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Is that Hiroshige Wopster?
binners - MemberIs that Hiroshige Wopster?
Yep.
love a bit of bosch
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http://www.computus.org/journal/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/the-garden-of-earthly-delights.jp g"/> [/img][/url].
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clicky pic for zoomability
@ DD My nan used to read me books with illustrations done by Her, can't remember what it was called although I bet my mum does.
Woppit, that's beautiful.
Where was that installation, btw?
Looks interesting.
Blimey Woppit! I won't ask how much that cost! I love his work. I did a dissertation on Japanese printmaking as part of my degree. Its amazing and fascinating stuff!
"Except it isn't by most people, is it? This isn't made a fact because you don't like it."
So you're saying 'most people' like Rothko? I very much doubt that. I think if people are absolutely honest, they'd admit to not really thinking much about his work at all. There's an incredible amount of pretentiousness surrounding modern art, and the Rothko myth exemplifies this. Rothko's work has it's place, just not in an art gallery. Just because you like it doesn't make you an expert on art, merely a sycophant.
Always enjoyed El Greco:
And Gerald Scarfe:
(I know it's a drawing but it's still fantastic!)
Rusty Spanner - MemberWoppit, that's beautiful.
Where was that installation, btw?
Looks interesting.
http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/yayoi-kusama
The distance was achieved by a darkened room of wall and ceiling mirrors and a floor of still water...
binners: the Hiroshige was just a small copy I picked up on a market stall for £16 along with three others from "53 Stations of the Tokaido"...
Just because you like it doesn't make you an expert on art, merely a sycophant.
Well... the 3 years I spent studying Art History at uni does kind of give me a base knowledge. Though unlike you, I don't think that qualifies my opinion as superior to anyone else's.
I love abstract expressionism, and Rothko in particular, because I find the history and politics of the McCarthyite persecution of the artists absolutely fascinating, and view it through this context. I find the Rothko Room very emotional as a result, though I'm not entirely sure why. So the fact I don't even understand my own emotional reaction to it, makes it even more interesting
So I suppose what I'm saying is that if that makes me a sycophant, then fine. Rather that than a pompous, pretentious, self-important cock eh? 😀
Three years studying art history, and now you just do colouring in using Paint and waffle on about Klitchko? Jeez. 😐
Rusty Spanner - Member
igrf - Seen any Chris Acheson?
No but hey, like the 2nd one.
Cool thread eh?
Its a bloody travesty isn't it really Bravissimo? 😀
"So I suppose what I'm saying is that if that makes me a sycophant, then fine. Rather that than a pompous, pretentious, self-important cock eh?"
You come across as both to be honest.
"Well... the 3 years I spent studying Art History at uni does kind of give me a base knowledge."
Could you not have done a proper meaningful degree instead?
Did anyone see the documentary about Grayson Perry that was on a while ago? Fascinating and very thought provoking.
Rothko Room very emotional as a result, though I'm not entirely sure why.
"Presence", I thought...
I was killing time in Glasgow today and saw a gallery selling a couple of Peter Howsons paintings which I always think are pretty striking. Also like the pervier Jack Vetteriano paintings.
Indeed! I took my kids to see the recent Kapoor exhibition at the City and we all loved it!
I don't know a lot about art but I do like these
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I got to see the Klimt exhibition in Vienna last year and went to the Dali museum in Tampa a few years back. Up close, looking at the brush strokes they are impressive and I was amazed how large Dalis Christ was
OmGee dont turn them into Chorlton lefties!
Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,
Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge,
Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs
And towards our distant rest began to trudge.
Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots,
But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;
Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hoots
Of tired, outstripped Five-Nines that dropped behind.
Gas! GAS! Quick, boys! – An ecstasy of fumbling,
Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time;
But someone still was yelling out and stumbling
And flound'ring like a man in fire or lime . . .
Dim through the misty panes and thick green light,
As under a green sea, I saw him drowning.
In all my dreams before my helpless sight,
He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.
If in some smothering dreams, you too could pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in,
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin;
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues, –
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.
Mr. Smith. There really is no need to be so rude just because you don't like what I like.
I wasn't being rude, I didn't call anyone any names I just voiced my opinion which is just as valid as yours.
check Haroshi out...
all made from old skateboards.
[url= http://haroshi.com/artworks/ ]Haroshi Art[/url]
BenHoldsworth..
Good choices!!
this guy ranks highly for me too... he is my buddy though.
[url= http://www.simonpeplow.com/ ]Simon Peplow[/url]
Geetee - I saw that exhibition of Paula Rego's! It's worth getting the book of her illustrated bursary rhymes. Makes them as dark as they were originally intended to be!
Geetee1972 I like that. Who is the artist? Its sexually-charged and disturbing.
My favourite, haunting Wilfred Owen poem
What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?
Only the monstrous anger of the guns.
Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle
Can patter out3 their hasty orisons.4
No mockeries5 now for them; no prayers nor bells;
Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs, –
The shrill, demented6 choirs of wailing shells;
And bugles7 calling for them from sad shires.8
What candles9 may be held to speed them all?
Not in the hands of boys but in their eyes
Shall shine the holy glimmers of goodbyes.
The pallor10 of girls' brows shall be their pall;
Their flowers the tenderness of patient minds,
And each slow dusk11 a drawing-down of blinds.
Loving the stuff so far.. some of the pictures I knew but I'm being introduced to some great artists too
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[url= http://www.wikipaintings.org/en/john-atkinson-grimshaw/a-moonlit-lane-1874 ]John Atkinson Grimshaw[/url]
have always been drawn to this since seeing his work in Leeds Art gallery
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[url=
]Henrique Oliviera sculpture[/url]
My untrained brain doesn't always "get" the message behind sculpture but I think this is interesting.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith by Gainsborough is a favourite (don't know how to put up a picture, can someone help please?)
Also enjoy most L.S. Lowry works of art.
my vote for Kyffin Williams
my vote for Kyffin Williams
I have a friend who had who ahd her portrait painted by him. He's a great painter.
Hora, Binners has it right. The artist is Paula Rego.
That painting of a milkmaid by Jan Vermeer.
[img] http://www.polyvore.com/cgi/img-thing?.out=jpg&size=l&tid=44041084 [/img]
-I like a good plat me -
Absolutely. And definitely skateboards!!!
I curated an exhibition of skateboard graphics once including a few Jim Phillips and Wes Humpston originals.
There has been some great stuff posted here. But not much from local or new artists.
I love the abstract expressionists, Anish Kapoor, Klimpt etc. But I can't trust myself totally in that, do I like them because of what I have read or learnt from others. A good example for me would be Barnett Newman, I love his Zip paintings, but I am not sure if I when I look at them I am being influenced by a friend who absolutely loved them or my own interpretation of them.
So I have found that when I react to unknown/lesser known or new artist, and have no preconceptions, I can trust my instincts a lot more.
So what new stuff do you like ?
Most by the following:-
Georges Braques
Salvador Dali
Escher
I also like Gustav Corbet.
Sorry for not naming particular paintings.
I'm struggling to identify my favourite painting, while not technically the best one of the most memorable I've seen is the panorama Mesdag in The Hague.
righog
So I have found that when I react to unknown/lesser known or new artist, and have no preconceptions, I can trust my instincts a lot more.So what new stuff do you like ?
Bought one of a series by Sue Rose, similar to this, at Christmas:
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I like it, nothing profound, but it makes me smile.
great bit of art telly on BBC4 at the mo' (can prob get on Iplayer) Tales of Winter: The Art of Snow and Ice. Lot's of good ole winter paintings. Great stuff!
thx1138 : I like rothko, enough to jump on a train a few years ago from scotland one morning and go down to the Rothko exhibition at the Tate and just sit or rather stand as it was so busy there all day and absorb them as much as possible then i jumped back on the train at night and came home, his work can unsettle me in ways that i have absolutely no comprehension why they do so and some make feel incredibly happy and others fill me wi dread and foreboding and others can make me forget to eat/shit/piss and breathe - I'm not arty in the slightest and didn't take art in high school and couldn't tell you one artist from another, apart from Rothko obviously.
I also love Pollock, i get lost in a good way inside his paintings and i'm not impartial to Hopper either.
I dunno why those artists get me excited but they do, i'm not saying i like them for effect either as i'm sure others who like them have also got valid reasons for getting something out of them.
Thanks Mcmoonter.
Somafunk; fair enough, but as long as you're aware that all you are looking at are some crudely daubed large canvasses, not something crafted with exceptional skill or talent. And be aware that setting and context play a very important part in how your subconcious receives the work; take a Rothko painting, and stick it on the wall of a dull restaurant or office foyer, and you'd probably pay it no more than a fleeting glance; a splash of colour to brighten up the place. But put it in a prestigious art gallery, and suddenly people start raving on about it. Just makes me laugh really. But then I suppose peole will be along to attempt to justify it, and claim I'm 'visually illiterate' or some other such nonsense. By all means enjoy it, but you could get the same enjoyment out of looking at a damp patch on a wall, if you put your mind to it. that's the truth.
'The Idle Servant' by Nicholas Maes is one of my favourites in the National Gallery in London:
Always makes me smile when I see it.
thx1138 - That painting's shit! 😆
Great thread!
I don't know too much about art apart from catches my eye really but I have enjoyed looking at peoples favoured art on this thread, I have a liking for the paintings by Howaida Moussa Weel -
I have even been fortunate enough to pick one up.
Keep them coming.
"thx1138 - That painting's shit!"
I assume you're joking, or being 'ironic' or something, otherwise that 3 years you spent at art college was a waste of taxpayers' money. Why not actually attempt some constructive criticism, rather than being childish?
I've always thought 'Alien' could have been even better had HR Giger had a greater influence. Could have been even more dark and disturbing.
^ wondered when the infamous bricks was going to make an appearance.
Puts kettle on...

























































