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Showing posts with label Monet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monet. Show all posts

Saturday, 24 June 2017

Hokusai: beyond the Great Wave



A confession: I hadn’t really appreciated the extent of the influence of the Japanese artist, Hokusai, until I visited the current exhibition at the British Museum – Hokusai: beyond the Great Wave (until August 13. So it was fascinating to discover through the background material on display the fame he achieved in his own lifetime and the impact his prints had when they were first exhibited in Paris in 1867, almost 20 years after his death. Van Gogh later wrote All my art is based to some extent on Japanese art. Monet himself acquired 250 Japanese prints, including 23 by Hokusai, and I spotted The Great Wave beside a dresser while at the painter's home in Giverny a few days after the show opened.
Hokusai created The Great Wave in 1831, when he was already seventy. It shows three fishing boats heading into a great storm wave. Just visible are the oarsmen who crouch forward, battling the water’s power. The wave encircles Mt Fuji, spray falling like snow on its sacred peak. It was part of an immensely popular series – as many as 8000 impressions were made. With its use of deep perspective and imported Prussian blue pigment, it reflects how Hokusai adapted and experimented with European artistic style, which was just starting to be seen in what had hitherto been a closed country. Mt Fuji remained a model for him in his quest for immortality during his later years. He styled himself Gakyō Rōjin (Old Man Crazy to Paint) and believed the older he got, the greater his art would become.
This exhibition is the story of Hokusai’s art in old age and many of the works have never been seen before in the UK. From iconic landscapes and wave pictures to deities and mythological beasts, from flora and fauna to beautiful women, they are amazingly varied.
The success of the Great Wave led to more print series, featuring waterfalls, bridges and flowers, such as these poppies.
He was supported by his daughter Eijo, herself an accomplished artist, who worked with and alongside him. There is one powerful painting by her in the exhibition, which shows in graphic detail a scene from a Chinese novel of the 1300s, in which a physician cuts into the arm of a general to remove an infected bone.The stoic general himself continues to play a board game, while others avert their eyes from the knife and blood.
China was a major source of cultural inspiration for Japan. Hokusai reinterpreted its traditions, making them accessible to ordinary people. This man checking for a break in the snowy weather may be a portrait of a heroic bandit from another Chinese novel of the 1300s, Outlaws of the Marsh.

Hokusai had many pupils and produced manuals for painters and craft artists. In 1848 he wrote in a postscript to one of them: ...from ninety years I will keep on improving my style of painting. After I reach one hundred, my only desire will be to revolutionise this vocation. He died in 1849, just short of his 90th birthday. He had already started to use a seal on his paintings with the character Hundred and was producing technically brilliant works to the end, often revisiting his favourite subjects, including waves.
These ceiling paintings were created for a festival cart and date from 1845.
A fellow artist executed this portrait of Hokusai in the 1840s. It was later inscribed with his deathbed poem:
Maybe I’ll unwind
by roaming the summer fields
as a will-o’-the-wisp.

Tuesday, 2 February 2016

Painting the Modern Garden - Monet to Matisse


Claude Monet, Lady in the Garden, 1867
Oil on canvas, 80 x 99 cm
The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg
Photo © The State Hermitage Museum. Photography: Vladimir Terebenin
This is the perfect exhibition for a grey winter's day, bursting with colour and full of the promise of summer. With Claude Monet as the starting point, the Royal Academy in London has brought together 120 paintings that span the period from the early 1860s to the 1920s - a time of great change in both society and the arts. About a third are Monet's, with the rest by contemporaries such as Pierre Bonnard, Emil Nolde, Gustav Klimt, Vincent van Gogh, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Matisse and Wassily Kandinsky.

Wassily Kandinsky, Murnau The Garden II, 1910
Oil on cardboard, 67 x 51 cm
Merzbacher Kunststiftung
Photo © Merzbacher Kunststiftung
 At this time, gardening was emerging as a widespread popular pastime. The middle classes were moving out of the cities and creating their own private Edens in the suburbs. Gardens became an extra room where they could relax and enjoy themselves, while artists were able to use them as outdoor studios, planting whatever inspired them to sketch and paint.  We see Camille Pissarro’s working garden, complete with gardeners, in Kitchen Gardens at L’Hermitage, Pontoise, and Gustave Caillebotte’s showy ‘cactus’ dahlias in front of his greenhouse. Kandinsky's sunflowers (above) became an experiment with abstraction while Matisse's eye was caught by a rose-coloured marble garden table, surrounded by ivy (below). 

Henri Matisse, The Rose Marble Table, Issy-les-Moulineaux, spring-summer 1917
Oil on canvas, 146 x 97 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Mrs. Simon Guggenheim Fund, 1956
Photo © 2015. Digital image, The Museum of Modern Art, New York/Scala, Florence / © Succession H. Matisse/ DACS 2015
The Spanish artist Joaquin Sorolla created a Moorish-style garden around his home in Madrid, while Max Liebermann designed a garden with a geometric layout that gave the impression of rooms extending from the house, in keeping with contemporary ideas in German garden design.
Monet cultivated plants wherever he lived, selecting plants and trees by tone, shape and height, arranging them so there was colour throughout the year; one painting shows red peonies growing under a protective straw awning.  “I perhaps owe it to flowers that I became a painter”, he recalled.


Auguste Renoir, Monet Painting in His Garden at Argenteuil, 1873
Oil on canvas, 46.7 x 59.7 cm
Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT. Bequest of Anne Parrish Titzell, 1957.614
Photo © Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT
 Renoir worked closely with Monet, and painted him early on in his career (above) as he captured on canvas a profusion of vast dahlia plants in a corner of his garden at Argenteuil – a work that is also on display.  Monet later created another garden at Vétheuil, where he portrayed his young sons surrounded by sunflowers. But his greatest creation was at Giverny, where he first rented, then bought, a property, adding to the grounds over the years.  One room at the exhibition (below) is devoted to his botanical books, original letters and plans that tell the story of his application for planning permission to create his famous water garden in the face of opposition from local farmers and villagers.
Devising and establishing the garden took years. He kept up with the latest horticultural research and techniques by subscribing to specialist magazines, and after 1890 employed a team of six full-time gardeners to help him realise his vision. He saw it as his “most beautiful work of art". In 1914 he built a bigger studio and began his huge water lily paintings. From then until his death in 1926, he continued painting the pond, the water, the sky and the Japanese bridge. Even the outbreak of the First World War didn’t stop him, despite being able to hear the sound of cannons and battle from his garden. “Yesterday I resumed work....it’s the best way to avoid thinking of these sad times,” he wrote.

Claude Monet, Nymphéas (Waterlilies), 1914-15
Oil on canvas, 160.7 x 180.3 cm
Portland Art Museum, Oregon. Museum Purchase: Helen Thurston Ayer Fund, 59.16
Photo © Portland Art Museum, Portland, Oregon
A stunning selection of these water lily paintings closes the show. The most famous must remain in the Orangerie in Paris, where they encircle two oval rooms, surrounding visitors with their beauty. But the final room of the exhibition has a breathtaking surprise – an earlier version, the Agapanthus triptych (below). These three huge paintings, each about 13 feet long, and shimmering with colour, were created to be shown together. They stayed in his studio until after his death, before being sold to three separate museums. This is the first time they have been reunited.
Agapanthus Triptych 1916 - 1919. (The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Saint Louis Art Museum, St Louis.)
A film examining the role of the garden in art history, from Impressionism to the Avant-Garde, will be in cinemas from April 12, part of the Exhibition on Screen series. Painting the Modern Garden: Monet to Matisse features behind-the-scenes visits to some of the gardens that inspired the artists, and interviews with artists, gardening experts and critics.
Painting the Modern Garden – Monet to Matisse is at the Royal Academy, London until April 20 2016. Admission £17.60 with Gift Aid (concessions available). For more information Ph 020 7300 8090 or www.royalacademy.org.uk