Wednesday, September 4, 2019
History of Still-Life :: Visual Arts Paintings Art
History of Still-Life     Flanders C16- Installed quite religious and common settings into the  pieces, the extremely detailed oil on canvas works were often home to  kitchen-like objects and utensils. Different foods such as cabbages,  fish and hares were used especially to capture reflection from the  surrounding light, thus creating a very real, almost touchable  effect. Drink glasses were layered repeatedly to produce a realistic  transparency; yet another method in generating such detailed realism  in the piece.    Dutch C17-In this period, the artists had not completely cast off and  thrown away any such relation to religion; they just concentrated  sorely on the idea of symbolism and reflection of light. To a  modern-day viewer, the still-life would appear to be an assortment of  strange objects placed on a wooden table. But to the seventeenth-  century Dutch observer, the paintings conveyed the theme of vanitas:  objects that symbolized the vanity of worldly things and the brevity  of life. The skull and bones refer to death, the books and writing  instruments to excessive pride through learning, and the fragile glass  goblet of wine to temporary pleasure. A golden cup on its side would  suggest immoderate wealth, and a man smoking a pipe displays idleness.  The obsessive layering of oil paints by the artists was their way of  creating accuracy and perfection. As modern day people have found,  the pigments suspended in the oil paints, which have lasted until  current years have slowly turned brown, and therefore have demanded  attention in the form of cleaning.    France C18-19- Adopting basically the same principle of painting,  although lesser applied, Jean Simà ©on Chardin, a self taught artist  situated in Paris acquired his acclaimed reputation as still lifeââ¬â¢s  foremost artist. Self-taught, his thick, rather textured technique  suited every middle and capital class (bourgeoisie (who made the  French revolution and Impressionism)) household. Many pieces were  minuscule, and all his pieces showed off his skills as an artist.   Elevating to look at such as ââ¬Å"The Jar of Apricotâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"The Rayâ⬠  (1758), the depth and use of reflections were mesmerising and  peaceful.    Paris turn of C20-This was the phase when artists really started to  adopt new styles to express there ideas. Braque, Picasso, Cezanne,  Picasso and Matisse were the fore founders, innovating cubism, block  colours, experimental studio time, and a different way of perceiving  art by twisting the laws of perspective. Now artists would churn out  many more pieces, for now, no longer would apiece take months and  months to complete. Particular pieces of the above artistsââ¬â¢ work  include: ââ¬Å"Lemons against a Fleur De Lys backgroundâ⬠ (Matisse-1943),  ââ¬Å"Still Life with a Chair Caningâ⬠ (Picasso 1911-12), and ââ¬Å"Still-life  with a Plaster Cupidâ⬠ (Cezanne-1895).  					    
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