Freitag, 15. Oktober 2010
Freitag, 18. Juni 2010
Dienstag, 11. Mai 2010
Impressions of Russia
Dienstag, 4. Mai 2010
Empty Streets of Paris
Donnerstag, 22. April 2010
Something different
I was sick today so I had much time to draw. I was in the mood of doing something different. Inspired by Danny Roberts or Garance Doré, I decided to draw the french muse Pandora.
Freitag, 16. April 2010
Sonntag, 4. April 2010
Mermaid
I
II
III
The works of John William Waterhouse (*1849 in Rome, †1917 in London) basically deal with mythological, historical and literary subjects. Most of them are inspired by British poets as Alfred Lord Tennyson. The Femme fatale is a common theme in his paintings with men being their victims.
The mermaid in European folklore was a creature living in the sea with the upper body of a human being and the tail of a fish. Mermaids provided magical and prophetic powers and they had no souls. Usually they were dangerous to man. They were able to bring misfortune and to cause floods or other disasters. Their apparition was an omen of shipwreck. Mermaids were irresitibly beautiful and could seduce men by singing. They enticed the men to follow them under water, which caused their death.
Waterhouses style and topics became a major influence on many of the painters of the Preraphaelite Brotherhood.
(Source: johnwilliamwaterhouse.com)
Freitag, 2. April 2010
Two sketches by Johann Heinrich Füssli
Two sketches by Johann Heinrich Füssli,
seen at Gemäldegalerie Berlin.
J.H. Füssli (1741-1825), son of a swiss painter, never received an academic artistic education. But beside his classical education he never lost his passion for drawing. It is said that he learned to draw it with his left hand to be able to study and draw at the same time.
Freitag, 19. März 2010
The curse of Juliette Récamier...
Juliette Récamier (*1777; †1849) was a famous french Salonière at her time.
At the age of 15 Julie Bernard, daughter of a notary, married the rich and much older banker Jacques Récamier. At her mansion in Paris they welcomed several famous writers as i.e. François-René de Chateaubriand or Benjamin Constant. It is said that almost every man who met Madame Recamier fell in love with her because of her excellent beauty and adorable charme. For Juliette Récamier held close friendships to some adversaries of Napoleon, she was banished from Paris.
Jacques Louis David was assigned by her to do this portrait. It is not finished for unknown reasons.
The painting is in horizontal format and has a distance between viewer and object, which is quite unusual for a portrait. By that, Juliette Récamier is augmented to an ideal of feminine elegance. She is allongated on a reclined sofa with her head turned towards the the viewer. Her classy but decent appearance with her bare feet, the white sleeveless dress, the curled hair and the absence of jewelry reveal the contemporary ideal of the antique. The room is empty except some pieces of Pompeian-style furniture. Through its unfinishedness, the room creates with its rough brushtrokes and dark colours a contrast to the detailed and bright body of Juliette Récamier and it further reveals Davids technique of doing a painting.
Notice: This type of sofa is nowadays called a Récamière.
I didn‘t have a good time lately. It took so long to post this drawnig, for my idea with the hair went toally wrong. I spent hours and hours trying to fix it, and it always looked like shit. I got very angry and nervous about it, for I was so happy with the drawing before the hair-accident. After several removings of colour and pencil, the paper is now roughened and you can‘t draw on it anymore. Right now, I am in a state of wanting to scream and to break the pencil. So for my health (and the pencil‘s), I decided to post it, as it is. Maybe it‘s the curse of the picture, that it has to stay unfinished (I am very supersticious) or it is me being cursed lately. So let‘s hope that next time, things will turn out better.
Mittwoch, 3. März 2010
Montag, 22. Februar 2010
Wilderness
Dienstag, 16. Februar 2010
Glory and decay of Socialism
The Towers of the Frankfurter Tor and the adjoining streets Frankfurter Allee and Karl-Marx-Allee in the Friedrichshain district of Berlin are witnesses of the past under Soviet influence.The complex was built in the 1950s on representative purposes of the strength of the Socialist system. The streets were planned as large boulevards for parades whereas the buildings show similarity to the Lomonossov University in Moscow and the Culture Palace in Warsaw. The architectural style is called Socialist classicism for it uses antique devices as columns and triangle gables. Also typical are the claddings of ceramic tiles. The whole construction was planned as apartement buildings and called palaces of the workpeople.
Nowadays only parts are sanified while some others decay. It is by this a visible allegory of the political system of the GDR.
Walking through these streets is somehow fascinating, you feel the spirit of the Soviet era that is not long gone.