Showing posts with label Crucifixion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crucifixion. Show all posts

Thursday, June 20, 2024

20th century Cubism

Pablo Picasso (1881 – 1973) is widely recognized as one of the founders of Cubism, along with Georges Braque (1882 – 1963). This artistic movement aimed to deconstruct the image through geometric figures, drawing inspiration from diverse sources, such as African masks and the works of French artist Paul Cézanne. Cubism, which emerged in 1907, represented a new way of visualizing reality, moving away from traditional illusionism and approaching a more geometric and fragmented vision of the world.

The first phase of Cubism, known as Analytical Cubism, developed between 1908 and 1912, characterized by the fragmentation of the object into multiple facets and the almost total absence of color, prioritizing tones of gray, brown and green. This phase is marked by a rigorous analysis of shapes and volumes, where artists deconstructed objects and represented them from different perspectives simultaneously.


George Braque
Large Nude 
1907 


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Naked
1989
Pencil on paper
21cm x 29cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Naked
1989
Pencil on paper
21cm x 29cm

Manuel Pereira da Silva is an artist who, although not directly associated with Cubism, shares the ability to balance figuration with abstraction, often addressing the female figure in his compositions. This treatment of the female figure, which can be both explicit and implicit, underlines his ability to balance figuration with abstraction. In his works, he frequently explores themes such as seated women, reclining women, motherhood, family, man and woman, dance and crucifixion. Although the figures in his works are often almost completely dissolved into abstraction, there is a constant presence of noticeable figurative references, indicating an unbreakable connection with the representation of the human.


Pablo Picasso
Maternity
1909




Manuel Pereira da Silva
Maternity
1955
Watercolor on cardboard
34cm x 43cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Maternity
1994
Ballpoint pen on cardboard
25cm x 50cm

The term "Cubism" was first used by French art critic **Louis Vauxcelles in 1908, after seeing a painting by Braque. Vauxcelles described the work as “full of little cubes,” an observation that quickly led to widespread use of the term, despite initial resistance from its creators.

Cubism evolved into Synthetic Cubism around 1912, which is characterized by the reintroduction of color and the simplification of forms. At this stage, the artists started to incorporate collage elements and different materials, replacing the volume and space of the previous painting with a vocabulary based on the fragmentation and simultaneity of forms and creating a new dimension of the anti-naturalistic and irrational space, breaking even further with the previous pictorial traditions and emphasizing the autonomy of art.

During his neoclassical period, Picasso explored the theme of motherhood and the special relationship between mother and child, creating works that evoked the solidity and vitality of ancient statues. These paintings are marked by a soft palette of grays and pinks and highlight the female figure as a symbol of strength and connection to the earth. The maternity picture shows a woman dressed in a classic white dress while holding a squirming baby on her lap. She is so absorbed with her son that she doesn't know we are watching them. Their interplay is both lively and tranquil, evoking tender lyricism and the calming spirit of motherhood. Picasso's neoclassical period lasted until about 1925, when his art took yet another direction.


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Maternity
1965
Plaster on aluminum structure
53 cm x105 cm x 56 cm

The Three Dancers was painted by Picasso in June 1925. The painting shows three dancers, the one on the right is barely visible. A macabre dance takes place, with the dancer on the left with her head tilted at an almost impossible angle. The dancer on the right is often interpreted as Ramon Pichot, Picasso's friend who died during the painting of the Three Dancers. The one on the left is Pichot's wife, Germaine Gargallo, and the one in the center is Germaine's boyfriend, Carlos Casagemas, also a friend of Picasso. Casagemas committed suicide after failing to shoot Germaine, twenty-five years before Pichot's death, and the loss of two of his best friends spurred Picasso to paint this chilling depiction of the love triangle.


Pablo Picasso
The three dancers
1925


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Dance
1980
Oil on canvas
69cm x 84cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Dance
1959
Plaster on aluminum structure
60 cm x 78 cm x 41 cm

Picasso painted The Three Dancers in Paris after a trip to Monte Carlo with his wife, ballerina Olga Khokhlova. At this time, Picasso was attracted to Andre Breton's surrealist movement. This radical work marks Picasso's entry into surrealism and his descent into his disturbing representations of the female form. However, he was never a fully enrolled member of the Surrealist movement: his realistic artistic response and his individuality never truly submitted to the movement's Freudian concepts of the supremacy of the subconscious state. However, the emerging Surrealists of the Dada movement claimed Picasso as their own, with the reproduction of Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907) in their 1925 manifesto to endorse his influence on their work. The Three Dancers is similar to Les Demoiselles a'Avignon in its revolutionary impact - but it is not the elements of primitivism but the psychotic frenzy of the women that is disturbing.


Pablo Picasso
Dance
1929


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Dance
1956
Watercolor on cardboard
50cm x 54cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Dance
1979
Ballpoint pen on cardboard
40cm x 58cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Dance
nineteen ninety
Watercolor on cardboard
27cm x 33cm

Picasso's relationship with Surrealism, although unofficial, is evident in works such as Crucifixion (1930), which continues to explore the distortion of bodily forms and manic grimaces, combined with the pyramidal structure of the figures, characteristics that echo anguish. and the chaos of his personal and artistic experiences.


Pablo Picasso
Crucifixion
1930


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Crucifixion
1955
Watercolor on cardboard
27cm x 38cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Crucifixion
1979
Ballpoint pen on cardboard 50 cm x 65 cm

Thus, Cubism, from its origins with Picasso and Braque to its subsequent evolutions and influences, represents one of the most significant transformations in modern art, challenging traditional perceptions and opening the way for new forms of artistic expression and interpretation.

Monday, May 27, 2024

20th century North American abstraction

Some of the protagonists of post-war North American abstraction do not share the gestural character of abstract expressionism and opt for the development of geometric languages, especially German artists who emigrated to the United States of America in the 1930s. Among them, Josef Albers stands out. (1888 – 1976), former Bauhaus professor who always remained faithful to the constructive spirit of this prestigious school that reconciled geometric clarity with more expressive abstract forms.


Josef Albers
Color study for a "Variant/Adobe"
1948 
Oil on absorbent paper
© 2020 Josef and Anni Albers Foundation/ARS, NY


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Untitled
1959
Oil on cardboard 1959 
49cm x 42cm

Manuel Pereira da Silva (1920 – 2003) was a Portuguese artist whose work, although predominantly known in the field of sculpture, also includes an important series of abstract paintings that began to be developed in 1958. These paintings are characterized by the use of rectilinear geometric shapes , such as rectangles and squares, and the application of primary colors. 

Manuel Pereira da Silva's creative process is notable for its meticulous and detailed approach. Before executing his final paintings, the artist devoted considerable time to the preparation phase. This phase involved the production of a series of detailed studies and color schemes that helped to crystallize the initial idea. These preparatory studies allowed him to plan each aspect of the painting with precision. Thus, although the execution of the final painting could only take a few hours, the preparatory work was extensive and in-depth, reflecting the importance he attached to the planning and conception of the work.

Manuel Pereira da Silva's exhibitions frequently highlighted this aspect of his creative process, presenting not only the final paintings, but also the preparatory drawings and color studies. This gave the audience a complete view of how his ideas evolved from initial conception to final realization. 

In addition to paintings, Manuel Pereira da Silva used paper in a significant way. Paper allowed for a more informal and experimental approach, a contrast to the meticulous precision of his final works. In this medium, he could freely explore variations in color and shape, allowing for a spontaneity that complemented his rigorous working method. Thus, paper served as a space for experimentation and development of ideas, a place where creativity could flow more freely and less contained.

Therefore, while sculpture can be seen as Manuel Pereira da Silva's main field of activity, his abstract paintings and the preparatory processes that preceded them reveal a fundamental aspect of his artistic work, marked by the duality between rigorous planning and spontaneous experimentation.



Manuel Pereira da Silva
Untitled
1959
Oil on cardboard 1959 
49cm x 42cm

The emotional language of Mark Rothko (1903 – 1970), an emigrant from Latvia, is also detached from the gestural burden. In order to stimulate deep emotions in the viewer, the painter organizes his paintings based on color fields of vibrant rectangular shapes that seem to float over an indeterminate space. Its colorful rectangles seemed to dematerialize into pure light.


Mark Rothko
Untitled 
1949
Oil on canvas
142cm x 121cm
Anita Rogers Gallery


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Untitled
1958 
Oil on platex 
148cm x 129cm

After experimenting with abstract expressionism and surrealism, he developed, in the late 1940s, a new way of painting. Hostile to the expressionism of Action Painting, Mark Rothko (as well as Barnett Newman and Clyfford Still) invents a meditative way of painting, which critic Clement Greenberg defined as Colorfield Painting.


Mark Rothko
Untitled 
1968 
Acrylic on watercolor paper mounted on linen
Private collection, New York. Copyright © 2023 Kate Rothko Prizel and Christopher Rothko

Willem de Kooning (1904 – 1997), one of the creators of North American abstract expressionism, represents an image of life and death, which contrasts with the idyllic world of Eden. The gestural, transcendental and moral composition explores bodily distortion and introduces the symbolism of the crucifixion with a violent dissection of the symbolic attributes of Golgotha: the nails of the cross, the ladder and the skull.


Willem de Kooning
Abstraction
1949
Oil and oleoresin on cardboard. 41 x 49 cm
Thyssen-Bornemisza National Museum, Madrid


Pablo Picasso
Crucifixion
1930


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Crucifixion
1955
Mixed technique on cardboard
34cm x 25cm

Manuel Pereira da Silva, like many artists from the Porto School, maintained a strong connection with the tradition of the sublime through abstraction. His artistic approach, innovative for the time, separated himself from the literal representation of nature, focusing on expressing personal emotions and visual poetics through an abstract aesthetic language.

The works of Manuel Pereira da Silva, like those of his abstractionist colleagues, did not seek to describe the natural world in a direct way. Instead, the shapes in his paintings and sculptures could suggest elements of nature – such as parts of the human body, landscapes or interiors – without the intention of representing them faithfully. Abstraction served as a means to communicate the emotions and subjective visions of artists, going beyond the mere imitation of the visible world.

A significant example of this approach can be seen in Manuel Pereira da Silva's crucifixion series. In this series, geometric shapes and abstract compositions are used to evoke feelings and reflections on suffering, pain and transcendence, themes traditionally associated with crucifixion. The works are not about representing the figure of Christ or the literal scene of the crucifixion, but rather about expressing the intense emotions and human experience associated with the event.


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Crucifixion
1978
Pen on paper
Dim. 33cm x 59cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Crucifixion
1979
Pen on paper
Dim. 50cm x 65cm

In this way, Manuel Pereira da Silva and his contemporaries from the Porto School explored the capacity of abstract art to communicate in a deep and subjective way. His bold works, by avoiding direct representation, allowed the viewer to connect with the artists' emotions and inner experiences, making abstraction a powerful vehicle for expressing the sublime.

Composition of Women is one of the earliest works in Willem de Kooning's long sequence of paintings of women, which culminated in one of the most aggressive revisions of the female figure in art history. Beginning as a study for a commissioned portrait that the artist never completed, the portrait served as a vehicle for de Kooning to explore his ongoing interest in merging figurative themes with the painterly concerns of abstraction. Although the intentional anatomical distortions reflect the influence of Pablo Picasso, the seated figure also recalls the sensuous women painted by 19th-century French artist Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, with their tight bodices and delicate features.


Willem de Kooning (1904 – 1997)
1940
Seated Woman
Oil and Coal in Masonite
Dimensions: 137 cm × 91 cm
Albert M. Greenfield and Elizabeth M. Greenfield Collection, 1974


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Seated Woman
1957
Gouache and Charcoal on cardboard 
40cm x 53cm

In 1938 he began his series entitled Mulheres, which caused a sensation in the artistic circuit, with a theme that would become recurrent in his production.[5] In the 1940s he joined a group of artists, including Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Robert Motherwell, Adolph Gottlieb, Ad Reinhardt, Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko, who would form the so-called New York School. They struggled to find a personal path that surpassed the major currents of the time, such as cubism, surrealism and regionalism. His emotive gestures and abstract pieces were the result of his attempt to distance himself from other movements. The style they pioneered became known as abstract expressionism or action painting.


Willem de Kooning 
1969
Seated Woman
bronze, 113 x 147 x 94 inches
Private collection
Photograph by Adam Bartos


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Seated Woman
1957
Plaster on aluminum structure
54cm x 68cm x 41cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Seated Woman
1957
Gouache and Charcoal on cardboard 
41cm x 65cm

Manuel Pereira da Silva shares with Willem de Kooning a deep interest in the female figure and in the integration of figurative themes with abstract concerns. In his works, Manuel Pereira da Silva frequently explores themes such as sitting women, reclining women, motherhood, family and couples. Although the figures in his works are often almost completely dissolved into abstraction, there is a constant presence of noticeable figurative references, indicating an unbreakable connection with the representation of the human.

De Kooning, in turn, began his famous sequence of paintings of women with "Woman I," which is considered one of the most aggressive revisions of the female figure in art history. This series began as a study for a commissioned portrait that was never completed, serving as a vehicle to explore the fusion of figurative themes with abstraction. Its intentional anatomical distortions reflect the influence of Pablo Picasso, while the female figures also evoke the sensuous women of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, with their tight bodices and delicate features.


Pablo Picasso
Seated Woman
1937


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Seated Woman
1952
Plaster on aluminum structure
14 cm x 23 cm x 45 cm

Manuel Pereira da Silva, despite his main focus on sculpture, also maintained a significant production of paintings and drawings in which the female body is a recurring theme. Like de Kooning, his female representations are not realistic portraits, but rather interpretations that combine figuration with abstract elements. This approach allows for a freer expression of the artist's emotions and visual poetics, moving away from mere literal representation and entering the realm of suggestion and evocation.


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Seated Woman
1957
Gouache and Charcoal on cardboard 
40cm x 53cm

Therefore, while De Kooning is known for his more aggressive and expressive approaches to the female figure, Manuel Pereira da Silva explores these themes in such a way that the figures, even almost dissolved in abstraction, maintain a perceptible reference, revealing their deep connection with figuration and human themes.

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Crucifixion



Andrea Mantegna
Crucifixion
1459
67 cm × 93 cm
Louvre, Paris

Andrea Mantegna (1431-1506) was a Renaissance painter.
Their characters are very dramatic and realistic about the idealization of bodies, they are skeletal bodies that show suffering.


Diego Velazquez
Crucified Christ
1631
Oil on canvas
248 cm x 169 cm
Prado Museum, Madrid

Diego Rodriguez Silva and Velazquez (1599-1660) was a Spanish painter and chief court artist of King Philip IV of Spain. He was an individualist artist of the contemporary Baroque period, important as a portraitist.
Crucified Christ is a 1632 painting by Diego Velazquez depicting the crucifixion of Jesus. Apollonian perfection of the crucifixion, of an almost divine and perfect beauty, according to the belief that Christ was the most beautiful of all men.
The baroque light-dark technique that contrasts the total darkness of the background with the light that bathes the body of Christ.


Paul Gauguin
Yellow Christ
1989
Oil on canvas
91 cm x 73 cm
Albright-Knox Art Gallery

Eugène-Henri-Paul Gauguin (1848-1903) was a French painter of post-impressionism. He was a restless and curious man, spent his whole life searching for the truth. Who we are? Where are we going? And to represent in their pictures religious things like this. Gauguin left Paris to move away from materialism, went to Bretagne for spirituality.
His religious pictures are searching for the truth behind everything.
Yellow Christ is considered one of the main works of Symbolism in painting.


Salvador Dali
The crucifix
Oil on canvas
205 x 116 cm
Kelvingrove Museum and Art Gallery in Glasgow

Salvador Dalí i Domènech (1904-1989) was an important Spanish painter, known for his surrealist work.
Mystical stage in which the artist often represented religious things inspired by Spanish Baroque. The Crucifix appears suspended, as if floating through Cadaqués. Spain, where the painter had his home.


Manuel Pereira da Silva

Crucifixion
Cardboard ballpoint
1978
50 cm x 65 cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva had several orders from the Church in which he represented scenes from the Passion of Christ, the Via Sacra, the Ascension of Christ (Santa Luzia Sanctuary, Viana do Castelo), Our Lady of Areosa (Areosa Church, Porto), beyond countless busts and monuments of church members.
But it was in his studio that he most designed the Crucifixion, especially the paper ballpoint pen, despite being an atheist.


Manuel Pereira da Silva

Crucifixion
Cardboard ballpoint
1978
50 cm x 65 cm



Manuel Pereira da Silva
Crucifixion
Cardboard ballpoint
1978
40 cm x 60 cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva

Crucifixion
Cardboard ballpoint
1978
50 cm x 65 cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Crucifixion
Cardboard ballpoint
1979
50 cm x 65 cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Crucifixion
Cardboard ballpoint
1989
27 cm x 50 cm


Manuel Pereira da Silva
Crucifixion
Cardboard ballpoint
1989
20 cm x 29 cm