Sunday, April 28, 2019

My Little Garden Zoo Summer 2019

As the season turns toward summer, it's time to start creating this years "Little Garden Zoo".  My collection of little animal figures has surpassed 350...so the days of presenting a complete collection are now long gone.  Still, I do enjoy this thematic approach to my container/planters.  Today, my faithful and most curious assistant "zookeeper" and I methodically began the work of restoring the planters to a "habitable" presentation.  It was an on again off again effort on a lovely, lazy Sunday.  In the end seven habitats were refurbished.  I was going to wait to actually inhabit them, but then...NOT.

So representatives from my larger collection of Reticulated Giraffe, Okapi and California Sea Lions have now arrived. 

THE RESTORED HABITATS





THE ARRIVAL OF THE FIRST ANIMALS

Assistant Zookeeper, Romeo, notwithstanding.  


RETICULATED GIRAFEE


OKAPI


CALIFORNIA SEA LIONS


Venetian Prints in the Time of Tintoretto: The National Gallery of Art

There is a companion exhibition at the National Gallery of Art to the Tintoretto retrospective that features contemporary prints, as well as, more of his and his contemporaries' drawings.  There are around 100 works in a medium rarely featured in museums.  Seen together, you get a tremendous appreciation for not only the skill of the artists, but also the sensibilities of the culture.  I was surprised by how modern some of the works felt.  Here are just a few for your consideration.
"Saint Sebastian"
circa 1604
Odoardo Fialetti, 1573 - 1638

"Saint John the Baptist"
circa 1610
Palma Giovane, 1544 - 1628

"The Ark of the Covenant in the Temple of Dagon"
circa 1540 - 45
Battista Franco, circa 1510 - 1561

"A Flying Angel"
circa 1590-95
Palma Giovane, 1544 - 1628

"Venetian Soldiers Attacking Constantinople"
circa 1605-15
Domenico Tintoretto, 1560 - 1635
Yes, this is Tintoretto's son.

 This room was filled with more drawings by Tintoretto and some of his students.
"Apostle (Saint Matthew)"
circa 1550
Andrea Meldonne (called Schiavone), circa 1510 - 1563

I had to look at this image for more a moment to decipher the head of the figure.  Finally I got up real close before I realized the face was turned around looking away from the direction that the body was facing.  A very curious pose, but highly effective in demanding my curiosity and attention.

"Man Playing a Viola da Gamba"
circa 1525-35
Paris Bordone, 1500 - 1571

Five Views from the National Gallery of Art's Sculpture Gardens






Saturday, April 27, 2019

Tintoretto: The National Gallery of Art, part 2

When exposed to such rich compositions, I always find my inner Sister Wendy rising up.  The sweet old nun taught me so much about art appreciation.  Look at everything.  Wonder about everything.  Ask questions.  What makes sense?  What doesn't?  What's the narrative?  Not the same thing as what the painting is depicting, the narrative in this case is what the painting is saying to me.  The painting never lies.

As show progressed, some of the works became absolutely monumenta.

"The Madonna of the Treasurers"
1567
Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Italy

This one is a bit of a "Mr. Toad's Wild Ride!".  The story goes these three treasurers were retiring and handed to give Venice a gift in appreciation for their employment.  They are depicted at the far right, but not good enough to just be visiting the Christ child on their own--they are backing up the Magi!  Brilliant, eh?  But wait.  There's more!  Of course, you have Mary and Joseph in this palace of a stable.  In Tintoretto's delightful mind, you also get Saint Sebastian and Saint Martin to flank the holy child.  

And then in the lower left hand corner is a cryptic little design layed into the side of the bench upon which Saint Sebastian is dying.  There is a latin inscription: "Unanimis concordia simbolus"  I'm spitballing here, but I think is refers to the odd images above the words and roughly translates to "Completely harmonious symbols".


 The gallery also featured several portraits.  All but two of men, a sign of the times.  Below, my favorite of the group.
"Giovanni Mocenigo"
circa 1578/80
Gemaldegalerie, Museen zu Berlin, Germany

"The Last Supper"
circa 1563/64
Church of San Trovaso, Venice, Italy

I fell in love with one.  What a real supper and all the drama and pathos of the moment when Christ has revealed that one of them betray him and they all shout out in disbelief demanding to know, "Is it I, Lord?  Is it I?"  Yet, there is still time to include a playful cat in the mix--brilliant, utterly.  
A room with more large works of heroic themes.
 In one room there was a work and a lovely wax model suspended off to one side.  A closer examination, and you could see that the little model resembled one of the figures in the painting.  The accompanying text explained how notes kept by Tintoretto described how he would make wax models in order to stage them in postures unattainable by living models.

 Across from this there were more sketches.  I thought this one was particularly evocative of the grace of motion that so many of the drawings possessed.
"Standing Clothed Man Seen from Behind"
circa 1557
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II's private collection, London, United Kingdom
"The Origin of the Milky Way"
circa 1577/59
The National Gallery, London, United Kingdom

 This one caught my fancy, because it is a topic that you do not often see depicted.  And the exquisite detailing of the pearls set free from the broken necklace to float away like stars from the body of Juno.  It's a detail that has absolutely nothing to do the with myth, but nonetheless strikes you as, I use the world again, brilliant.

 The last gallery contained the largest works, like this one depicting the Virgin Mary contemplating in a garden.  A rather dark and sinister garden at that.

And the circle closes with this self portrait made later in the artist's life.  Painting circa 1588, Tintoretto would have been around 70, just 6 years away from his death in May of 1594.  It's a wonderful exhibition, and it almost didn't happen thanks to the Trump's Federal Government shutdown stunt.

If you're in DC, it's free and highly recommended.

Tintoretto: The National Gallery of Art, part 1

A year of Art History in college still impacts my perspective on art.  I know that Tintoretto is an A-list Italian Renaissance painter.  I have more exposure to others in that august group: Titian, Giorgione, and Bellini, for instance.  So I expected grand paintings of Saints and mythic gods.  Tintoretto did not disappoint.  While it's not my favorite genre of painting, I do enjoy the way artists never painted a subject simply for its face value.  The works come like intricate puzzles full of many meanings. The slightest oddity can carry with it tremendous power, if you can unlock the meaning.

The exhibition starts with an early self-portrait. painted circa 1546/47 when the artist would have been around 28.  It's a lovely small work.  Unlike the majority of his monumental paintings.  The face bespeaks both intelligence and confidence.
"The Conversion of Saint Paul"
circa 1544
The National Gallery of Art, DC

"Venus and Mars Surprised by Vulcan"
circa 1545/46
Alte Pinakothek, Bayerische
Staatsgemäldesammlungen, Munich, Germany

The subject of this one is quite titillating.  Venus is being naughty with Mars when her husband Vulcan suddenly comes home from blacksmithing in the underworld early.  He suspects something, but Mars has managed to hide under the bed.  Apparently, you don't need a PhD to be the god of war.  And his eminent undoing rests in the little dog's revenge!  (Detail provided) 
A rare compositional sketch for the painting.  
"Venus and Vulcan"
circa 1545
Kupferstichkabinett, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Germany

"Reclining Male Nude"
circa 1553
Musee du Louvre, Paris, France



"Saint George and the Dragon"
circa 1553
The National Gallery, London, United Kingdom

As God looks down from heaven, St. George prepared to dispatch the dragon.  A dragon that had slain the first soldier and was about to dessert on a princess--who we see running away.  This work certainly holds an unusual focus.  Most on this subject glorify the Saint and not the nameless maiden.
"Saint George, Saint Louis, and the Princess"
circa 1552
Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Italy

A work on the same subject from the previous year creates a curious menage a trois by tossing Saint Louis.  The dragon is also tethered and decidedly under the Princess' control.  Delightfully strange on so many levels.