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Monthly Archives: December 2012

E. H. Gombrich and Arthur Danto: Setting the highest standards in expository writing in the arts and humanities

14 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by Romantic and Postromantic Art in aesthetics, After the end of art, Albert Einstein, Andy Warhol, art blog, art criticism, art history, Arthur Danto, Arthur Danto After the end of art, Arthur Danto Encounters and Reflections, arts and letters, Claudia Moscovici, contemporary art, Duchamp Fountain, E. H. Gombrich, E. H. Gombrich and Arthur Danto: Setting the highest standards in expository writing in the arts and humanities, E. H. Gombrich The Story of Art, expository writing, fine art, fineartebooks, Gombrich The Story of Art, Pablo Picasso, postromanticism, Romanticism and Postromanticism, scholarship in the arts and humanties

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aesthetic philosophy, aesthetics, After the end of art, Andy Warhol, art, art and aesthetics, Art and Illusion, art criticism, art history, Arthur Danto, Arthur Danto After the end of art, Arthur Danto's Encounters and Reflections, Claudia Moscovici, contemporary art, Duchamp Fountain, E. H. Gombrich, E. H. Gombrich and Arthur Danto: Setting the highest standards in expository writing in the arts and humanities, E. H. Gombrich The Story of Art, expository writing, fine art, fineartebooks, fineartebooks.com, Gombrich The Story of Art, history of art, introduction to art, modern art, postromanticism, Romanticism and Postromanticism, scholarship in the arts and humanities, the importance of art, The Story of Art, what is art

The Story of Art by E. H. Gombrich

The Story of Art by E. H. Gombrich

Like many scholars of my generation, I have lived through the “culture wars” in the arts and humanities, marked by the rise and critique of poststructuralist and postmodern theories. My personal view on these so-called “culture wars” is that life’s too short to focus on the negative. Why get bogged down in largely academic debates, when there’s so much of value in art and culture? Early on in my career as an art and literary critic, I made a conscious decision to concentrate on the aspects of art, literature and scholarship that I believe make major contributions to culture internationally.  This is what the postromantic art movement, which I co-founded with Leonardo Pereznieto in 2002, is all about.

https://fineartebooks.wordpress.com/2010/09/07/what-is-postromanticism/

http://www.catchy.ro/manifestul-postromantismului/29786

famous quotes by Albert Einstein

famous quotes by Albert Einstein

“If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough” Albert Einstein                                

The inspiration I found in the writing of art historians/aesthetic theorists E. H. Gombrich and Arthur Danto kept me going along this positive and constructive path. In my opinion, their books set the highest standards in expository writing in the arts and humanities. Both of them felt equally comfortable writing for a large general audience as for a smaller group of specialists. In fact, they wrote different books for these different audiences. Though highly respected for their scholarship, both Gombrich and Danto are best known for explaining art history and aesthetics to the general public in a simple, clear and engaging manner. They abide by one of the most famous sayings attributed to Albert Einstein—“If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough”—which, I believe, should be a mantra for expository writing in the arts and letters (creative writing being, of course, another matter).

forgetting-renoir-2

E. H. Gombrich and “The Story of Art”

Gombrich put into practice his belief that clarity, logical elegance and simplicity are the best ways to communicate ideas about the history of art. Although the author is appreciated among scholars for his later theoretical works, The Sense of Order (1979) and Art and Illusion (1960), which present a psychology of perception and explain the artistic process, his best-known and best-selling work is, by far, The Story of Art (1950). Originally intended as a high school textbook, the book is written so simply and clearly—and it reveals such a genuine appreciation of art–that it quickly became very popular with the general public. Translated into 39 languages, this introduction to art history has been a bestseller for over 50 years, selling over six million copies worldwide. “This is a book which may well affect the thought of a generation,” The Times Literary Supplement declared in 1950. This high praise turned out to be an understatement. The Story of Art has influenced many generations and, I predict, it will continue to do so.

Brancusi-TheKiss

Aside from its clarity, simplicity and eloquence, this book explains cogently and persuasively how the artistic process works. It also introduces the most important artists and art movements of Western civilization. E. H. Gombrich declares from the start: “There really is no such thing as Art. There are only artists” (“The Story of Art,” New York and London, Phaidon Press, 15). By this the author means that art has no timeless standards of value or beauty.

egyptian_princess

There is no essence that encompasses that which different periods and cultures call artistic. Rather than trying to capture the essence of art, Gombrich focuses instead on the particularity of artistic movements and the accomplishments of individual artists. Which is not to say that he leaves aesthetics to the philosophers. His descriptions of artistic movements interweave the texture that holds groups of artists together under a dialogue of assumptions, perceptual problems they are working on, innovations, economic possibilities and modes of representation.

famous Picasso quotes

famous Picasso quotes

“Learn the rules like a pro so you can break them like an artist” Pablo Picasso 

Although written for a general audience, and therefore in a much simpler more accessible style, The Story of Art is not worlds apart from his best-known scholarly book, Art and Illusion: A Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Representation. In both books, Gombrich describes the creative process from a psychological—and hence social–perspective. He contends that artistic creativity is never fully original. In fact, originality didn’t become important until the Renaissance and didn’t become the main artistic standard until the nineteenth century. But no matter what period we are considering, no artist reinvents the wheel, Gombrich contends. Each artist inherits artistic conventions (which he calls “schemata”) and selectively incorporates some of the techniques of established artists that came before him (or her).

Rodin-The-Kiss

This doesn’t mean, of course, that new art is a simple regurgitation of the past. Rather, the past—with its diverse styles and traditions—offers inspiration for new generations of artists.  This leaves a lot of room for creativity. The best artists abide by Pablo Picasso’s famous quote, “Learn the rules like a pro so you can break them like an artist”.

M. C. Escher

M. C. Escher

According to Gombrich, artistic creativity consists of a trial and error process of experimenting with former techniques and inventions to create something fresh and new for your times. His main contribution, however, is that he manages to make even indifferent readers appreciate art. There’s no way to describe, without having the pleasure of reading The Story of Art, how Gombrich’s clear, simple and eloquent writing style captures readers’ attention and imagination, making us fall in love with art. This is any art historian’s greatest achievement.

fountain

Arthur Danto and “Encounters and Reflections: Art in the Historical Present”

Arthur Danto has a unique background that prepares him equally well to be both philosopher (of art and aesthetics) and art critic/historian. He thrives in both fields, which are not only close, but also complementary. The field of aesthetics explains the underlying structure of art: what is art; how is it created; what is an artist; how does art reach an audience; what are the relationships between art and other fields, like sociology, religion, psychology and life in general. Art history touches upon all of these questions, since the works of every artist are, simultaneously, a creative process, a form of knowledge, an expression, and a contribution to society (even if for some, like the Dada movement, it’s just to negate meaning, “high art” and knowledge).

Like Gombrich, Danto expresses his ideas and theories equally well for both a large mainstream audience and for a small group of specialists in  art and aesthetics. From 1984 to 2009, Danto was the art critic for The Nation. For many years, he also taught philosophy at Columbia University, where he is now Johnsonian Professor Emeritus in Philosophy. He’s known as one of the most effective and earliest proponents of postmodern art. In fact, he introduced Andy Warhol to the general public before he was (in)famous.

andy_warhol_gallery_5

In most of his theoretical work, Danto explains the rise of conceptual art. His artistic heroes are Marcel Duchamp and Andy Warhol, who arguably contributed most to make art what it is today: aesthetic in the critical and reflexive ideas it raises about art, not in the way it represents objects. Duchamp’s urinal and Warhol’s brillo boxes, Danto argues, are not artistic in their materiality. There’s nothing intrinsic to these objects that makes them different from ordinary household objects. Their aesthetic qualities, Danto suggests, lie in the way their make us question the nature and existence of art in a radically new and provocative way.

discobolus+Myron

The millennia-old Platonic tradition of understanding art as some kind of inferior mimesis or imitation of reality is clearly gone in such ready-made objects and pop assemblages. Gone is also the equally old tradition, famously initiated by Plato and resurrected by the Romantics and even by Gautier, of art as a special, almost daemonic, inspiration that leads to the creation of beauty. Last but not least, in reading Danto we get the impression that the notion of creativity and originality, so vehemently defended by Emile Zola, remains in artists such as Duchamp and Warhol, but is hard to match after them.

Damien Hirst

Once originality is pushed so far as to eliminate the intrinsic qualities and extrinsic social functions of art, what’s left of aesthetics? Does art even continue to exist as a separate domain of creativity? Even Danto, the philosophical defender of pop art before it became popular, is not optimistic about the future of art. In After the End of Art (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1998), Danto sees no innovation possible after the destruction of the aesthetic object. Tracing the path to this destruction and seeing if it can be, in some ways, reversed or pushed beyond the current impasse hence presents a real challenge.

Encounters and Reflections by Arthur Danto

Encounters and Reflections by Arthur Danto

As is the case with Gombrich, Danto’s writing is most effective—and moving—in his art criticism. Encounters and Reflections: Art in the Historical (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1997) contains many of his vivid art reviews published in The Nation between the years 1986 and 1990.  In these essays, the aesthetic philosopher takes a back seat to the art historian. Danto reveals the wonders of the greatest artists in the history of art, from old-time favorites such as Van Gogh and Klimt, to relative newcomers—and two of his personal favorites–Warhol and Mapplethorpe.  Accessible, clearly written, poetic in style, and reflecting not only a deep appreciation of art history but also a genuine love of art, Gombrich’s The Story of Art and Danto’s Encounters and Reflections continue to enlighten countless readers and set the highest standards for expository writing in the arts and humanities.

Claudia Moscovici, postromanticism.com

http://www.amazon.com/Romanticism-Postromanticism-Claudia-Moscovici/dp/0739116754

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The Photography of Bill Gekas and its Alice in Wonderland Imagination

07 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by Romantic and Postromantic Art in aesthetics, Alice in Wonderland, art blog, art criticism, Bill Gekas, Bill Gekas photography, Claudia Moscovici, contemporary art, fine art, fineartebooks, Lewis Carroll, photography Bill Gekas, postromanticism, Romanticism and Postromanticism, The Photography of Bill Gekas and its Alice in Wonderland Imagination

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Alice in Wonderland, art criticism, Bill Gekas, Bill Gekas photography, Claudia Moscovici, contemporary art, contemporary photography, fine art, fineartebooks, history of art, Lewis Carroll, photographer Bill Gekas, photography, photography Bill Gekas, Romanticism and Postromanticism, The Photography of Bill Gekas and its Alice in Wonderland Imagination

 

Bill Gekas

Bill Gekas

A self-taught artist of Greek origin born and raised in Melbourne Australia, photographer Bill Gekas is well-known around the world for his distinctive, Alice in Wonderland style that has won him numerous prestigious awards. In 2012, he received  Gold in the International Loupe Awards  and Silver in Le Prix de la Photographie in Paris.

Bill Gekas

Bill Gekas

His images usually feature a young girl of an unearthly cuteness in settings that sometimes take us back to different periods of art history and at other times carry us even further away, in fantastic and idiosyncratic realms of the imagination. This is why I drew the comparison between Bill Gekas’ images and Lewis Carroll’s popular tale.

Bill Gekas and the Alice in Wonderland imagination

Bill Gekas and the Alice in Wonderland imagination

Although “Alice in Wonderland” was published in 1865, it remains to this day one of the most beloved stories for both children and adults. The story has everything to please kids—colorful characters, an exciting, fancy-filled plot, plus lessons in life if you’re looking for them—and enough mental paradoxes, puzzles and symbolism to engage even the most brainy adults. Since Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) was a mathematician who incorporated elements of his field into the narrative, some have even identified non-Euclidean geometry in the Cheshire cat’s disappearing body and residual grin.

Bill Gekas

Bill Gekas

Bill Gekas experiments through photography with finding complexity in a seemingly simple motif: the portrait of a young girl. Through countless variations on this theme, Gekas offers viewers fascinating slices of the history of art, including allusions to the paintings of Vermeer and Rembrandt, to literary works, such as Alice in Wonderland. 

Bill Gekas

Bill Gekas

He pays enormous attention not only to conveying the rich and ever-changing expressions of the little girl, but also to capturing the texture, color and feel of the various settings. The vivid tableaux he creates featuring the same model are, arguably, far more diverse than if you considered the works of different artists working in the same genre. Achieving this variety while working with the same subject takes enormous skill at the craft of photography and a very rich and ingenious imagination. Bill Gekas welcomes you to his fantastic photographic world on the website http://www.billgekas.com/.

Claudia Moscovici, postromanticism.com

http://www.amazon.com/Romanticism-Postromanticism-Claudia-Moscovici/dp/0739116754

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The Surprising and Stunning Photography of Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

05 Wednesday Dec 2012

Posted by Romantic and Postromantic Art in aesthetics, art blog, art criticism, Claudia Moscovici, contemporary art, fine art, fineartebooks, photography Andrey Yakovlev, photos Andrey Yakovlev, postromanticism, Romanticism and Postromanticism, The Surprising and Stunning Photography of Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva, Yakovlev and Aleeva

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Andrey Yakovlev, Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva, Andrey Yakovlev photography, art, art and creativity, art blog, art criticism, artistic photography, Claudia Moscovici, contemporary art, contemporary photography, fashion, fashion photography, fineartebooks, photography Andrey Yakovlev, photos Andrey Yakovlev, postromanticism, Romanticism and Postromanticism, the photography of Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva, The Surprising and Stunning Photography of Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva, Yakovlev and Aleeva

 

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

The French writer Francoise Sagan once said “Art must take reality by surprise.” I think that applies especially to the art of photography. Photography today shares with architecture a double function: it must be both pragmatic and sublime. Buildings combine form and function. They must stand no matter how artistic and innovative they may be from an architectural point of view. Likewise, the best fashion photography of our times is innovative, surprising and stunning and at the same time very practical and flexible. It conforms to the advertising needs of each client while also staging a new invention and offering a novel surprise in each photo shoot.

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Few combine the pragmatic and creative functions of photography as well as Moscow-based photographer Andrey Yakovlev and art director Lili Aleeva. World-famous for the gorgeous models, elegant fashions, inventive sets, and above all creative photo series that never fail to surprise and impress viewers, Yakovlev and Aleeva raise the bar for contemporary artistic photography.

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Some of their photo series deliberately mimic the diverse styles of classical, realist, romantic, art nouveau and modernist paintings. We see echoes of Ingres, of the pre-Raphaelites, of Bougureau, of Klimt and even of Picasso’s blue period in some of their images.

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

In other series, they set a subversive tone, pushing the limits of our imagination. In yet others, they emphasize feminine beauty and glamour. In most of their photo series, Yakovlev and Aleeva stage a set and create a drama, through the postures, gestures and facial expressions of the models.

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

These expressions surprise us rather than simply imitating life in a repertoire that we’re already familiar with. The poses are not realistic; they’re dramatic and statuesque.

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

These images take our breath away through their stunning beauty and capture our attention through an undefinable element of surprise that characterizes the best artistic creations. You can view more of Yakovlev’s and Aleeva’s beautiful photography on the websites below:

http://www.behance.net/AndrewLili
 
http://www.photodom.com/photo/2268874
Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva

Claudia Moscovici, postromanticism.com

http://www.amazon.com/Romanticism-Postromanticism-Claudia-Moscovici/dp/0739116754

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The Statuesque Images of Herb Ritts

03 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by Romantic and Postromantic Art in Claudia Moscovici, fashion, fineartebooks, Herb Ritts, Herb Ritts celebrity portraits, Herb Ritts fashion photography, Herb Ritts photography, photography, postromanticism, Romanticism and Postromanticism, The Statuesque Images of Herb Ritts

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art, art blog, art criticism, Claudia Moscovici, contemporary photography, famous portraits, fashion photography, fineartebooks, Herb Ritts, Herb Ritts celebrity portraits, Herb Ritts fashion photography, Herb Ritts photography, photographer Herb Ritts, photography, postromanticism, Romanticism and Postromanticism, The Statuesque Images of Herb Ritts

Herb Ritts

Herb Ritts

The L. A. based photographer Herbert (Herb) Ritts (1952-2002) bridged the gap between artistic photography and commercial fashion shoots. His work shows that photography can be highly commercial without losing its originality, signature style and aesthetic value.

Herb Ritts

Herb Ritts

Ritts is known around the world for his iconic black and white portraits of celebrities–including Brooke Shields,  Diana Ross, Britney Spears, Madonna, Julia Roberts, Cindy Crawford, Naomi Campbell and Nicole Kidman. His photographs are simple, elegant and statuesque, in poses that transcend our fashions and times and deliberately imitate the style of classical Greek and Roman statues.

Herb Ritts

Herb Ritts

In the course of his long and successful career, Ritts has photographed for some of the most prestigious fashion magazines, such as Esquire, Mademoiselle, Glamour, GQ, Vogue and Elle. The elegance, simplicity, starkness (his images are usually black and white) and timeless, statuesque poses of his fashion shoots and portraits make them stand out as works of art.

Herb Ritts

Herb Ritts

Ritts has also directed music videos, including Madonna’s “Cherish” and Michael Jackson’s “In the Closet”. He passed away in 2002, at the age of 50, due to complications from pneumonia. In the fall of 2012, the  Getty Museum commemorated Ritt’s beautiful artistic legacy with an exhibit of his photography called “L.A. Style”. You can see more of his fashion photography and famous portraits on his website below: 

http://www.herbritts.com/

my teenage heartthrob, Corey Hart, photographed by Herb Ritts

Claudia Moscovici, postromanticism.com

http://www.amazon.com/Romanticism-Postromanticism-Claudia-Moscovici/dp/0739116754

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