Before I offer an update about the fresh items listed in the galleries (which may be found by clicking on the links at the top of the page) I wish to talk briefly about what has been happening in my world in terms of principles recently addressed in the posts.
Let me explain with regard to the last post about complementary tensions in figures. Twenty-one years ago I modelled in clay a set of bookends in the form of trees (see below) intended to express a personal state of angst with my world. At this point I need to clarify that this feeling was not a profoundly upsetting type of angst but rather a little angst surrounding the need that I actually have to “do” things. Fortunately, it was a feeling far removed from my present lovely circumstance, now that I have retired, where I don’t have to do anything that I don’t wish to—a state of absolute heaven!
Getting back to my story, these modelled trees had been gathering dust on a shelf in my uni staff room waiting for the day that they could be used to prompt students suffering a similar emotional malaise to engage with the fine therapy of reassigning worries into objects. (Interestingly, no student took up the challenge of putting their inner feelings into sculptural forms in a meaningful way.) Getting back to my story once again, I was contemplating these dusty relics the other day and I decided to refresh their surface with my newly concocted recipe for lacquer. While I was applying the lacquered finish I had one of those special Proustian experiences—a reliving of past memories excited by seeing/smelling/feeling/hearing something in the manner that Marcel Proust experienced when he enjoyed a cup to tea while munching on Madeleine cakes. It arose when I was rubbing the surface of the modelled trees and my actions triggered an immediate gut reaction of literally feeling my old angst once more.
On reflection, I now see that the triggered feeling—a feeling that was a bit like Munch must have felt when painting The Scream—was all about the tensions embodied in the tree forms. Moreover, when thinking back to the time when I crafted the sculptures I can recall the level of calculation that I originally engaged with to ensure that the tensions in the trees were “just right.” In fact, the process of transcribing feeling into the sculptured trees was thoroughly predetermined. It involved careful consideration about how the tensions should be encoded in the front/foreground of each piece and how they needed to be adjusted towards the back. Indeed, this thinking process is part in my sketchbook-journal jottings in preparation for making the tree-bookends as shown below.
On reflection, I now see that the triggered feeling—a feeling that was a bit like Munch must have felt when painting The Scream—was all about the tensions embodied in the tree forms. Moreover, when thinking back to the time when I crafted the sculptures I can recall the level of calculation that I originally engaged with to ensure that the tensions in the trees were “just right.” In fact, the process of transcribing feeling into the sculptured trees was thoroughly predetermined. It involved careful consideration about how the tensions should be encoded in the front/foreground of each piece and how they needed to be adjusted towards the back. Indeed, this thinking process is part in my sketchbook-journal jottings in preparation for making the tree-bookends as shown below.
My memory of this very calculated translation of personal angst ridden tensions into the tree sculptures still resounds in my head and it is especially strong after rationalising in the last post how other artists use tensions in their figure drawings. I mention this niggling memory as last week I attended a series of performances at the Australian Festival of Chamber Music and I couldn't help thinking during the recitals about how tensions are encoded in music.
To find out more about Daniel de Borah visit:
http://danieldeborah.com
Fascinated as I was with his
careful articulation of sounds in space I must add that there was another
factor enhancing my involvement with listening: the scent of perfumes
surrounding me in the auditorium. I do not know if smell and sound affect other
listeners, but for me the smell of fragrances with notes of moss, woody decay
and herbs really help me to visualise sounds and relationships between sounds
very clearly.
Moving on to the important topic
about the fresh items listed in the galleries shown as links at the top of the
page, I have some very desirable items to consider.
In the Architecture and Ornament Gallery I have listed a stunning
early and very rich etching (with engraving) by one of the very few female
printmakers from the Renaissance still finding her way into the history books:
Antoinette Bouzonnet Stella (1641–76). The featured print is part of a series
of twenty-five plates published in 1675, titled: Entrance of Emperor Sigismund into Mantua. As a point of interest
concerning this series, Sonja Hansard-Weiner, from the Spaightwood Galleries,
raises the probing question in her review of the 2010 exhibition, Pomp & Power (see https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/emw/article/download/14868/11909 [viewed 17 August 2014]): Why
did Stella commit herself to such a project? After all, as Hansard-Weiner
points out: “some visitors to the museum might think the martial subject matter
of the engravings an odd choice for a woman artist…." From my
standpoint, after years of contemplating women’s interests, I believe that the
subject material that many women artists are drawn towards—and of course I may
be wrong (heaven forbid)—fits with Stella’s interest. Essentially, women like
patterns; for instance, they tend to love the patterns of bark in trees (see my
earlier post for a more lengthy discussion of this dangerous topic: Female Perception [http://www.printsandprinciples.com/2012/04/delasalle-female-perception.html]) or, as is the case with this
print and the series in general, patterns involving textures that invite
the hand to touch and explore them. Or to express this in a way that will
probably offend many women (but said in a spirit of tongue-in-cheek): patterns
that could be translated into doona/quilt covers. In short, I believe Stella
enjoyed the eye-touch relationship of translating an endless procession of
military folk into the flattened space of a bas-relief.
Detail of
plate 15 from Antoinette Bouzonnet Stella’s
Entrance
of Emperor Sigismund into Mantua
|
In the Figures and Fauna Gallery is an
etching by Kathe Kollwitz that has become, after many hours of close
examination, one of my favourite prints. I would not claim that it exemplifies
the typical Kollwitz theme of bitter war-torn suffering and resilience; nevertheless,
every stroke in it bears the signature of an artist fully engaged in deep thinking
and feeling. For me, the treatment of the print with its myriad of fine lines pictorially
weaves the portrayed naked male figure with his immediate surrounding. Going
further, I view the treatment as a superb exemplar of a haptic artist visually
feeling her subject into an image. Moreover, if Antoinette Bouzonnet Stella’s
choice of a triumphal entrance (or adventus) subject could be justified in terms of
a female’s leaning to sensuous touch then Kollwitz’s print epitomises this
leaning.
Detail from Kathe Kollwitz’s Sitzender Mannlicher Akt [Seated Male Nude] |
In the Landscape and Flora Gallery you will find a botanical rendering of a banana tree that not only captures the scientific details of this plant, but also embodies—at least to my eyes—the hot and humid atmosphere of the tropics. This description of the effect of this print on the senses may sound implausible, as scientific illustrations are usually coolly objective and far removed from evoking any notion of felt experience, but this one does. Perhaps it is the richness of the inked impression, or the arrangement of the banana tree’s languidly drooping fronds, but whatever magical ingredient is in this image to trigger thoughts of heat, sticky banana sap and the continuous buzz of tropical insects, this print has it!
What is also fascinating about this print is the inscription in the lower margin: “De DUDAÏM door Ruben gevonden. Gen. 30:14” [Dutch translation: The mandrakes found by Ruben].
This may at first seem a curious line of text to append to an image clearly featuring bananas rather than the hallucinogenic plant, mandrake, but the text makes sense when viewed in context with Genesis 30:14:
And Reuben went in the days of wheat harvest, and found mandrakes in the field, and brought them unto his mother Leah. Then Rachel said to Leah, Give me, I pray thee, of thy son's mandrakes.
The element in this verse (and those following) that has given many scholars a headache is determining whether דודאים really was mandrake or something else that Rachel wanted. I should add at this point that Rachel, the infertile second wife of Jacob, wanted this “דודאים” to help her to overcome her infertility and wanted it so much that she was prepared to let Leah, her sister, sleep with her husband. Fortunately, everything must have worked out as Leah was happy, Jacob was happy and Rachel earned her דודאים and ultimately became pregnant. Herein, lies the message proposed by the bananas: the illustration is an “answer” to the riddle of what Reuben had found in the wheat. Interestingly, among the many other plants that have been proposed as דודאים are: ginseng, blackberries, figs and even the opium poppy—purportedly because word “duda'im”, according to Sir Thomas Browne in Pseudodoxia Epidemica, (ch. VII), “may be a reference to a woman's breasts”
(see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandrake_(plant) [viewed 18 August 2014].)
Also freshly listed in the Landscape and Flora Gallery is what may be described as a mini exhibition of the marvellous prints of Adolphe Appian (1818–98). For me there is something eerie about the treatment of his chosen subjects. The way that he portrays trees, for instance, is full of spikes and an odd fusion of tight curves with long verticals and short horizontals. I would like to mention the word “mood” here, as it is perfect for explaining the dark feelings that his work often expresses, but sadly it has faded from the lexicon of phrases that “proper” writers use. Nevertheless, Appian’s images are ideal examples of how images can embody and project an emotional charge.
In the last gallery, I have presented two Art Nouveau jugs that caught my eye some time ago as their design is so strong and captures beautifully the spirit of the period. At the time I thought that I would become a collector of such jugs but my interest shifted to collecting ceramic Saki bottles featuring loosely laid calligraphy instead (see below) … and I do not touch alcohol at all! Fortunately I have run out of library shelf space so expect to see a crate of Saki bottles on offer soon.
(see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandrake_(plant) [viewed 18 August 2014].)
Also freshly listed in the Landscape and Flora Gallery is what may be described as a mini exhibition of the marvellous prints of Adolphe Appian (1818–98). For me there is something eerie about the treatment of his chosen subjects. The way that he portrays trees, for instance, is full of spikes and an odd fusion of tight curves with long verticals and short horizontals. I would like to mention the word “mood” here, as it is perfect for explaining the dark feelings that his work often expresses, but sadly it has faded from the lexicon of phrases that “proper” writers use. Nevertheless, Appian’s images are ideal examples of how images can embody and project an emotional charge.
In the last gallery, I have presented two Art Nouveau jugs that caught my eye some time ago as their design is so strong and captures beautifully the spirit of the period. At the time I thought that I would become a collector of such jugs but my interest shifted to collecting ceramic Saki bottles featuring loosely laid calligraphy instead (see below) … and I do not touch alcohol at all! Fortunately I have run out of library shelf space so expect to see a crate of Saki bottles on offer soon.