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November Cultural Passport Van Gogh

§ December 16th, 2008 § Filed under Cultural Passport § Tagged § No Comments

Boris Kalendariov

For Van Gogh, night is far from the absence of light

“It often seems to me that the night is much more alive than the day.” Those words stood high in big bold italic letters as an epigraph at the entrance to Van Gogh’s exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. The exhibition was so popular that it required timed-entry tickets, and it was necessary to squeeze and weave in and out through the crowds if you wanted to catch a glimpse of what van Gogh meant when he preferred the life of the night to the day. This limited run of Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night, in collaboration with the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, brilliantly displayed 23 paintings, 9 drawings and several letters by van Gogh in six seductive galleries. By blockbuster standards, it is not a vast exhibition but its impact is far greater than shows of more quantity.

After unsuccessfully working as a clerk and art salesman, van Gogh decided to pursue a career as an artist in 1880. He had an intimate feeling for the night and like most artists he relied on the skills of observation for his work. But painting in the dark in the late 19th century had its difficulties. Although he admitted to not being able to work exactly from his imagination, he was able to work through this with his experiments through sleepless nights of combining his love for nature and the nocturnal landscapes, interweaving the images and color effects in the paradoxical representation of night by light and color.

The galleries presented the paintings chronologically beginning with his early landscapes and dramatic scenes. “The Potato Eaters” was believed to be one of his first paintings depicting the interior night scene. Van Gogh painted this under candlelight, indoors. He was able to discover new colors everywhere and presented them in his nocturnes. Moreover, nighttime brought a sense of relief to laborers; he believed that the laborers were closest to nature because they worked the fields and portrayed this belief in his earlier paintings.

His earlier paintings have a sense of peace and optimism, often showing the effects of the sun’s rays at dusk and dawn. It is almost a serene feeling seeing his art progress from “Sower” and “Landscape With Wheat Sheaves and Rising Moon,” as his experiments with the different shapes and the shifting textures, the use of complementary colors and the depiction of light in the paintings reflected his connection to nature. Once past the third and fourth gallery he shifts from illustrating touches of light yellow and vivid orange colors to portraying the lights and colors of darkness. He now paints outdoors, and the night has deepened from the vestiges of color seen at twilight to a midnight palette.

Darkness is often defined as, in essence, the absence of light, yet he was somehow able to craft “The Starry Night over Rhone,” and the “The Starry Night” and conquered the problem of depicting night by the use of vibrant colors. Van Gogh was able to portray the night by using the stars and moon. His approach to paint with striking colors along with his rhythmic strokes fused both his powers of observation and imagination to create these iconic images. Is night really the absence of light? Not if you are Vincent van Gogh.

Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night is running until January 5 at the Museum of Modern Art at 53rd

Street and 5th Avenue.

Dong Hyeok Lee - December cultural passport

§ December 15th, 2008 § Filed under Assignments, Cultural Passport § No Comments

Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night

 

        

 

These two paintings are both painted by Van Gogh, the first being entitled The Starry Night over the Rhone finished in 1888 and the second one being entitle The Starry Night finished in 1889. Just like the names of these paintings, these two paintings have many similarities in themselves. Both being paintings of the night, Van Gogh paints them with similar colors but in different ways. The first painting is in a more realistic fashion of a town by a bay also with a couple walking by the waters. The sky and the stars are drawn in a way that most people would draw it. However, the second painting is different in which Van Gogh uses swirling skies and auras around the stars. A unique way of portraying night, it is another reason why the painting is so beautiful. As Van Gogh’s own thoughts are in this painting, it is a way that he wanted to reveal night to others. As these paintings have their stunning similarities, I was able to find some differences in these two beautiful pieces by Vincent Van Gogh.

Dong Hyeok Lee - November cultural passport

§ December 15th, 2008 § Filed under Assignments, Cultural Passport § No Comments

Chagall’s Bible: Mystical Storytelling

 

                   

 

These are two other drawings by Marc Chagall that was not part of the exhibit in the Museum of Biblical Art. The first picture is of King Solomon asking for wisdom from God and the second is of King David playing his harp. Also two well-known stories of the Bible, I thought that Chagall portrays these two kings of Israel very well. In these two pictures, he shows the bright sides of the Bible of two great kings that were also great followers of God. As the picture shows, it shows that great people will receive great gifts as King Solomon received the gift of wisdom and King David received the gift of musical abilities.

Dong Hyeok Lee - October cultural passport

§ December 15th, 2008 § Filed under Assignments, Cultural Passport § No Comments

The Seduction of Light: Compositions in Pink, Green, and Red

 

“I am not an abstract painter”

 

Things are not all as it seems

 

“Relationships between form and color”

 

Different people, different views, different styles

 

“Tragedy, ecstasy, destiny”

 

            Good and evil, love and hate

 

 

“I am not an abstract painter. I am not interested in the relationship between form and color. The only thing I care about is the expression of man’s basic emotions: tragedy, ecstasy, destiny.”

 

                                                                        - Mark Rothko

Andrey Grebenetsky-December Cultural Passport

§ December 15th, 2008 § Filed under Cultural Passport § No Comments

Andrey Grebenetsky-creative view  (went to Comic Strip Live)

5 Haikus (that’s one more line than a sonnet)

 

We went out for laughs

We sure got what we came for

The service was good

 

Improvised jokes rock

Who needs rehearsed material?

That is true talent

 

We were brought closer

Groupthink is not always bad

We laughed at ourselves

 

These are not clowns here

They are professional comics

Success says Seinfeld

 

Two drink minimum

Way to impose on our cash

The service was good

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