Monica D. Murgia

Where art, creativity, and fashion meet
January 28th, 2013

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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January 21st, 2013

George Bellows & The Ashcan School

The George Bellows show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art really blew me away this weekend.  I worked at an art gallery for some time, and learned about the Ashcan School of painters.   Founded by Robert Henri (1865–1929) around 1900, this group of painters focused on depicting scenes as they were (Realism) instead of in the dreamy, staccato way of the American Impressionists.

Henri believed that painters needed to depict everyday subjects in an interesting and honest way: “What we need is more sense of the wonder of life, and less of this business of picture making.”  

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Summer Night, Riverside Drive by George Bellows, 1908.  Image courtesy of allpaintings.org

 

Members of the Ashcan School became instantly recognizable for their lavish use of black paint.  Black paint had pretty much been eliminated by the American Impressionist palette, although it was used heavily by the Old Masters like Rembrandt, Frans Hals, and Goya.  Contemporaries of the Ashcan school affectionally called them the “Revolutionary Black Gang” or the ” Ash Can Group” (hence the name).

 

Stag at Sharkeys George Bellows

 

Stag at Sharkey’s by George Bellows, 1909.  Image courtesy of cleveland.about.com

George Bellows (1882-1925) was originally from Ohio.  He moved to New York to continue his study of painting.  Bellows met Henri shortly after arriving and started to study with him.  Henri encouraged Bellows to depict scenes of contemporary life, even if  the compositions and subjects challenge prevailing standards of taste. Bellows focused on impoverished immigrants in New York, especially children in “squalid and dangerous slums”.

 

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Cliff Dwellers by George Bellows, 1913.  Image courtesy of The Tenement Museum.

 

Bellows is really my favorite painter from the Ashcan School.  He has an amazing sense of value and color.  All of the paintings have so many harmonious colors, and really express a sense of light and dark.  The canvases are so luminous, they seem to have a radiant light source within.  One of my favorite paintings in the show was called Noon.  

Of course I’m partial to it because of all the blue paint, but you can definitely see how there are areas of light and dark.  The bridge and how it casts shadows over parts of the canvas, the dark areas with figures in the shade, and even the billowing smoke – just take a look at how masterfully they are all done:

 

 

1908 Noon oil on canvas 55.9 x 71.1 cm

 

 Noon by George Bellows, 1908.  

There were so many great depictions of New York City.  In addition to his sensitivity to color, Bellows was an amazing draftsman.  He carefully outlines shapes within the composition.  Almost all of the paintings have a balanced foreground, middle, and background.  And the subjects just seem to come alive, with all the care and detail with which they are painted.

 

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New York by George Bellows, 1911.

But really, the best part of seeing all of these paintings was the opportunity to look at Bellows’s brushstrokes.  It’s really difficult to see in photographs and images.  That’s why going to museums and galleries are so important.  There is a really, tangible experience of the painting that you just don’t get by looking at on the internet or in a book.  As someone that paints, it’s a special learning tool to see how other people push paint around the canvas.

 

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The Palisades by George Bellows, 1909.  Image courtesy of the Tate.

As I looked at certain paintings, I noticed that Bellows directed the paint to follow the specific object he was painting.  So for example, the water is painted horizontally and the tree is painted vertically.  Take a look at smoke in the upper right hand corner.  It’s really easy to see that Bellows swirls the paint around to mimic the way smoke billows in the wind.  So pretty!

 

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Snow Capped River by George Bellows, 1911.  Image courtesy of the Telfair Museum.

Snow Capped River was another favorite.  You MUST see it in person.  The image above doesn’t even hint at what a beautiful work of art it really is.  Bellows also changed the thickness of paint within his compositions.  Certain areas are very flat, with thin layers of paint, and others are thick and impasto.

The George Bellows exhibit is at the Metroplitan Museum of Art until February 18th, 2013.  Don’t miss it – the show is included with general admission!

 

 

 

 

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October 16th, 2012

The Importance of Museums, Libraries, & Friends

Today’s post is filled with gratitude for three of my favorite things: friends, libraries, and museums.  I never tire of good company and things that stimulate the mind.  Thankfully, I never seem to be lacking any of these!  I’ve been writing a lot about collaboration between creative people in the 1940s recently: Marcel Vertès, Wesley Simpson, and John Little.  My dear friend Lizzie Bramlett collaborated with me for this post.  She read the aforementioned posts and sent me these images from the January 1946 edition of American Fabrics:

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January 1946 edition of American Fabrics.  Image courtesy of Lizzie Bramlett.

American Fabrics was a trade magazine.  It focused on the all of the interesting aspects of the American textile industry: artist collaborations, fashion designers, manufacturers, industrial uses of fabric, automobile interiors, and furniture.  It was an oversized periodical, sort of like W Magazine of today, and featured lavish artwork and real textile swatches.  I was first introduced to this magazine at the FIT library.  Seeing artwork paired with real textiles filled me with joy and excitement.  I literally couldn’t stop looking at the magazines.  I spent hours and hours paging through volumes of these precious magazines.  It was endlessly entertaining, and all for free!  (Libraries are really good sources for free entertainment.  You can rent movies, cds, and books with your card.  All you have to do is fill out a form and return the items on time.)

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January 1946 edition of American Fabrics.  Image courtesy of Lizzie Bramlett.

The article that Lizzie sent me is about the same Marcel Vertès print in my pervious post that is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s collection.  Here is what the article says:

“I was bowled over when I saw what American fabric and dress designers did with museum objects as inspiration” . . . from an article by Cora Carlyle in Women’s Reporter

“One of the most exciting fashion events of 1945 was undoubtedly the descent of 22 famous designers on the Metropolitan Museum of Art in search of design inspiration.  When the finished fashions were show to the public, it was obvious that the designers had unearthed a pot of gold.  Combing the rooms and archives of the Museum, they had come away with sketch pads crowded to the edges with precious ideas.

Thus they glamorized fabric and fashion in the finest sense of the word, and on the highest level.  The demonstration contributed materially to the fashion industry . . . to the public . . . to the Museum.  It delineated the living qualities of Museum art in practical form.  It educated the public to an appreciation of art as it can be applied to everyday living.

So let’s go to the museums more often . . . let’s encourage our designers to closer rapport between art and industry . . . let’s have art IN industry . .  . to the mutual benefit of both.  Over $780,000,000 worth of design ideas are waiting to be tapped.  Let’s profit by the world’s great art in museums.

(I couldn’t agree more!!!!!!!!!!)

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January 1946 edition of American Fabrics.  Image courtesy of Lizzie Bramlett.


Vertès was inspired by the Flemish Angel painting above, which he turned into a textile print  for Wesley Simpson, used by Hattie Carnegie for a dress.

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Marcel Vertès textile design for for Wesley Simpson, 1944.  Used for dress design by Hattie Carnegie.  Image courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

 All of these amazing things are at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  This museum lists a suggested donation, but you can contribute as little or as much as you want.  I always give something – as much as I can afford – because I want it’s doors to stay open as long as possible.
Like the American Fabrics article suggests, we can profit from the resources around us.  Libraries, museums, the internet, good friends, mentors – they are all sources of inspiration.  The key is to recognize these resources, apply them to everyday life – and show your support!

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May 7th, 2012

Costume Institute Gala Streamed Live!

Forget the Oscars.  If there was one red carpet event I could attend, it would be the Costume Institute’s annual Gala.  The evening celebrates and raises funds for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s glorious Costume Institute.

Anna Wintour and Bee Shaffer at the Costume Institute Gala 2011. Image courtesy of ballfashionista.com

The Costume Institute houses a collection of more than thirty-five thousand costumes and accessories, representing five continents and seven centuries of fashionable dress, regional costumes, and accessories for men, women, and children, from the fifteenth century to the present.

Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty exhibition at the Costume Institute. Image courtesy of metmuseum.org

The Costume Institute began as the Museum of Costume Art, an independent entity formed in 1937 and led by Neighborhood Playhouse founder Irene Lewisohn. In 1946, with the financial support of the fashion industry, the Museum of Costume Art merged with The Metropolitan Museum of Art as The Costume Institute, and in 1959 became a full-fledged curatorial department.  (Which means, yes, fashion is art!)

Robe à la Française, c. 1750. Image courtesy of Metmuseum.org

Since the event is affectionately know as the “Oscars of the East”, the Met has decided to stream the Gala live tonight.  Watch the event  on Vogue.com, Amazon.com/Fashion, and Metmuseum.org from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.

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April 21st, 2011

Fashion Critics – The Writing is on the Wall

Fashion and textile exhibitions are not a new phenomenon in the museum world.  What is new, however, is the public new-found admiration and interest in them.  The New York Times recently featured an article examining museums’ installing fashion exhibits.  (Museums Are Finding Room for Couturiers By GERALDINE FABRIKANT Published: April 20, 2011)

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Simply Halston exhibit at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, 2008.  Image courtesy of the museum.

Critics dismiss this cultural shift as a preference for “fluff over fine arts,”  or simply a sophomoric obsession fueled by reality TV shows.   Tyler Green, editor of Modern Art Notes, believes that fashion exhibitions lack substance and scholarly investigation.  Or do they?

Venomous attacks such as Green’s are unfounded, and well, a bit outdated.  Curating a museum exhibition on any subject is as scholarly as an investigation could get.  A subject is proposed, research is conducted, and curators painstakingly create a written and visual narrative.  The written component includes a detailed object list, wall didactics, and an exhibition catalog.  (Academic terms for the descriptions of the object and maker, the writing on the wall explaining the exhibition, and the tempting book available at the gift shop)  Becoming a curator is academically rigorous; requirements include: conducting original research, lecturing to the public, publishing articles and books, and presenting at conferences.  Clearly, curators showcase the best of their scholarly pursuits.  So why the rancor?  And just why was Fabrikant, a senior writer for the business section at the Times, citing antiquated debates and quotes?

The Model as Muse: Embodying Fashion. Met Museum. 2009.

The real contention revolves around defining fashion.  Is fashion art?  Is fashion a serious discipline?  Is fashion worthy of investigation on an academic, social and cultural level?  These questions have been addressed by great philosophers including Socrates and Foucault, yet the debate persists.  But why?

Fashion exists in a perpetual duality: it is as serious as it is superficial.  Creating clothing requires creativity, mathematical expertise for a precise fit, and a continual quest for innovation in fabrication and silhouette.  On a micro level, fashion choices communicate individual identity.  Non-verbal communication accounts for about 90% of an individual’s message.  Clothing, therefore, speaks for you.  On a macro level, clothing signifies economic, social and cultural groups.   Aside from personal identity, clothing also gives wearers a sense of communal belonging.

Gothic: Dark Glamour. Museum @ FIT, 2011.

Yes, fashion is art.  And anyone that is an art aficionado knows that there is a stratification of art.  There is highbrow, there is low brow, and everything in between.  For many years, graffiti was considered tasteless vandalism.    Now, street artists’ work, like Banksy’s, sell for millions of dollars on the contemporary art market.

Banksy’s Street Art.

Fashion also is a subtle indicator of political and social movements.  Changes in clothing often predate the movement itself.

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Women’s Suffrage Movement. 

Black Power Movement.

 

 

Despite the seriousness, fashion can still be fun.  The daily choice of self-expression is experimental.  It is a creative way to invent yourself, the image you want to project to the world.  To a large degree, what people chose to wear is an unconscious act.  Most of us don’t wake up wondering what the political ramifications of our outfits will be.  This is why fashion, as a discipline, is scoffed at.  The very act of waking up and dressing is minimized.  For the majority, dressing has become an involuntary act, like breathing.  If we don’t think about it, does it make it less important?  No!  Perhaps the remedy is redirecting the focus to making it fun.  Clothes that don’t fit our mode of expression can be discarded.  The act of trying new garments to achieve “that look” is what philosopher Foucault was talking about when he said: The task is not to find ourselves, but to invent ourselves. Why leave such an important task to chance or reflex?

Model as Muse: Embodying Fashion. Met Museum, 2009. Photo courtesy of daydreampilot.com.

When museums’ showcase a fashion exhibit, it is a way for the public to reconnect with the past on a very personal level.  We can learn something of our own personal style by reflecting on what has come before.  Seeing what people wore makes the past more real, more tangible.  We can envision ourselves in the garments.  We can literally feel what it would be like in their shoes.

Chopine. On a Pedestal: From Renaissance Chopines to Baroque Heels. Bata Shoe Museum, 2010.

 

 

Not everyone will read the didactics and object lists.  But they will have a real visceral experience of stepping into the past or mind of the designer.  But for the critics and journalists who continually bash fashion as art, I must ask: Have you taken the time to read the curator’s work?  If you haven’t, the writing is on the wall.

Fashion Independent: The Original Style of Ann Bonfoey Taylor. Phoenix Museum of Art. 2011. Image courtesy of downtowndevil.com.

 

 

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