Columbus Museum of Art  documentary

In conjunction with the 2009 exhibition George Tooker: A Retrospective




Impetus, Lucidaville


Now playing: Tom McRae - You Only Disappear

Wednesday, 16 March 2011



David Wojnarowicz (1954-1992)






A Fire in My Belly, 1986-87



Courtesy of the Estate of David Wojnarowicz and P.P.O.W Gallery, New York.




Wojnarowicz made A Fire in My Belly, dated 1986-87, at a turning point. In 1987 his longtime mentor and lover, the photographer Peter Hujar, died of AIDS, and Wojnarowicz himself learned that he was H.I.V.-positive. 


As Ants Crawl Over Crucifix, Dead Artist Is Assailed Again
By Holland Cotter
Published: December 10, 2010
The New York Times



Now playing: David Wojnarowicz - Arts Funding

Friday, 11 March 2011

The right light


Isabella Blow (Isabella Delves Broughton)
The Head of Isabella Blow
by Tim Noble and Sue Webster
2002


The Head of Isabella Blow was donated to the National Portrait Gallery in 2009 by the artists and Blow's estate. The work (which must be spot-lit for the subject's silhouette to be visible) is comprised of taxidermic magpies, rooks, hooded crows, a rattlesnake, a raven, a robin, a carrion crow and a black rat.  Other materials also used include fake moss, wood, a lipstick tube and a Manolo Blahnik shoe heel.



  
Poetry is something in-between the dream and its interpretation. - Lou Andreas-Salomé





Now playing: Dead Can Dance - Song Of The Sibyl

Sunday, 13 February 2011

St. Sebastian


Saint Sebastian
Guido Reni, 17th Century







Saint Sebastian
Gian Lorenzo Bernini, 17th Century







Saint Sebastian 
El Greco, 16th Century
Cathedral of San Antolin, Palencia







St. Sebastian







Sebastiane (1976)





...uses his body to lend eternity to whatever is fleeting, giving visible form to an abstract aesthetic idea... 

Federico Garcia Lorca, from a letter to Salvador Dali





Now playing: Claude Debussy  - Le Martyre de Saint Sebastien, Fragments Symphoniques:  
I. La Cour Des Lys. Prelude
II. Danse Extatique Et Final Du 1er Acte 
III. La Passion 
IV. Le Bon Pasteur