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Egon Schiele

Thursday, September 27th, 2007

I can’t tell if Egon Schiele was ahead of his time or if many illustrators and artists reached a plateau in similar styles. He even looks like a modern man. What do you think?
200px_Egon_Schiele_Anton_Josef_Trcka_1914.jpg

Here’s a video:

My Trip

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

Good day, I just got back from an out of town area. I saw many a thing, but mostly ate many a food. One of the many a thing that I’ve seen were the insides of the SF MoMa. There I was almost brought to tears being in the presence of many historical artists I’ve studied, some which I’ve covered here. The escalation for me was going from a Max Ernst along the wall until I hit a Mark Rothko.

THINKING.jpg

Several years ago I did a Max Ernst portrait, around the time when I started addressing the mess and cloudiness inside my head. Since then I’ve managed to clear it up and gain some mental discipline. Some people thought the portrait was of an old guy pointing a rifle to his head. It was really of Max pointing a vacuum hose to his head, almost like a gun, but instead of blowing, it was sucking (there is a line drawing of a vacuum behind him). I used him, because I happened upon some video of him doing some dada film, when I started this conquest. There he was madly waltzing down a New York City street. Also I didn’t want to continue sucking after losing my mind.

Ernst was a Dadaist/surrealist who also helped influence the Abstract expressionist movement. My favorite painting of his was The Elephant Celebes.
The_Elephant_Celebes.jpg

More Rothko

Monday, September 17th, 2007

James Kalm on Rothko

Dali Dump

Friday, September 14th, 2007

Montagin’

Sellin’

Hitchcockin’

Bootleggedin’

Trailer, Eyballin’

Trailer, Turtlin’

Gameshowin’

A Trailer for a Short in Which He Acts Like Charlie Chaplin’

Banksy Dump

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

In Self Promotion

In a British Museum

In LA

In Palestine

In Disney

In Paris

Robert Crumb

Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

Here is Kalm taking us through a Robert Crumb show:

Here is an interview of the squirrelly fellow:

“Old School”

Tuesday, September 11th, 2007

Here, YouTubester, JamesKalm gives us a tour of a Zwirner & Wirth exhibition, which includes John Currin and Elizabeth Peyton, and a description of a Donald Kuspit essay.

In case you were wondering, ge gives the tour after running up forty three flights of stairs.

Vincenzo Campi

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

(A quicky)

Tintoretto pt. 2

Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

Anyway, Tintoretto was scorned by his contemporaries because they argued that the hastiness of his work degraded the craft of painting and lowering the status of the artist. He painted for middle class locals as opposed to upscaled internationals like Titian.

TintorettoOrigin.jpg

Here is the “Origin of the Milky Way“. According to The National Gallery, The National Gallery has this to say:

The probable source for the subject was a Byzantine botanical text-book, ‘Geoponica’, in which it is related how Jupiter, wishing to immortalise the infant Hercules (whose mother was the mortal Alcmene), held him to the breasts of the sleeping Juno. The milk which spurted upwards formed the Milky Way, while some fell downwards giving rise to lilies.

Lilies were once present at the base of the painting, until a part of the original canvas was cut off.

, ,

Tintoretto pt. 1

Monday, September 3rd, 2007

My head is constantly working on things, like smoothing out the plot of a story or putting a book shelf together. This is why I need to get things done quickly, so I could be done with it and get to the next problem. Because of this, the quality of my work varies, from a bunch of shades of gray representing a face:


COOKIE.jpg

To the multi layered expressions and outcry of the experiential memories spent during an artist residency in Florence, Italy:
FLUB.gif

A Mannerist who has been criticized for the speed at which he worked was Venice’s Tintoretto.

tintoretto_self.jpg

He embraced mostly the emotional aspect of Mannerism, and was influenced by Michelangelo, and took the color palette of his mentor, Titian. He was the son of a cloth dyer, also known as a tintore in Italy. Tintoretto was his nickname, meaning “the little dyer.”

More on him later, after I finish some projects with a more worthwhile pay (they pay with ice cream).

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