понедельник, 9 января 2012 г.

Picasso’s fascinating early works


A new exhibit traces the seminal painter's development as an artist from childhood through young adulthood



I’ll never forget an object I saw in the Picasso Museum in Barcelona 25 years ago: Picasso’s first-grade reader. He’d filled the margins with pencil drawings: animals, birds, people. Next to the book in the glass case was a teacher’s note to his mama: “Pablo should stop drawing in class and pay attention to his lessons” (my rough translation). Last year, I went back to the museum, which had been much enlarged and fancied up, and wanted to see that little book again. “Not possible. It’s in the basement now,” I was told. Too bad, because it could be an object lesson to all artists and designers (and their early teachers).

With much anticipation, I visited the current “Picasso’s Drawings 1890 – 1921 – Reinventing Tradition” exhibition at the Frick Collection. Which early works, I wondered — Picasso was 9 years old in 1890 — would be there, and what would they reveal about how his budding talent was viewed and nurtured (or not)?

The earliest drawing in the exhibit — which presents 60 works in pencil, ink, watercolor, gouache, pastel and chalk — is an 1890 pencil drawing of Hercules, based on a statuette in the hallway of the family’s apartment house in Málaga. Picasso’s father, Don José Ruiz y Blasco, I’ve learned, was a museum curator who painted naturalistic depictions of animals and birds and taught drawing at the local art school. Young Pablo, then, was surrounded from birth by works of art and by the teaching and practice of making art. I think we can safely assume that his parents were not too troubled by the teacher’s note.

Picasso’s formal academic art education began in 1892, when as an 11-year-old he drew “Bullfight and Six Studies of Doves,” a pencil drawing that foreshadows iconic themes that reappear throughout his career. “Study of a Torso,” above, demonstrates how well he was able to master Renaissance draftsmanship and principles of style and form by age 14.

Most Picasso exhibitions these days are blockbusters, with advance ticket sales, long lines, huge crowds. The Frick is an opulent and perhaps underappreciated Fifth Avenue mansion that houses a renowned collection of old master paintings. This exhibit makes it possible to see — in an uncrowded setting — works on paper that give an intimate glimpse into the artist’s influences, techniques, themes and experiments. “Mother and Child on the Shore,” below, anticipates the 22-year-old artist’s mature themes and colorations.

In 1904 Picasso moved to Paris, where, as the exhibition catalog notes, “he was uniquely situated in time and place to create his combustive mix of traditional means and new formulations.” By the time he painted “Still Life with Chocolate Pot,” above, he‘d broken away from traditional means of representation. The forms of ordinary objects have been made angular and faceted, and are seen from different points of view: cubism is born.

I was most drawn to the collage, or papier collé, above, ”The Cup of Coffee.” “It is if Picasso had literally cut up the past,” reads the catalog. “The methods, techniques and supports of the rich history of drawings and reassembled them into a new order.” This charcoal and chalk drawing on fine art paper incorporates patterned wallpaper that was cut and pasted together in a dimensional manner, casting shadows that made me want to reach through the glass and touch it. And maybe it incorporates typography, too; I see a big blue letter ‘E.’

In the 1920s, when “everybody” was doing cubism, Picasso returned to classicism, his own brand, which married monumental sculptural elements with influences ranging from Italian mannerism to Ingres to African sculpture. “Head of a Woman,” the theme image of the exhibit, at top left of this post, and “Two Women with Hats,” above, demonstrate the power of and intimacy of works on paper. They’re both in a tiny room on the 142,600-sq-ft museum’s first floor; the exhibition continues down a spiral staircase to a lower-level area. (Is the museum saying that they wouldn’t give up any wall space in the 18 grand rooms that display the Van Eycks and Rembrandts for this stuff?)

“Picasso’s Drawings” closes at the Frick on Jan. 8, after which the exhibit will travel to the National Gallery in Washington, D.C.



  

Andreas Gursky photography

One of the most famous of the contemporary art photographers is Andreas Gursky. Gursky was born in Leipzig, Germany in 1955. He makes large-scale colour photographs distinctive for their incisive and critical look at the effect of capitalism and globalisation on contemporary life.
Gursky studied under Bernd and Hilla Becher (see previous blog post) at the Düsseldorf Kunstakademie in the early 1980s and first adopted a style and method closely following the Bechers’ systematic approach to photography, creating small black-and-white prints. In the early 1980s, however, he broke from this tradition, using colour film and spontaneous observation to make a series of images of people at leisure, such as hikers, swimmers and skiers, depicted as tiny protagonists in a vast landscape.
Since the 1990s Gursky has concentrated on sites of commerce and tourism, making work that draws attention to today’s burgeoning high-tech industry and global markets. His imagery ranges from the vast, anonymous architecture of modern day hotel lobbies, apartment buildings and warehouses to stock exchanges and parliaments in places from as far a field as Shanghai, Brasília, Los Angeles and Hong Kong. Although his work adopts the scale and composition of historical landscape paintings, his photographs are often derived from inauspicious sources: a black and white photograph in a newspaper, for example, that is then researched at length before the final photograph is shot and often altered digitally before printing.
Andreas Gursky has exhibited internationally, including Sydney Biennial (2000), 25th São Paolo Biennial (2002) and Shanghai Biennale (2002) and Venice Biennale of Architecture (2004). He has had numerous solo exhibitions, including Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg (1998), Museum of Modern Art, New York; Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (all 2001), Haus der Kunst, Munich (2007), Museum fur Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt (2008) and Moderna Museet, Stockholm (2009).






пятница, 11 февраля 2011 г.

How hand-drawn typography was reborn

A commercial artist turned influential designer, Ed Fella made a huge impact with his quirky fonts




Even if you’ve been fortunate enough to receive Ed Fella’s annual holiday poster, or the occasional package of his exhibition and lecture posters, this book, “Ed Fella Documents” written by Vincent Tuset-Anres, is a must-have. This is a substantial catalog of the exhibit of the same name held from May 21 to Aug. 26, 2011, in Chaumont, France, as part of the 22nd International Poster and Graphic Design Festival (it later moved to the Laterna Magica Festival in Marseille, where it closed on Dec. 24). I picked mine up at the MoMA/Soho store in New York. It chronicles some of his typographic art projects, and for the Fellaficinado there are very early examples of when he worked for Detroit commercial art bullpens.

For those who do not know Edward Fella: In the 1980s, after a lifetime working as a commercial artist in a Detroit studio primarily servicing the auto industry, Fella enrolled as a graduate student at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomington, Mich. After graduating with an MFA, he became one of its most popular teachers. Cranbrook took the vanguard of “the new theory,” a blend of deconstructionist literary concepts wed to typographic practice that gave birth to a wave of young designers and design educators. Fella reveled in this hothouse environment. In fact, the risks that he had avoided in his younger days while producing illustrations and brochures for conservative commercial clients seemed to pour out of him after “retiring” to academia. He produced an astonishing array of expressively raw, misshapen, hand-lettered type compositions that were used as posters and invitations for eclectic art galleries and nonprofit cultural institutions in the Detroit area.

The prolific and prodigious Fella arguably revived hand-drawn typography and made it a period style. When Fella started making contorted hand-hewn typography that echoed the earlier “words in freedom” practiced by avant-garde dadaist, futurist, and surrealist designers, he swore never to do a “straight job” again.

What typifies the Fella style is a boundless curiosity and effortless rule busting. The former took him on an odyssey around the United States photographing ad hoc and amateur signs — ultimately collected in the book “Letters on America” (Princeton Architectural Press, 2000) — and making signs of his own. The latter gave him license to create his own typographic systems that are part illustration and part scribble.

During the late 1980s and ’90s Fella’s free-form, serendipitous approach to typographic design earned him exposure in the pioneering type magazine Emigre, which saw in Fella’s handwork inspiration for new expressive digital compositions. The era of late modernism, with its emphasis on transparency, clarity and the grid, had fallen out of favor. Fella’s work rejected impersonal universality, and his matter-of-fact disregard for the strictures adhered to throughout his professional life appealed to many young designers who saw graphic design as an expressive medium.

Fella made a huge impact with his quirky typeface OutWest, with characters that look like cacti wearing cowboy hats, and his comic dingbats Fella Parts, nonsensical abstract designs — both distributed through Emigre Fonts. Fella always worked as though the hand is mightier than the pixel; still, each of his fonts was digitized for widespread sale. Although he’d turned his back on the commercial life, these fonts found their way into the design mainstream. For Fella primitivism is an antidote to slick professionalism — but his approach is neither artless nor naive. Fella knows exactly what he’s doing.


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