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Wednesday 5 November 2014

William Kentridge: Conceptual Framework



Conceptual Framework: (Frames – which frames suit the reading of the artwork and practice?)

Frames Kentridge uses:

  • Subjective (psychological)
  • Emotive – his artworks portray emotion and evoke emotion              
  • Feelings – anxiety, isolation, loneliness, confusion are all experiences we all have yet are common to human condition
  • Cultural
  • Political – current issues
  • Social issues – Felix in Exile was inspired at a subconscious level by Kentridge’s discovery of the photographs of the Sharpville Massacre.


Artwork:

World:

Audience:

  • Work isn’t created for the audience.
  • The interplay of audience interacting with the artworks is a shifting field and remains ambiguous. He leaves it out for interpretation.
Practice: (how, when, where, why the artist creates the work)

  • Uses charcoal
  • Prefers to work with black and white
  • Feels that colour is a distraction as it slows him down
  • Doesn’t feel he uses colour naturally or well
  • Prefers to use non picturesque landscapes with black and white visuals of his practice
  • He uses his own references and resources
  • Some of his animations were inspired by dreams he had
  • He is always inspired in his work “I have always wanted too…”
  • He feels responsible for his characters particularly ‘Soho’ as he got older. He also sees himself in his characters, “I feel that I should have a character that is not me. I wouldn’t feel so responsible for them.
  • Instead keeping a written journal/diary of his travels, he purchases books and draws in them. The places he visits help to inform his ideas in art making. When he is somewhere, he thinks of his ideas then and there and draws them later.
  • He needs to make sure that his characters go places that he would want to draw.
  • Kentridge compares writing a novel and making a film. Each scene is like a chapter in a novel – visual novel or his artworks. His artworks are visual narratives.
  • Still like to create as in creating he leaves a concrete trace in one way or another.
  • In his films we can see the merging of memories and drawings.

Thursday 16 October 2014

Salvador Dali: Conceptual Framework

Artist

   Salvador Dali was born on the 11 May, 1904 in Catalonia, Spain, and died on the 23rdJanuary, 1989.
   His mother died when he was 16 which had a profound effect on him.
   In 1922, Dali moved to Madrid to study at the school of fine arts.
   He was a prominent Spanish Catalan surrealist painter in the Surrealist movement with an eccentric nature.This made Dali the most prominent representative of the Surrealist movement and the most recognised artists in the world.
   He was also the first artist to hold a solo exhibition in Barcelona.
   While Dai’s artistic output is enormous, he is most often associated with images of melting clocks
   In 1931, he painted the Persistence of Memory, his most famous work.
   Imagination partly exists in dreams. This is shown in The Persistence of Memory through the melting cheese idea represented by the melting watches.  There are many theories of the melting clocks. On Dali’s death bed, scientists approached him and asked him if it had something to do with Einstein’s theory of relativity. Dai said no and that it is based of Camembert cheese melting in the sun.

Audience (impact)

One of Salvador Dali’s recognizable works, The Persistence of Memory became frequently referenced in popular culture and therefore was widely recognized. When The Persistence of Memory was painted the impact it had on the audience is different to its response now. At the time it was painted his paintings were criticised because Surrealists identified with leftist politics. However,  Dali thought that art could be apolitical. There are many different interpretations of the painting, some of these include:
·      Feminist
·      Marxism
·      New Historicism
·      Deconstruction

World (influences)

   Sigmund Freud was Dali’s hero and one of his influences. Freud was a neurologist who became influential in the field of psychoanalysis. Psychoanalysis is the treatment in which a patient talks about their thoughts, dreams and fantasies so the doctor can figure out their symptoms. In 1938 Dali met Freud and sketched his portrait.
   A dream is defined as a series of thoughts, images, and sensations occurring in a person's mind during sleep. Freud’s analysis of dreams as wish-fulfilments helped him to analyse symptom formation as well as elaborate his theory that a person’s unconscious can shape their conscious state of mind.
   Andre Breton was a French writer and poet. However is well-known as the founder of Surrealism. Breton was influential to Dali as he was the leading Surrealist at the time but they differed in terms of their political beliefs. Breton also wrote the first manifesto on Surrealism. In his manifesto he states that dreams are important as a reservoir of Surrealist inspiration.

Practice
How:

    Dali made paintings, usually using oil on canvas, prints, sculptures, films, photographs, jewellery and was a designer.
   He uses many big brush strokes and bold hand movements.
   Dali’s preferred painting method is the Paranoiac critical method. This method deals with the interpretation of unconscious thoughts and feelings into increasingly elaborate visual illusions.
When:

   From around 1920 up until his death

Where:

   Dali created his works everywhere. He even created some in public. He was a performer and took part in performance pieces that were despised by critics.
Why:

   He was inspired by realism 
   He was inspired by surrealism 
   He was a supporter of Dadaism 
   Because of his political views

Artworks
Artwork 1 – ‘The Persistence of Memory’,1931, oil on canvas
Figure 1http://karmajello.com/culture/art/salvador-dali-art-compilation-photo-gallery-video.html

   The Persistence of Memory’ is Dali’s most recognizable works.
   Since 1934, it has been in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. It was received from an anonymous donor.
   The image of the soft melting pocket watch exemplifies Dali’s theory of “softness” and “hardness”. In Dali’s time, this theory was central to his thinking.
   In his painting, ”the soft watches are an unconscious symbol of the relativity of time and space, a Surrealist meditation on the collapse of our notions of a fixed cosmic order" (Ades, Dawn. Dalí. Thames and Hudson, 1982).
   The human figure in the middle of the composition appears ambiguous as it is obscure. However, it is a strange monster. This “monster” was used in several of Dali’s contemporary pieces to represent him - the abstract form of becoming something of a self-portrait, appearing frequently in his work.
   The focal point the viewer is immediately drawn to is the animal figure in the mid ground. Its unusual appearance makes it significant. The background features an arid landscape of cliffs whereas in the foreground, melting clocks can be seen.

Artwork 2 – ‘Swans Reflecting Elephants’, 1937, oil on canvas
Figure 2: http://www.dali.com/blog/swans-reflecting-elephants-is-one-of-those-dali-paintings-everybody-loves/

   The double images used in this painting were a major part of Dalí's "paranoia-critical method”. Dalí used this "paranoia-critical method” to bring forth the hallucinatory forms, double images and visual illusions that appeared frequently amongst his work during the Thirties.
   The three swans in front of leafless trees are reflected in the lake so that the swans' necks become the elephants' trunks and the trees become the legs of the elephants. 
   In the background of the painting is a Catalonian landscape portrayed in fiery autumn colours.

In contrast to the stillness of the water, the brushwork creates swirls in the cliffs that surround the lake.

Thursday 25 September 2014

Salvador Dali: Artworks - The Persistence of Memory & Swans Reflecting Elephants

The Persistence of Memory
The Persistence of Memory is oil on canvas painting that was painted in 1931
  •  It is Dali’s most recognizable works
  • Since 1934, it has been in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. It was received from an anonymous donor.
  • The Persistence of Memory introduced the image of the soft melting pocket watch which exemplifies Dali’s theory of “softness” and “hardness”. In Dali’s time, his theory was central to his thinking. In his painting, ”the soft watches are an unconscious symbol of the relativity of time and space, a Surrealist meditation on the collapse of our notions of a fixed cosmic order" (Ades, Dawn. Dalí. Thames and Hudson, 1982).
  • There is a human figure I the middle of the composition which is a strange monster. This “monster” was used in several of Dali’s contemporary pieces to represent him – the abstract form of becoming something of a self-portrait, appearing frequently in his work.

Swans Reflecting Elephants
Swans Reflecting Elephants is oil on canvas and was painted in 1937

  • The double images used in this painting were a major part of Dalí's "paranoia-critical method"
  • Dalí used this "paranoia-critical method” to bring forth the hallucinatory forms, double images and visual illusions that filled his paintings during the Thirties
  • The three swans in front of leafless trees are reflected in the lake so that the swans' necks become the elephants' trunks and the trees become the legs of the elephants.  In the background of the painting is a Catalonian landscape portrayed in fiery autumn colours. In contrast to the stillness of the water, the brushwork creates swirls in the cliffs that surround the lake.