Monica D. Murgia

Where art, creativity, and fashion meet

Archive for the ‘Nature inspired’ Category

May 17th, 2013 by Monica Murgia

Textile Designs by Rockwell Kent

As promised, I wanted to write more about the textile designs I saw at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  This was the original drawing that caught my eye.  The design, entitled Swaying Trees, is by American artist Rockwell Kent.

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This was a big surprise for me!  Kent (1882 – 1971) studied painting under William Merritt Chase and Robert Henri.  I’d learned a bit about his paintings while working at an art gallery.  Henri encouraged Kent to paint landscapes of Monhegan island in Maine on his own.  This experience of painting directly in nature greatly affected Kent.  Whatever medium he chose, Kent’s work always captures the amazing power of nature.

Kent gained a reputation of a neo-Transcendentalist because of this.  Transcendentalism was a philosophy that originated in the 1830s and asserted that spiritual experiences could be observed in nature.  Time spent in nature often created a mystical or transcendental experience to those that followed this philosophy.

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You can see that his textile designs capture natural themes.  The other accompanying design is called Running Deer.  Both of these were realized in 1950.  Kent made a similar design for Bloomcraft Inc called Deer Season, which you can see below:

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Kent also completed a few other designs for Bloomcraft Inc, including Harvest Time:
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Harvest Time by Rockwell Kent.  Image courtesy of Boston Museum of Fine Arts
And Pine Tree:
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Pine Tree by Rockwell Kent.  Image courtesy of Boston Museum of Fine Arts

 Unless otherwise states, images courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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April 15th, 2013 by Monica Murgia

Forecasting Fashion

 

 

 

 

It’s been an intense week, so things have been quiet on my blog.  New classes, new students, presentations about The Stieg Collection.  Everything has been so much fun, but I’ve had little time to write.  I probably should be grading papers, but I wanted to write a post about my fashion forecasting class.

Much like it sounds, you can predict future fashions and trends if you know what to look for.  We look at different people, what motivates them to participate in fashion, innovations in textiles, trends in colors, and lots of other things.  What I like most about teaching this class is that I have to communicate how I see things.  Last week, I took my class on a field trip to do some trend spotting.  I have some ideas in my head already that fashion is going to become increasingly inspired by nature.

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Even in the city, you can see that people crave nature.  Plants line storefronts.  Colorful flowers and shrubs are displayed for purchase.  Food culture is becoming more focused on natural flavoring, organic produce, and saying “no” to genetically modified organisms.

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We also went to Brooklyn Charm, and I noticed a lot of jewelry that took cues from the natural environment.  Leaves, flowers, gems, crystals, geodes – everything pointed to the great outdoors.

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I couldn’t resist!  I got a few small charms for my own necklace.

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I saw some vintage clothing from the neighborhood we observed that had some great references, too.  I wanted to buy everything, but I was only observing.

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Leaves can be dressed up or down!

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And you can never go wrong with flowers.

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I started to see how people were already wearing this on the street.  Doesn’t it look sort of like the early 1970s?

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My thoughts were confirmed when I saw all the pictures from Coachella!  New York and California seem to agree some fashion points.  It’s a flower power revival, don’t you agree?

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Coachella 2013.  Image courtesy of Celeb Buzz.

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April 1st, 2013 by Monica Murgia

Joan Mitchell

Teaching doesn’t come with an instruction manual.  I’d never planned to be a teacher.  Yet almost four years ago, I found myself in front of a classroom.  To say that I was anxious would be an understatement.  Luckily, it got easier with practice.  The very first course I taught was called Fashion Seminar at FIDM.  Part theory, part portfolio development, I was responsible for teaching fashion theory along with art.  The portfolio consisted of a series of art assignments.  The learning outcome was to take an inspiration source and create new and meaningful artwork from it. Each week, we would have a new focus: collage, found object, textile design, and so forth.  There was one assignment that initially gave me any problems.  It was called multiple sensory.

 

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Untitled by Joan Mitchell, 1969.  Image courtesy of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Cheim & Read Gallery, and Lehigh University.

I understood the concept.  Say your inspiration source is a tree.  How does it feel to touch its bark?  Try drawing that sensation.  Obviously, there is no “wrong” way to do this assignment.  Yet it caused so much confusion the first time I tried to explain this to the students.  For me, this was frustrating.  I didn’t seem to have the right words to explain the desired result.  But then, I remembered learning about synesthesia.  I decided to do a little research and present my findings to the class.

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Detail. Image courtesy of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Cheim & Read Gallery, and Lehigh University.

Synesthesia is a neurologically-based condition in which stimulation of one sensory pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory pathway. Synesthetes, those that have synesthesia, will see colors when they hear sound or touch objects.  (I’ve written about this before!  Please read my post Synesthesia in Art & Fashion.  It’s one of my favorites!)  When I research, I go to libraries and book stores.  I build a sort of book fort around myself, and get lost in thought for hours.  I stumbled across several great books, but the best one was a small catalog called Synesthesia: Art & the Mind.  It’s fantastic, and I have a copy in my personal collection.

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Untitled by Joan Mitchell, 1978.  Image courtesy of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Cheim & Read Gallery, and Lehigh University.

This catalog is how I became acquainted with Joan Mitchell.  And it was love at first sight!  There is a small essay by Patricia Albers in this catalog, and it explains all about Joan Mitchell and how her synesthesia influenced her paintings.  Albers explains:

Joan Mitchell had several forms of synesthesia, including personality-color synesthesia, in which other people induce colors . . .

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 Heel, Sit, Stay by Joan Mitchell, 1977.  Image courtesy of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Cheim & Read Gallery, and Lehigh University.

It turns out that Mitchell also had “colored-hearing” synesthesia, or that she would see shapes and colors while listening to music.  She also has eidetic memory (aka photographic memory) which means that instead of remembering, she would quite literally relive the past.  Albers goes on to explain:

” ‘I carry my landscapes around with me’ she often said, in the form of images that ‘roosted inside’ her.   As involved as she was with trees, rivers, fields, clouds, weather, and so on, she did not work out-of-doors, but rather mentally ‘framed’ whatever spoke to her: ‘the motion is made still like a fish trapped in ice.  It is trapped in the painting.  My mind is like an album of photographs and paintings.’ “

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Tilleul by Joan Mitchell, 1978.  Image courtesy of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Cheim & Read Gallery, and Lehigh University.

Lehigh University currently has a show on Joan Mitchell’s work.  It doesn’t touch on her synesthesia, but I sat in front of these large scale works and just marveled at them.  I really enjoyed the painting above. This canvas just looks like a tree to me.  I stared at it for a while, wondering if I was looking up at branches.  It was like going for a walk through Mitchell’s personal landscape.  This painting really made me happy.  And there was just so much to look at!  It’s even more magical up-close.  Look at the details:

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Details. Image courtesy of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Cheim & Read Gallery, and Lehigh University.

 

When I explained synesthesia and showed Mitchell’s artwork to my students, I saw a drastic improvement on the work they produced.  There is a really freeing sense that developed in my classroom.  Everyone can experiencing a merging of the senses to some degree.  But the very idea stimulates creativity.  Sensations, emotions – they aren’t logical, nor do they possess a recognizable visual form.  So relating feelings and perceptions to colors and forms in art was almost liberating to the students.  Their creations didn’t have to look like anything, but there was always a recognizable correlation to their inspiration.

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Untitled by Joan Mitchell, c. 1952.  Image courtesy of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Cheim & Read Gallery, and Lehigh University.

As I walked through the Mitchell exhibit, I had the real sense of experiencing nature.  A tree, a leaf, branches, flowers, rain, sunshine through a window – I had the sensations of experiencing it the way Mitchell must have.  This painting made me think of blossoming flowers.  At first, I saw one large flower.  But as I approached the canvas, it seemed there were small flowers scattered about.

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Detail. Image courtesy of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Cheim & Read Gallery, and Lehigh University.

 

It reminded me of the critiques I had with my students in LA.  Somehow, it all makes sense.  If you are in the Bethlehem area, please drop in to see the show!  It is at the Zoellner Art Center until May 2013.

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Untitled by Joan Mitchell, 1992.  Image courtesy of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Cheim & Read Gallery, and Lehigh University. 

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March 25th, 2013 by Monica Murgia

Monet & Etretat

Yesterday, I wrote a post about a vintage illustrated dictionary I found.  The little drawings pouring out from each page really captivated me.  I spent a few hours making my own drawings based on the illustrations in the book.  One, in particular, reminded me so much of paintings by Claude Monet (1840-1926).  The illustration of a bluff made me think of Monet’s series depicting the coastline of Etretat.
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Etretat is a small farming and fishing town near in the Normandy region of France.  It attracts tourist far and wide for the naturally formed bluffs and cliff formations.  According to the Musee d’Orsey, Monet first visited this area in the winter of 1868 and returned every year between 1883-1886.  Monet made countless paintings of this coastline, each showing a different time of day or weather pattern.
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Etretat in the Rain by Claude Monet, 1886.
I love this series of paintings.  When I find a really special place, I take endless photographs and make drawings and paintings of what I observe.  There is a small trail in the woods near my home that is really special to me.  This is what I base a lot of my own paintings off of, as well as a large portion of my Instagram feed.  Since this type of technology wasn’t available at the time, Monet had to paint rapidly to capture the ambient light and atmosphere.
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If you’ve ever painted or drawn landscapes outdoors, you know how tricky it is to capture the moment.  The wind blows, a cloud passes by – whatever may happen, the environment constantly changes.  The lighting may be different.  Leaves will scatter about.  People may enter the area.  The scene is in a constant state of flux.  If you sit outside and observe the same spot carefully for 15 minutes, you’ll see how rapidly that little spot will change.
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Etretat, La Porte d’Aval – Boats Leaving the Harbor by Claude Monet, 1885. Image courtesy of Musée des Beaux-Arts de Dijon via Wikimedia Commons.
If you observe the same place at different times of day over a period of time, you’ll start to notice so much more.  It’s a really extraordinary thing to see the environment change from afternoon to sunset.
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 Soleil Couchant à Etretat by Claude Monet,  1883.  Image courtesy of El Museo de Hipatia.
Each sunset is unique and different.  Look at the variation between these paintings.
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Etretat at the End of the Day, Claude Monet.  Image courtesy of Poul Webb.
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Cliffs at Eretat by Claude Monet, 1886. Image courtesy of The Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow.
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Sunset at Etretat by Claude Monet, 1883.
Weather patterns change the lighting and colors the eye perceives.  Here is Eretat during a particularly bad storm.  Look at how dark and dreary it is.  You can almost feel harsh winds whipping around you.
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Rough Sea at Etretat by Claude Monet, 1868.  Image courtesy of Wikipaintings.
Monet painted another storm at Eretat, but this one seems less alarming.  The sea seems to be more frenetic and turbulent.  The brushstrokes are more pronounced, which gives the sea a really harsh feeling.
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Agitated Sea at Etretat by Claude Monet, 1883. Image courtesy of Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lyon, via Wikimedia Commons.
And then, you can always observe the same place from a different vantage point.  Here is another storm, from the other side of the bluff.  Can you see the lone seagull?
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Amont Cliff with Rough Weather by Claude Monet, c. 1886.

 

 Eretat is a really beautiful place, and I hope to make it there some day.  Until then, I’ll have to enjoy these lovely paintings by Monet.
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The Cliffs at Etretat by Claude Monet, 1885. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

 

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March 24th, 2013 by Monica Murgia

A to See

 

 

It’s been one of those weeks.  You know, the kind of week when your to-do list is a mile long and you’re running on fumes.  I’ve been juggling multiple projects, commuting, and grading for the end of the term.  After carefully finishing all my requirements, I needed some time for myself.  Having quiet time is really essential for me to stay balanced.  So what did I do?

Earlier in the week, I found this great vintage illustrated dictionary.  It was the first volume in a set of six, and covers A to Ch.  There was something so compelling about the illustrations that I had to buy it.  There were so many wonderful pictures that I knew would inspire me to draw.

 

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There is something about drawing that re-energizes me.  It is sort of a meditation.  I become really absorbed in the process of creating shapes and lines.  When I draw, I want to capture not only a likeness of the object, but it’s spirit – the way it makes me feel.  That is why making art changes my mood.  Instead of focusing on external things outside of my control, I look to a thing of beauty that makes me happy and try to create a record of it.  This little dictionary was filled with some of the happiest, beautiful illustrations.  Like this:

 

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The catalpa is a tree with heart-shaped leaves.  I’ve seen trees like this before, and marveled at them.  A tree full of hearts!  What a perfect plant for me.  But I’d never know the name.  Of course I was inspired and made this little drawing:

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The illustration that really made me purchase the book was of a bluff along the sea.  It has a little sailboat hugging the shoreline.  I thought it was really darling, and reminded me of Monet’s seascapes.  (Maybe I will post about those paintings tomorrow!)

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I changed the color of the sails to purple, but kept the passenger.

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Then, a chestnut tree caught my attention:

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I’m not sure if I liked how this one came out, but it was still fun to do!

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Every page I turned brought more inspiring images.  I sketched a few more things, but was most happy with this canyon.

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I could easily entertain myself this way for much longer.  I only wish I had the entire volume of this dictionary!  There must be so much more to see.

(Like my drawings?  I used a thin tip Sharpie marker and Crayola Twistable crayons.  I highly recommend these items!)

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February 25th, 2013 by Monica Murgia

William Morris & Co.

Back in January, I wrote about the Pre-Raphaelites.  The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood is one of my favorite groups of painters, mostly because of the way in which they depict ideal beauty.  Long, flowing wavy hair, big doe eyes, and a natural glow – I don’t think this could ever be considered anything other than beautiful.  So many Pre-Raphaaelite paintings depict gorgeous woman sitting in nature in billowing gowns.  The dresses are made of diaphanous fabrics with beautiful floral patterns.
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Boreas by John William Waterhouse
William Morris (1834 – 1896) was a textile designer that was affiliated with the Pre-Raphaelites.  He created the most beautiful and intricate floral textile patterns.  Really, Morris was more than a textile designer.  He wrote poetry and philosophy; drew and painted; and also did interior design.  I just think he was particularly gifted at creating beautiful, complex patterns for fabrics.
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William Morris. Wey, 1883-4.  Image courtesy of The Textile Blog
Morris was influenced by mediaeval art, particularly stained glass windows, tapestries, and murals.  He started to seriously study mediaeval architecture in 1855.  He inherited a large fortune, and took a walking tour through Northern France.  He spent a lot of time observing and sketching Gothic cathedrals there.
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Fruit by William Morris.
 The intricately carved doorways, the stained glass windows, and tapestries – these all created within Morris the desire to revive hand craftsmanship.  He believed that art suffered under the Industrial Revolution.  In 1861, he established the Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Company.  This was a commercial venture to encourage a revival of hand crafts and interior design.  (And a major contribution to the Arts and Crafts movement in England.)
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Pimpernel by William Morris.
So what exactly does this mean for all of these beautiful textile designs and wall paper patterns?  Well, Morris and other artists would first draw and paint the elaborate patterns on paper.   These designs, once finalized, would be carved into a block of wood for printing.  There are a few unfinished drawings below that are great examples of what I’m talking about:
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William Morris. Windrush, 1883-4.  Image courtesy of The Textile Blog

Tapestries were created with a similar method.  The sketches for a tapestry are called cartoons.  They must be drawn to size, and placed underneath the loom so that the weavers can follow the patterns.

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Drawing for block-printed fabric Tulip and Willow by William Morris, 1873.  Image courtesy of Wikipedia

Morris died at age 62, of what some believed to be exhaustion.  He was so prolific, and worked tirelessly on his many passions.  Morris really believed in what he did.  He so beautifully stated:

“My work is the embodiment of dreams.”  

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Jasmine by William Morris.  Image courtesy of The Textile Blog.
Morris & Co. still operates today, and many of the classic textile and wall paper patterns are available for purchase.  You, too, can order yardage and make a dress to look like a Pre-Raphaelite painting.  I know I’ll be saving my pennies to do that!
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January 28th, 2013 by Monica Murgia

Ode to Matisse

The Matisse show at the Met definitely was not what I was expecting.  Entitled In Search of a True Painting, the galleries are full of studies and series of paintings based around the same subjects.  After seeing the impressive paintings on George Bellows, it was a real contrast to see an artist’s studies and struggles with the canvas.

The truth is, Matisse really struggled with painting.  He never felt his work was complete, and wanted to push every painting to the next level.  This was really a surprise to me.  I’ve always considered Henri Matisse (1869–1954) one of the geniuses of the twentieth century.  I love his painting, Acanthus, which I am happy to report was at the Met.

 

Matisse

 

The curators at the Met go on to explain:

Unbeknownst to many, painting had rarely come easily to Matisse. Throughout his career, he questioned, repainted, and reevaluated his work. He used his completed canvases as tools, repeating compositions in order to compare effects, gauge his progress, and, as he put it, “push further and deeper into true painting.”

The show didn’t really make much of an impact on me until I got home to paint.  I sort of do the same thing with my own art.  Trees are really my favorite subject.  I spend a lot of time outdoors. I love to photograph, draw, and paint the beautiful trees I see while on my walks.  A few weeks prior to seeing the Matisse show, I’d done a few studies of the same tree:

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I do these kinds of studies a lot, especially when I’m not sure if I want to change the color palette.  I like to draw outside while I’m in nature.  I can see more colors than a photograph will capture, and I can play around with the intensity of the hues while drawing.  It’s a lot of fun.  But with the cold weather, I’ve been drawing more indoors.
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Since my visit to the Met, I really wanted to make a painting of a tree.  I love the bright colors of Acanthus, and wanted to incorporate them into my own work.  Since I wasn’t really sure what I wanted to do, I made a few studies:

 

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Making a drawing or painting is like meeting a person that you like.  You just get a feeling that it’s a good fit – everything just seems to flow and there is a sense of harmony.  I definitely felt that in the last study I did above.  The composition worked, I liked the colors.  So I decided to try my Ode to Matisse out on the canvas.

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I mostly like to paint on the floor.  Standing at an easel at my studio doesn’t really give me the range of motion I like.  But when I paint with David Ohlerking, it’s especially helpful to have an easel.  The way he mixes his paints is so different – they’re sort of runny.  So the paint sort of drips down.  I love painting with him because of this!  It’s an entirely different experience.  I always learn so much.  If you paint, I really suggest venturing out of solitude once in a while.  Painting with someone else can really help you learn new techniques and ways to express yourself.

When I paint by myself, I try all sorts of things.  Sometimes I mix the paint directly on the canvas.  Other times, I use a palette to mix colors or revisit something I’ve mixed before.  (Oil paint never really dries!)  I’ll push it around with palette knives, brushes, and bits of cardboard.  My brushes are usually really dry.  I probably don’t get all of the paint off and it hardens.  So every time I use a brush, it manipulates the paint in a different way.  I didn’t get to finish yet, but here is what I have so far:

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March 1st, 2012 by Monica Murgia

In Memory of Yadid Rubin

My post, Sunshine on a Cloudy Day, was about the paintings of Israeli artist Yadid Rubin.  Sadly, Mr. Rubin passed away shortly after the post.  The Chelouche Gallery for Contemporary Art and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art had an evening in memory of Yadid Rubin.  My friend and extraordinary artist, Daniel Beaudoin, attended the event and wrote this guest post.

As an artist, Beaudoin felt an affinity for the of Yadid Rubin. Rubin painted spiritual landscapes.  In a similar way, Beaudoin paints political and social landscapes in his art.  Beaudoin says:

My art deals with social and political issues; and tries to give expression to existential dilemmas.  I use everyday objects and a variety of materials, with which I texture and construct my canvases. This approach is exhilarating, and I often feel like a mason at work on a construction site.   I am then free to present in my paintings the moral dilemmas of the social and political issues I am currently engaged with.

 

Yadid Rubin at work. Image courtesy of Chelouche Gallery.

 

Yesterday evening, 29 February 2012, I attended an event to commemorate the passing away of Yadid Rubin (74), an Israeli painter that dared to defy and challenge the institutional dictates and rules set by the self appointed gatekeepers of Israeli art.

Yadid Rubin, born 1938, lived and worked in Kibbutz (a collective farm) Givat Haim.  Rubin’s paintings remarkably and beautifully express the meaning of the allusive term Israeli: the landscape of the kibbutz, vast plowed fields, plantations filled with fruitful trees, columns of cypresses, warehouses and tractors.

Kibbutz Landscape by Yadid Rubin. Image courtesy of Chelouche Gallery.

Rubin, at the beginning of his career, was intimidated by color, and painted carefully, including self portraits and more minimal depictions of kibbutz life.  He was afraid to “tamper with God”, as he put it to me one day when I had the unexpected luck of running into him at the Chelouche Gallery, which was his artistic home for more than two decades.  Eventually, he decided to touch the face of the divine, and began to paint in an exhilarating and explosive display of color: hues of yellow, ochre, red, blue, browns and so many layers of paint applied straight from the tube.

A rare portrait by Yadid Rubin. Image courtesy of Chelouche Gallery.

I always wanted to get up real close and smell his paintings, maybe even take a small bite out of one of the plowed fields.  The gooey bright texture, for some reason, reminds me of treacle and toffee, consumable landscapes of Israel.  Unfortunately, on the many occasions that I went to see his work, including in the landmark exhibition he held at the Tel Aviv Museum for Modern Art (with a record six month showing), I was unable to escape the museum guards; I never had the chance to stick my face to the canvas and taken a good sniff and taste.

Landscapes reminiscent of toffee, by Yadid Rubin. Image courtesy of Chelouche Gallery.

The repetitive motive of his work recall prayer mantras: again and again the emotional rendition of childhood scenes and adulthood spent in the fields and agricultural activity surrounding him.  These landscapes, he said, reflect my soul, and that is why he preferred to paint from memory, and from within a windowless room, which was an old chicken coop.  But the windows of his soul were very wide open, and they invite us to participate in the divine experience of his sensual orgy of color, texture and naïve dreams of how simple and beautiful life can really be.

 

Very shortly before his death, for real estate purposes, the kibbutz decided to level the fields and cypress trees which surrounded his studio.  The thought still haunts me that maybe the disappearance of the so familiar landscape had traumatized him so much that it actually caused his demise.  I am not sure, but I know that whenever I travel through the country and see a red tractor plowing line after line of deep brown fields, or the row of pines along the horizon, floating in a mist of ochre brilliance, I too feel as if I were close to the divine.

Thank you, Yadid.

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January 23rd, 2012 by Monica Murgia

Leonard Nelson

Fashion is such an integral part of my life that I find my outfit selections reflect whatever is happening to me.  A few weeks ago, I went to an art gallery.  Since I was somewhere “artsy”, I decided to dress that way.  My pick was this cotton sheath dress in a conversational print, with a matching chiffon peplum.

Vintage dress in a conversational print.

 

Detail of dress.

 

Conversational prints are simply fabrics with designs that can start a conversation.  While the idea is as old as designing fabrics, there was a surge in popularity during the 1950s.  The fabric used for this dress also mirrors the trend in art for Abstract Expressionism, which appears after WWII.  Abstract Expressionism is non-representational (ie: it doesn’t look like anything) and emphasizes a subconscious, spontaneous application of paint.  Abstract Expressionist work is quite varied, but generally the focus is on color.  (For more on the issue of color, you might want to read my previous posts, Synesthesia in Art and Fashion and Color Semiotics.)

My outfit did spark a conversation, and the gallery owner told me all about an artist named Leonard Nelson.  He showed me this painting, Les Competiteurs by Nelson, which uses colors very similar to my dress.

Les Competiteurs by Leonard Nelson. Image courtesy of GratzGallery.com

 

Leonard Nelson (1912-1993) was exhibiting work with famous American Abstract Expressionist painters like Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko.  He has been obscured from art history because of his choice to work in Philadelphia, and not New York.  Les Competiteurs is one of Nelson’s earlier works, and a bit derivative of Picasso.   After a bit of research, I’m admittedly a fanatic of his later works – fields of color.

Colorfield (N9A) by Leonard Nelson, 1976. Oil on Canvas, 48" x 72.5". Private collection. Image courtesy of the book Leonard Nelson by Sam Hunter.

 

I found it a bit funny that Nelson is classified as an Abstract Expressionist.  To me, his work seems so realistic.  The fields of color look like framed views of nature.  Colorfield (N9A) looks a lot like dandelions in a meadow.

 

Flowery Meadow by Christel B. Image courtesy of deviantart.com

 

Nelson was inspired by nature and its beauty.  His ability to capture the natural landscape in an abstract form was poetic.  Even when he spoke about the act of creating, it sounds transcendental:

My paintings must be exciting, and they must be beautiful.  I am very, very definitely involved in the creation of beauty.  I like to think I work in isolation, but I don’t.   I don’t take my easel and go out and paint the scene . . . the scene gets inside of me.

So by painting landscapes, the landscapes become part of the soul.  I feel that way when I look at his paintings, anyway.  Alma Night certainly looks like water during sunset:

Alma Night by Leonard Nelson, 1979. Oil on canvas, 72" x 92". Collection of Mr. & Mrs. Carmen Romeo of Valley Forge, PA. Image courtesy of the book Leonard Nelson by Sam Hunter.

 

Brome Lake at Night. Image courtesy of wallpaper1080hd.com

 

The most interesting thing happened to me after I learned about Leonard Nelson.  While I was walking my dog, I looked down into the stream.  The pebbles in the water looked a lot like one of his paintings.  Isn’t it interesting that looking at art can change the way you perceive the world?

 

Colorfield by Leonard Nelson, 1975, Oil on Canvas, 36" x 50". From the collection of Colorfield Partners in Rosemont, PA. Image courtesy of the book Leonard Nelson by Sam Hunter.

 

Pebbles in the stream

 

But the real hedonist in me became apparent after I saw this painting.  I immediately saw it and thought:

This would make the perfect dress!

Colorfield by Leonard Nelson, 1981. 20" x 24" from the collection of Colorfield Partners, Rosemont, PA. Image courtesy of the book Leonard Nelson by Sam Hunter.

 

Who could blame me?  What I wear reflects what interests me at the time.  And often, it starts a conversation.

GHTime Code(s): nc 

November 16th, 2011 by Monica Murgia

Sunshine on a Cloudy Day

20111116-204712.jpg

 

The fall season always ushers in grey, rainy days.  Baring a tempest, I enjoy these days quite a bit.  The reason rainy days are so interesting to me is observing the change in my environment.  Everyday, I pass by the HSBC tower and look at a painting called Hefer Valley by Yadid Rubin.

It’s a massive canvas depicting the sun shining down on a field being plowed.  I always enjoy walking by this painting.  The bold colors are rhythmically applied, and almost seem to vibrate off the canvas, out of the lobby, and onto the street.  Undoubtedly, Hefer Valley is an impressive piece.  Yet it seemed absolutely transcendental as I passed by in the rain.

The absence of natural sunlight allowed me to see the luminosity of the colors in the painting in a different way.  Luminosity is the measurement of brightness and radiance.  When ambient lighting changes, our eyes adjust and perceive luminosity differently.

Most days, I will look and smile as I walk by.  But yesterday, I just had to cross the street and enter the building to take a closer look.

 

 

The way that Rubin applies paint to the canvas reminds me of the way textiles are woven together.  He doesn’t just use one color, but layers bold, impasto hues next to one another to create depth and harmony.  From a distance, the eye can blend these areas together to create an image.  Up-close, the experience of viewing the work is much different.  Woven textiles are similar in this way.  Many different color threads and yarns can create a rich combination.  A great example of this is Harris Tweed.  The Vintage Traveler recently discussed the richness of Harris Tweed- it uses four yarns for a single color.  It’s this blending of these that creates a beautiful textile

 

Yarns used to make a Harris Tweed. Image courtesy of The Vintage Traveler.

 

A finished Harris Tweed. Image courtesy of The Vintage Traveler.

Viewing Hefer Valley made me curious.  I’d never heard of Yadid Rubin before.  After a little research, I learned that Rubin (1938) is a prominent Israeli landscape artist that paints in his closed, windowless studio.  Now this fact resonated with me.  Rubin controls the amount of ambient light while he paints.  This must be why my reaction to the painting was so different in the rain– this was the way Rubin observed his canvas while creating.

 

Rubin explained why he works in a closed, windowless studio:

 I paint the landscape of the kibutz [a collective farm or settlement owned by its members in Isreal], but in fact these are the landscapes of the soul.  I don’t paint out of plain observation, but out of the accumulation of sensations and reactions to different conditions of nature.[1]

 

Untitled, 5 by Yadid Rubin. Image courtesy of chelouchegallery.com

 

Untitled by Yadid Rubin. Image courtesy of chelouchegallery.com

 

So it is possible to have sunshine on a cloudy day.

 

For more of Rubin’s work, please visit chelouchgallery.com


 

GHTime Code(s): nc nc 

September 28th, 2011 by Monica Murgia

Will Travel for Fashion

1929 Jantzen Diving Girl Swimsuit. Image courtesy of thevintagetraveler.wordpress.com

As a fashion lover and professor of fashion history, it’s no surprise that I have a passion for vintage.  It’s a logical progression that since my working hours are dedicated  to looking at art, fashion, and interiors from past eras that my enthusiasm for history often spills over into my free time.  I’m an avid eBay shopper.  American Pickers is my favorite show.  Digging through flea markets and thrift stores is my idea of a modern-day treasure hunt.  So recently, when I came across The Vintage Traveler, I was delighted to find someone as interested in vintage as I am!

Vintage skirt with Paris motif. Image courtesy of fuzzylizzie.com

Creator Lizzie Bramlett is a former teacher and long-time collector  of vintage clothing.   Her blog chronically the quest for life, liberty, and the pursuit of vintage.  Lizzie takes us on her trips across the country to find the most amazing pieces.  Think of it like American Pickers for fashion historians.

Vintage Dior hatbox! J'adore! Image courtesy of fuzzielizzie.com

 

In addition to seeing Lizzie’s drool-worthy finds, The Vintage Traveler shares obscure fashion history facts.  Expect to see vintage photographs, reviews of fashion books and films, hints for identifying and collecting historic fashion, and a bi-weekly round-up of fashion history news from around the internet.

Vintage purse, detail. Image courtesy of thevintagetravler.wordpress.com

A site dedicated to gorgeous, one-of-a-kind fashions that teaches us to be vintage connoisseurs – what’s not to like?

Racks of vintage. Image courtesy of thevintagetraveler.wordpress.com

 

Fun mannequins. Image courtesy of thevintagetraveler.wordpress.com

Vintage hangers with a West Highland Terrier! Image courtesy of thevintagetraveler.wordpress.com

Be sure to visit The Vintage Traveler for more beautiful photos.  And follow Lizzie on Twitter for daily tweets!

GHTime Code(s): nc nc nc nc 

June 23rd, 2011 by Monica Murgia

Color Semiotics: Unraveling Hidden Meaning of Color

A Visualization Of XKCD's Color Name Data by Stephen Von Worley. Image from datapointed.net

A few weeks ago, I participated on a conference on color.  Kaleidoscope: New Perspectives on the Humanities explored how color is interdisciplinary.  Color is used not only in artistic practices, but is a common theme in literature, design, politics, and communication.  While there, I met Maryam Mohammadzadeh Darrodi, an expert and PhD candidate in color semiotics.  Having studied literature, I was familiar with the concept of semiotics.

 

Maryam M. Darrodi, expert and PhD candidate in color semiotics

 

 

 

Semiotics is the study of signs and symbols as elements of communicative behavior – including language, gestures, and fashion.  But I had never really considered that colors have encoded, semiotic meanings.  Maryam is conducting a fascinating study on how we respond to color.   She graciously allowed me to interview her on color semiotics and her study.  (Please take 30 seconds to participate in Maryam’s study.  Visit Colour Semiotics)

 

Survey of color

 

 

Q) What is color semiotics?

I have to say using the word “colour semiotics” is just a more efficient way of describing colour emotions. As semiotics includes the concept of symbolization.  Colour has certain properties, which I would like to categories as colour preference, colour harmony and colour semiotics.  So it is clear that colour semiotics is not about liking a colour or not (colour preference), and not about finding its combination pleasant or not (colour harmony), but rather; how we feel about it.  Do we  feel that the certain colour is heavy or light, soft or hard and etc.

Color creates an emotional response.

Q) What are some of the ways color semiotics are used today?

Nature has been the first to teach us about colour semiotics: we know that a green tomato is not as ripe as a red one. So instantly, different meanings are communicated through colours. Nowadays, successful marketing has a crucial role in selling goods, on the other hand people make decisions about purchasing a product in less than 90 seconds which 60% of their decision is based upon colour. So there we go, it is very important to be able to build the right impression through colour semiotics.

Color indicates which tomato is ripe and which one isn't.

Q) Is color and the ways we respond to colors constructed by culture and society?  Or is it innate to the human experience?

Unfortunately it is both and even more, gender, age, culture, geographical location, season and many more parameters which are directly involved in the human psychology affect individual’s decisions about colour. This makes it more and more challenging for colour researchers which is why they often try to restrict the parameters to one or two.

Emotional responses to color are innate, but also constructed by society

Q) How did you become interested in color semiotics?

Well, I have a statistical background!  In the lectures they use to say that statistics is a science which has the ability to work in “All aspects”. I use to wonder how I can challenge my statistical skills towards a notion that nobody has ever done before.  Of course, with all the interest I had in colour, I thought colour semiotics, which is all about emotions; can be the best to become my subject or in other words a weapon for my battle with statistics.  And I must admit, up to now statistics has truly proved its effectiveness to me, by building a beautiful model that relates colours and emotions together.

 

A Visualization Of XKCD's Color Name Data by Stephen Von Worley. Image from datapointed.net

Q) Tell us about your survey – what is it, what are you hoping to achieve?

 
So for my research, I am carrying out an experiment which I wana see how all parameters effect the human response to colour semiotics.  But the thing is all the experiments up to now have been carried out in controlled conditions with few people but this experiment is novel in the sense that it involves all possible conditions which can be effective, such as cultural, age and gender differences. People around the world communicate and understand their emotions in different terms so that’s why I have also made this survey multi-lingual so people can be more comfortable.

 

The survey takes about 30 seconds to complete.  It will ask your primary language, age, gender, and a few other questions.  You will then be giving a color and asked to respond.  Screen shots of the survey are below.  Please take a few moments to participate.

GHTime Code(s): nc 

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