Whistlejacket
In the painting produced by
George Stubbs in 1762, I can see a depiction of a horse by the name of Whistle
jacket whose renowned for his famous victory in a race over four miles for a
2000 cash prize at York in August 1759.
20th Century Art
In terms of background, I can see
that there is a lack of content apart from the horse to show this sense of
isolation from reality and to also keep things eye level on Whistlejacket. Stubbs has made precise detail a value when
he was producing this painting to make the viewer to read open cues. When
I look at the eyes of the horse I can see this blameless glare which Stubbs
highlights especially with white paint finish, this creates a sense of
innocence; and as the eyes make a good focal point, it gives the viewer a
first impression of what the context is about.
I can see also that Stubbs has
applied a fluent tonal variation from a dark brown head moving downwards to a lighter
brown shade on the body to show the horse to create this positive flow of
energy around him. Whistlejacket has this interesting inner character, body language wise, he starts off with a timid face
and a pitiful glare, and it transits to an elegant body that defines every
bright colour shades and every contraction of muscles indicate confidence; like
a book changing from an introduction and getting more engaging.
Stubbs has shown an astounding
mastery of oil paint on this life size board. He has used compatible mixtures
of brown, yellow ocher, and lighter shades of brown to suggest integrity in
Whistlejacket. The thick but perfectly blended sways of yellow lines create
this gestural imagery which tells me that he has a passion for racing.
The composition focuses on a centered horse in an uprising stance to suggest this liberation within him. Whistlejacket is not composed symmetrically or asymmetrically but I can see
this radially formed figure through the roundness of the edges and this
distinctive proportion of head to toe. As Whistlejacket is centered, in
reference to the Golden section rule, it tells me that things in the middle
have the least dynamism which also describes Whistlejacket as being playful but
subtle.
The Burlington House Cartoon
This is a
preparatory drawing titled ‘The Burlington House Cartoon’ that Leonardo da
Vinci began producing in October 1499 which was remained unfinished until 1505.
Da Vinci, did not have the chance to finish this work as he was called back to
Milan by the French Governor of the city.
I can see in-conclusions of
the work through certain parts such as the flat and line drawn background
which has been left unrefined to make the 3D defined human figures of the
Virgin, Jesus, etc stand out.
I notice in the cartoon that
Leonardo da Vinci has incorporated earthy colours of yellow ocher and hazy grey and textural concrete background to show this complexity and atmospheric
environment that he come across from time to time during his daily life. Things
in the image are overlapped together which gives me this feeling of rawness and
I sense a slight in-hostility in the image even though the facial expressions
of the human depictions do not show it. Its layered quality also shows that da
Vinci’s making references of his awareness of the French invasion of Milan in 1500.
I have also noticed a
sequential cues in the image. I notice that facially St Anne gazes at St Mary
with a cheerful smile whereas Mary has a subtle smile whilst occupied on Christ to portray this ordinary group repartee. As I glance downwards I notice that
there is a gestural flow through movement of their legs to show that they are
creating a rhythm as Mary sits on the lap of her mother. Da Vinci has left the
background pastel and put light shades on the
faces and bodies to highlight the harmony in the human figures.
Personally, I think that Leonardo wanted to divide these contents through
expressive sections and smooth sections to create this contrast of bitterness
and grace.
The mediums used in this image were chalk and charcoal. The artist uses gentle strokes of
chalk to create hazy shadows and blunt dark tones in dark areas to create this calm visual depth. I can see that he has
applied fine black charcoal lines as a finish to makes the viewer read clarity
in the image.
Da Vinci
also has a concept. He believes that poses, facial expressions and gesture, describes
the motion of the mind. This might look obscured but when I gaze closely, I can
see St Anne’s finger pointing to heaven hence this alludes that she is trying
to anticipate Christ’s future which is presumably being in heaven with God. The
hand looks inconclusive in contrast to the face and body that even though it
might have been unintentional, it gives it a sense that he was trying to hide
it so that the viewers can use their imagination to decode the image.
Reference:
- The National Gallery.
Whistlejacket. 1762
www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/george-stubbs-whistlejacket
-
Roger Robinson’s Poem inspired by Whistlejacket
www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/george-stubbs-whistlejacket
-
Leonardo da Vinci. Artist Biography. 1452-1519
www.nationalgallery.org.uk/artists/leonardo-da-vinci
20th Century Art
Pablo Picasso
(L’Accordeoniste 1911)
One of the most famous
and inspiring artist of the Twentieth century is Pablo Picasso. A specialist of
many styles and medium from printmaking to painting and from Blue period to
Cubism.
Cubism
is a traditional style which was developed by Picasso and his associate Georges
Braque in Paris in the early twentieths. One of the subbranches of Cubism, is a Analytic Cubism, which
was a dynamic style. It was a simplistic but significant
part of Cubism which was practiced by both artists between 1907 and 1911 in France.
The Cubist was fond to working
with Oil on canvas as its opaqueness and roughness creates a rough portrait.
The movement Cubism greatly rejects well known methods of perspectives,
structuring and the straight forward impressions of ordinary objects that
maintains distinct. Picasso has produced shattered and rearranged objects to
portray a visual analysis of day to day surroundings, hence forms the term
‘Cubism’. The subtlety in the
brushstrokes is major, which makes the design graceful looking.
The way Picasso has worked with a neutral colour palette conveys this earthy crossed with pastoral
feel. The image has a vague quality, as
the readership gaze at the centre they would see a depiction of an eye-drawing
human figure; in my perspective a women playing a mandolin, this style that
Picasso works with makes the image tough to read which presents
ambiguousness.
Compositionally,
Picasso overlaps the background and foreground which presents this mislaid
structure where contents would disband into the arrangement.
The
limitations of colour palette creates a linear depth of an image. From reading
the painting, I see that the focus greatly revolves around the centre of the
painting, and as they is a big contrast between the pale black of the centre
and the creamy ochre of what is around it, it suggests that he is opening up
another layer of 3 Dimensionality.
Picasso
often repeats shattered glasses and vases to create an endurance of pattern
play; the same object would be displayed multiple times as if it was duplicated.
This
crossover of lines and tones portrays his shear understanding of planning the
coordination of which content is ordered where, and that suggests a mastery
skill of mapping.
Hi Ibrahim, it is really good to see how you have approached this and have obviously looked into some background research for both pieces well indicated in your referencing at the end 😃
ReplyDeleteYou do provide your account in the first person (I see....etc) so this expresses that the words are stating your position which is typical of a blog commentary. However the words seem adopted from a source text and this is good in so far as building your own knowledge of the subject much as we highlighted that terminology is a key indicator of understanding and very important in any discipline. But do be wary and try and cross reference to multiple sources which prevents any plaigerism issues. In undertaking the task I believe that the more you do this the more confidence you will gain and be able to use in explaining your own work later on. I particularly find the comments on the Leonardo cartoon insightful.