Mr. Reed; Mr. Marriott
Baby Boomer Classics: Electric Sixties
Found, on a various artist album, two songs
one by the Velvet Underground (Lou Reed)
and one by the Humble Pie (Steve Marriott)
Baby Boomer Classics: Electric Sixties
Found, on a various artist album, two songs
one by the Velvet Underground (Lou Reed)
and one by the Humble Pie (Steve Marriott)
When kids think Man Ray is a poisonous jellyfish, there clearly isn't enough art in our schools
La Dame Aux Camille (Sarah Bernhardt) 1896
Out of his many posters, I picked this one to convey the beauty of colors and flowers and approached to design, mixed with the tragic story we know as Camille. She is a beautiful courtesan of 19th Paris who is dying of TB. Sarah Berhardt played the role on stage, and was famous for it, in part because of this poster.
The actress is wearing an elegant dress, in profile. She is surrounded by her Camilla, her white flowers, Mucha emphasizes her fragile beauty by putting her figure in a gilded frame of tiny stars. Around her head the pink color winds down and there is a hand holding a Camille plant at the bottom. Theatre la Renaissance far at the bottom complete the poster.
JOB (1898)
The infamous JOB beauty scene a hundred times in "head shops" of the 1960's and 1970's. She is a poster beauty advertising JOB rolling papers. JOB appears in large letters, and the lady holding the papers with fine brunet hair pulled up to give her a classical look, is in a circle of flowery twists, and her body is in a seated, twist, holding the papers in one hand, and smoking or letting the smoke float from a lit rolled cigarette in a stylized drift. She is wearing a lilt orange dress and it pulls the viewers eye in to notice the JOB papers in her hands. The lady looks on to the smoke with mild disinterest.
In someways, Beardsley's broke through the different art movements of Sybolism and Art Nouveau with his strange obscessing for bondage and "perverted" sexual figures. Other members of the Art Nouveau movement took his flat lines and innovatedness and reinvintated it in their own style. Rene Lalique was at first a jewely designer. He used design elements and simiprecious stones rather than rubies or diamonds. The Art Nouveau swirls and female nudes were worked into his pieces.
His most famous work is perfume bottles. (L'Aire du Temp perfume by Nina Ricci still features frosted glass bird floating over the bottle of perfume.)
His earliest perfum bottles were the most beautiful, and collectable today. E'Elegance by D'Orsay, a perfume botttle designed by Lalique c. 1914. (today it is worth $4,700.00 in mint condition, signed by the artist.)
It is a very simple design of a square bottle and stopper made in frosted glass, shaped like a beehive. The bottle stands 5 1/2" tall, but it so exquistedly rendered, it's like jewelry for your dresser. You could set this piece down and have no other decorations.
The figures of two slender female forms, elegantly draped in gowns, swaying among flowers are in high relief. This is a piece where art and design meet - the premise of Art Nouveau - and remains timeless in it's astictic appeal.
Ouiatt Alexander Builski, c. 1927 is a perfume bottle also designed in dressed down elegance. The glass is clear and bell shaped, the screw on top is golden, and it looks like the shape is just approaching Art Deco - there are no vivid swirls or flowers, and the glass is very plain. It has the look of something stamped out of a mold, not hand crafted, There is a sun figure of aman with his whiskers rediating all around him as a sun burst. Lalique kept his designs simple and in harmorny. Many perfume bottle and jewelry pieces are inspired by him to this day.
A graphic artist who lived to only see 25, personified the shift from Symbolism to Art Nouveau. His work was complicated, erotic, decadent and he as an artist, was beloved of Salome, the infamous Biblical dancer of the 7 veils. However, he was strictly Art Nouveau in his rendering of flat drawings. He drew only in black and white, but the complexity of his lines shows him to be a great draftsman and artist, not simply a creepy pornographer.
Dream (1896) ink on paper
Dream show an elaborate chambermaid and her "uniform" outside a sheer curtained bed. She's poised in the left part of the scene, and the bed curtain makes a pointed edge, makes the patterned carpet, the only dark part of the picture, the only negative space. The chambermaid is wearing a short, 18th century puffed, flounced skirt, and fitted bodice, and a blouse of sheer dotted Swiss. She has on a fitted, beautiful mob cap. She is highly stylized, and it's uncertain if she's the Dream, creating the Dream or looking into the bed chambers to see the Dream. She has a faint feel of erotic bandage about her, wearing black boots, and carries a long baton twinkling at the top. She points into the bed chamber. This must be where the action begins.
The Dancer's Reward (1893) ink on paper
The perpetual femme fatal in the form of Salome, having danced her dance of the 7 veils, receives John the Baptist head on its silver platter. Just as she requested. She is both tender, loving and menacing as she looks down at the blood head where the tray is being held up by a stylized post, as if it were part of the surroundings. Salome grabs the Baptist by the hair, in one hand, and feel the dripping blood with her other hand. This is done with a sort of glee.
Salome in this picture is a vengeful Salome and she wears a dress like one designed by Paul Poiret (French Fashion Designer), an gown, but elegant. There are white lines that define the dress and a hanging scarf around her neck as counterpoint.
She has no problem with the blood and complications of killing of man in revenge for her own lust. The head of the Baptist is severed at the neck and the cry of his death throes are still on his mouth. Guess who won this sexual surrender?
"In 1981, a nineteen old unknown graffiti writer took the New York art world by storm. The rest is Art History"
the film directed by Julian Schnabel
the working script by Julian Schnabel
Into: this film script is a shorten version of much more complicated story about the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960 - 1988). The film itself is a complicated story, so I took the highlights & compared them to the facts from the biography of JMB (Jean-Michel Basquiat: a Quick Killing in Art by Phoebe Hoban (1998) in italics. At the very end I wrote up some of the differances in the film & the script published on the web.
Note: Schnabel was another artist in JMB's life so he had to fabricate a character - Milo - to fill out the story.
From time to time I pick up art magazines just for sheer fun of paying $7.00 - $15.00. Still, it is like buying a fine art book you can catalog with all your other art findings. If you do not mind the art ads all over the place (like even this site has been prone to lately, only not artsy, not art gallery artsy, yet)
April, 2008 issue profiles Photographers in St. Petersburg, all shot in black & white - this writer's favorite form of art photographer. From the introduction: " . . . the city's history has been etched in dark and tragic tones."
Continue reading "Black & White Magazine for Collectors of Fine Photography" »
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