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i had similar misgivings regarding picasso it was only after watching a documentry on matisse did i finally get them both, and that appreciation or what ever you may call it only dawned after maybe 15 years of studying art and artists but thankyou for this thread should be interesting to see what opinions everyone may contributeXamonas Chegwé wrote:I have never understood the appeal of Matisse. His paintings are kindergartenish. Critics praised him for "dispensing with" such things as depth, perspective and proportion - personally, I have never been convinced he knew how to use them in the first place - any evidence that he did is scant!
My point made for me.fordo wrote:i had similar misgivings regarding picasso it was only after watching a documentry on matisse did i finally get them both, and that appreciation or what ever you may call it only dawned after maybe 15 years of studying art and artists but thankyou for this thread should be interesting to see what opinions everyone may contributeXamonas Chegwé wrote:I have never understood the appeal of Matisse. His paintings are kindergartenish. Critics praised him for "dispensing with" such things as depth, perspective and proportion - personally, I have never been convinced he knew how to use them in the first place - any evidence that he did is scant!
Picasso clicked for me when I saw an exhibition of his erotic sketches in Paris. There was one sketch that he had done on the back of an envelope for a bloke in a bar - one of many, he would scribble a sketch for anyone that asked him - it was just three intersecting, curvy lines yet it was instantly recognisable as a woman fingering herself. The economy of effort combined with the precision of execution was mesmerising and I stood staring at the sketch for 10 minutes before moving on. That was the point where I recognised Picasso's genius - after that, learning why he painted what he did and what he was trying to achieve by it was just icing on the cake. I suppose it is a case of knowing that he could easily have drawn and painted anatomically accurate and photo-realistic portraits that made me appreciate far more that he chose not to!fordo wrote:i had similar misgivings regarding picasso it was only after watching a documentry on matisse did i finally get them both, and that appreciation or what ever you may call it only dawned after maybe 15 years of studying art and artists but thankyou for this thread should be interesting to see what opinions everyone may contributeXamonas Chegwé wrote:I have never understood the appeal of Matisse. His paintings are kindergartenish. Critics praised him for "dispensing with" such things as depth, perspective and proportion - personally, I have never been convinced he knew how to use them in the first place - any evidence that he did is scant!
For me it will always be...Pappa wrote:My favourite piece of Dada... possibly one of the most contentious artworks ever displayed in a gallery. People are still arguing over what it represents almost 100 years after it was shown.
I like the lack of pretension and conformity. I find his work just a little trippy to contemplate, rather than naive as such.Xamonas Chegwé wrote:I have never understood the appeal of Matisse. His paintings are kindergartenish. Critics praised him for "dispensing with" such things as depth, perspective and proportion - personally, I have never been convinced he knew how to use them in the first place - any evidence that he did is scant!
It is worth remembering that people like Matisse, Picasso, the impressionists generally were ground breaking at the time. They also intellectualised what they were doing amongst themselves rather more than we tend to do today with modern art given we seem to be in something of an anti-intellectual dip culturally at the moment. Matisse was determined top strip away the artifices, the representationalism and 'realism' of art to reduce the subject to its barest visual essence. At the time such approaches were considered daring and adventurous - sometimes even scandalous. Easy to forget in an age of anything goes.charlou wrote:I like the lack of pretension and conformity. I find his work just a little trippy to contemplate, rather than naive as such.Xamonas Chegwé wrote:I have never understood the appeal of Matisse. His paintings are kindergartenish. Critics praised him for "dispensing with" such things as depth, perspective and proportion - personally, I have never been convinced he knew how to use them in the first place - any evidence that he did is scant!
Agree on Kandinsky ... one of my favourite artists too. Fresh, playful colour and movement that cheers the mind ..
Another of my faves is to the other extreme of emotiveness ... Francisco Goya .. his series .. the Black Paintings ... the Disasters of War ... Los Caprichos ... the darker side of humanity explored, satirised, charicaturised, never glorified.
Gallstones, did you ever play Name the Artist? Unfortunately some of the images are no longer there, but would love to see the thread kicked off again.
mistermack wrote:My favourite artist was Oliver Reed.
His greatest work, " Urine in Snow " sadly didn't survive, but it wasn't meant to, as it was performance art, but he was one of the greatest piss-artists of all time.
And that Kandinsky could have had a career in blanket design. What a waste !!!
Fordo!fordo wrote:i had similar misgivings regarding picasso it was only after watching a documentry on matisse did i finally get them both, and that appreciation or what ever you may call it only dawned after maybe 15 years of studying art and artists but thankyou for this thread should be interesting to see what opinions everyone may contributeXamonas Chegwé wrote:I have never understood the appeal of Matisse. His paintings are kindergartenish. Critics praised him for "dispensing with" such things as depth, perspective and proportion - personally, I have never been convinced he knew how to use them in the first place - any evidence that he did is scant!
mistermack wrote:My point made for me.fordo wrote:i had similar misgivings regarding picasso it was only after watching a documentry on matisse did i finally get them both, and that appreciation or what ever you may call it only dawned after maybe 15 years of studying art and artists but thankyou for this thread should be interesting to see what opinions everyone may contributeXamonas Chegwé wrote:I have never understood the appeal of Matisse. His paintings are kindergartenish. Critics praised him for "dispensing with" such things as depth, perspective and proportion - personally, I have never been convinced he knew how to use them in the first place - any evidence that he did is scant!
If painting is meant to be some form of communication, Picasso has failed.
If it takes 15 years to get it, I fail to see why people can be bothered.
The first time I heard Bob Marley sing "no woman no cry", I got it within seconds.
Same with the stranglers and "golden brown". And Beethoven's "duh duh duh, duuuuuuuh".
Isn't it possible that after fifteen years of staring at the same spot, you start seeing things?
No.charlou wrote:I like the lack of pretension and conformity. I find his work just a little trippy to contemplate, rather than naive as such.Xamonas Chegwé wrote:I have never understood the appeal of Matisse. His paintings are kindergartenish. Critics praised him for "dispensing with" such things as depth, perspective and proportion - personally, I have never been convinced he knew how to use them in the first place - any evidence that he did is scant!
Agree on Kandinsky ... one of my favourite artists too. Fresh, playful colour and movement that cheers the mind ..
Another of my faves is to the other extreme of emotiveness ... Francisco Goya .. his series .. the Black Paintings ... the Disasters of War ... Los Caprichos ... the darker side of humanity explored, satirised, charicaturised, never glorified.
Gallstones, did you ever play Name the Artist? Unfortunately some of the images are no longer there, but would love to see the thread kicked off again.
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