John Coulthart's Blog, page 316
March 16, 2011
The Ursulines' winter garden
Another winter garden, this addition to the Institute of the Ursulines, a Catholic school in Onze-Lieve-Vrouw-Waver, Belgium, is a lot smaller than previous examples but is celebrated for its beautiful Art Nouveau-styled stained glass canopy. The winter garden was added to the main building in 1900 and—surprisingly—no one seems to know who the architect was. The photo above is by Eddy Van 3000 from Wikimedia Commons, while the one below is from the same photographer's Flickr set showing many other views of a building which is only open to the public one day a year.
Previously on { feuilleton }
• Hothouse panoramas
• Ludwig's Winter Garden
• The Schönbrunn Palm House
• The Royal Greenhouses of Laeken
March 15, 2011
Ave Arthur!
The Last Sleep of Arthur in Avalon (detail) by Edward Burne-Jones (1881–1898).
Arthur magazine announced its demise this week: "He died as he lived—free, high and a-dreaming of love, 'neath vultures' terrible gaze." The magazine lapsed for a while in 2007 then returned but this time it seems things are more permanent. Running a magazine of any kind is never easy, and they don't always last long—the UK run of the legendary Oz only managed 48 issues to Arthur's 32—but it's a dismal fact that certain tastes are rarely catered for or encouraged in this world. Supermarkets stock multiple titles devoted to women's hair or tin boxes with wheels but you'll have to hunt elsewhere for copies of Sight & Sound or The Wire. This isn't a sign of any kind of new barbarism, if you look to history you'll find The Savoy magazine publishing Aubrey Beardsley's art and literature alongside contributions from future Nobel Prize winners yet it only managed eight issues; New Worlds magazine struggled during its run in the 1960s and 1970s, and while it may never have officially died (not while Michael Moorcock lives and breathes) it's safe to say that it would struggle anew if re-launched today. If this is the end then let's celebrate what's been done, and hope it may inspire something new.
Issues #1–25.
The Arthur archives will be available online in the future. In the meantime, the favourites among my own contributions were MBV Arkestra (cover illustration), The Aeon of Horus, Out, Demons, Out (cover illustration), Brian Eno, and Sir Richard Bishop.
Previously on { feuilleton }
• The Savoy magazine
• Dodgem Logic
• The Realist
• A wake for Arthur
• Oz magazine, 1967-73
March 14, 2011
Splendor Solis
Venus: The Peacock's Tail.
The Tarot-like illustrations to the Splendor Solis, a 16th-century alchemical manuscript, have fascinated me for years, ever since I saw them reproduced in the pages of Man, Myth & Magic. Despite their familiarity, the copies online are less than satisfactory, mostly poor scans from books with inconsistent colours. Given the amount of original alchemical documents being made available by the world's libraries it's only a matter of time until a decent set of reproductions turn up. Until then there's a complete set of the plates here with details about the book and links to further information. As usual, if anyone finds better copies—preferably from a copy of the original text—please leave a comment.
The Black Sun.
Hermaphrodite with Egg.
Previously on { feuilleton }
• Amphitheatrum Sapientiae Aeternae
• Cabala, Speculum Artis Et Naturae In Alchymia
• Digital alchemy
March 13, 2011
Hothouse panoramas
Kew Gardens, London, by Davide Cornacchini.
I would have done this earlier if I hadn't been distracted. Favourite panorama site 360 Cities doesn't have any views of the Laeken greenhouses but they do have a view of a capacious interior of the Palm House at Kew Gardens, London. And as a follow-up to the post about the Schönbrunn Palm House, panorama photographer Bernhard Vogl shows us several views of that distinctive building, inside and out.
Schönbrunn Palm House, Vienna, by Bernhard Vogl.
Schönbrunn Palm House, Vienna, by Bernhard Vogl.
Previously on { feuilleton }
• Ludwig's Winter Garden
• The Schönbrunn Palm House
• The Royal Greenhouses of Laeken
• Arcades panoramas
March 12, 2011
Weekend links
Invisible Light by Margo Selski.
The Glass Garage Fine Art Gallery has an online collection of paintings by Margo Selski, many of which feature her cross-dressing son, Theo. Coilhouse profiled artist and model earlier in the week. Some of these paintings mix oil with beeswax which is something I've not come across before.
• The Periwinkle Journal's first issue will be available online, free, from March 22nd until mid-June, featuring work by filmmaker and artist Hans Scheirl (Dandy Dust), artwork and collages by Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, a 7-page colour comic by Mavado Charon, artwork by Timothy Cummings, artwork and installations by Cody Chritcheloe/SSION, photos by Megan Mantia, Science-Heroes by Peter Max Lawrence, an illustration portfolio by Diego Gómez, selections from the queer photography pool on Flickr, reviews and other stuff. More later.
• The Quietus wanted to remind us that this year is the 25th anniversary of the NME's C86 compilation tape, a collection that sought to capture a moment of ferment but which inadvertently inspired too much dreary sub-Velvet Underground pop. I'd rather celebrate the 30th anniversary of the NME's C81 compilation, a far more diverse collection and musically superior. If you want to judge for yourself, both tapes can be downloaded here.
Machine in the Garden — Our Island Shall Know Abundance Without End by Margo Selski.
• Rick Poynor continues his exploration of Ballardian graphics with a piece about the paintings of Peter Klasen. Related: Where Will It End? JG Ballard interviewed by V. Vale & introduced by Michael Moorcock (Arthur No. 15/March 2005).
In his autobiography, Miracles of Life, JG Ballard suggested that illustrated versions of The Arabian Nights helped prepare him for surrealism.
Robert Irwin, author of The Arabian Nightmare, on the illustrators of The Arabian Nights.
• Another Coulthart cult movie surfaces, Jerzy Skolimowski's Deep End (1970), out of circulation for many years but newly restored by the BFI. A re-release is scheduled for May so I'm hoping now that a DVD release will follow soon after.
• Thom Ayres' photostream at Flickr, and more long-exposure photos.
• Fuck You, A Magazine of the Arts, number 5, volume 8.
• Nicolas Roeg: "I don't want to be ahead of my time."
• MetaFilter looks at the films of René Laloux.
• The Eerie covers of Frank Frazetta.
• Requiem (for String Orchestra) by Toru Takemitsu.
March 11, 2011
Wildeana #5
Gertrude Hoffmann dressed for her opera role as Salome (1908).
Continuing an occasional series. Some people may be surprised to hear that Al Pacino loves Oscar Wilde's Salome. He acted in a stage version of the drama in 1992 playing Herod to Sheryl Lee's Salome (the Godfather versus Laura Palmer), and in 2006 announced an intention to make a drama documentary about the play. He talks about his interest in Wilde's work here. IMDB currently has a page showing a 2011 release for Wilde Salome by Al Pacino but the film's release has already been subject to delays. Related: Clive Barker's Salome from 1973; Derek Jarman meets Hammer Horror.
• Oscar Wilde at Tumblr: Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde and Oscar Wilde Assembly. Then there's Youth is wasted on the young, a charmingly obsessive Dorian Gray blog.
• Actor Brian Bedford (again) is interviewed by Kevin Sessums about playing Lady Bracknell in a New York production of The Importance of Being Earnest.
• What Oscar Wilde could teach us about art criticism by Jed Perl.
• Oscar Wilde, classics scholar by Daniel Mendelsohn.
• Scarlet letters lift the lid on Wilde's dalliances.
Previously on { feuilleton }
• Wildeana #4
• Philippe Jullian, connoisseur of the exotic
• Wildeana #3
• The voice of Oscar Wilde
• Wildeana #2
• The Oscar Wilde Galop
• Heinrich Vogeler's illustrated Wilde
• Teleny, Or the Reverse of the Medal
• Tite Street then and now
• Wildeana
• Uranian inspirations
• Henry Keen's Dorian Gray
• The real Basil Hallwards
• Dallamano's Dorian Gray
• Oscar Wilde playing cards
• Matthew Bourne's Dorian Gray
• John Osborne's Dorian Gray
• Dorian Gray revisited
• The Picture of Dorian Gray I & II
March 10, 2011
Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #11
Continuing the delve into back numbers of Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration, the German periodical of art and decoration. Volume 11 covers the period from October 1902 to March 1903, and is almost solely devoted to the many design exhibits from the Prima Esposizione Internazionale d'Arte Decorativa Moderna, a major exposition held in Turin in the summer of 1902. As with the Secession work in the previous edition, many of the featured pieces here are familiar from books about the art and design of the period but DK&D shows them in greater detail. Peter Behrens' vestibule (above) is one of these, a very advanced design which looks ahead to the stylisations of Art Deco. As before, anyone wishing to see these samples in greater detail is advised to download the entire volume at the Internet Archive. There'll be more DK&D next week.
The vestibule ceiling panel.
Another Behrens design which would have still looked modern twenty years later.
Furniture designs by Carlo Bugatti, father of the car manufacturer. Many Bugatti designs are strikingly unique and wouldn't look out of place in David Lynch's Dune. One of his bed designs was used in a film, being the sickbed of the ill-fated Lucy in Francis Ford Coppola's Dracula.
Designs by Philippe Wolfers (above and below). Wolfers' exotic and often macabre jewellery has featured here before, and I'd thought of gathering pictures of his peacock lamp so this has forced my hand. The manufactured item differs slightly from the sketched design with a figure whose brazen pose was modified by a conveniently placed peacock wing. Several variations on the design exist but this was the original.
More familiar jewellery and another peacock, standing guard over René Lalique's amazing dragonfly.
This edition finishes with many pages of book designs.
Previously on { feuilleton }
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #10: Turin and Vienna
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #10: Heinrich Vogeler
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #9
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #8
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #7
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #6
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #5
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #4
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #2
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration #1
• Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration
• Jugend Magazine revisited
• The art of Philippe Wolfers, 1858–1929
• Lalique's dragonflies
March 9, 2011
Die Andere Seite by Alfred Kubin
Re-reading Alfred Kubin's strange fantasy novel Die Andere Seite (The Other Side) this week, I found myself suffering the same frustration as when I bought the book, namely that the illustrations in the Dedalus edition are very poor reproductions. When this new translation appeared in 2000 there wasn't any convenient way to see better copies of Kubin's drawings unless you had the earlier (and for me, elusive) Penguin edition. Thanks to Flickr we can now see reproductions from the first printing of 1909 in this set of photos. Not all the drawings are featured but the ones present are better than those in my volume. The illustrations are often rather perfunctory, and they lack the finesse and erotic weirdness of Kubin's better known works, but a couple are as macabre as one would expect. And I love the cover design.
As to the story, it concerns an unnamed narrator who receives a request from an old school friend, Claus Patera, to leave Munich and go with his wife to live in the city of Pearl, a newly-built metropolis in a nation known as "The Dream Realm" which Patera has founded in the Far East. Having travelled there the couple find themselves in a city filled with other displaced Europeans which is at first eccentric then increasingly nightmarish. It's the kind of book you might expect an artist like Kubin to have written, in other words, and since the narrator is a thinly-veiled counterpart of the author we can occasionally glimpse the man behind the works. Anyone interested in Kubin the artist is advised to seek it out.
Elsewhere on { feuilleton }
• The illustrators archive
Previously on { feuilleton }
• The Hour-Glass Sanatorium by Wojciech Has
• Kafka's porn unveiled
• Hugo Steiner-Prag's Golem
March 8, 2011
The recurrent pose #41
Nude – The Pool (1910) by George Seeley.
Having spotted this Flandrinesque photogravure print by George Seeley (1880–1955) on a couple of sites I was wondering where there might be a decent collection of the photographer's other work. "Photogravure" proved to be the key word since The Art of the Photogravure has a selection of Seeley prints. Like his contemporary Fred Holland Day, Seeley created very painterly results with his camera; like Day he was also prepared to pose unclothed young men in natural settings for a "Classical" effect.
Elsewhere on { feuilleton }
• The recurrent pose archive
Previously on { feuilleton }
• Fred Holland Day revisited
March 7, 2011
The art of Mario Laboccetta
Tales of Hoffmann (1932).
Another great illustrator about whom information is scant; I need better reference books, the web is often no use at all. Monsieur Thombeau posted the cover to Laboccetta's edition of Les Fleurs du Mal (below) which had me looking around for other work by the artist. VTS has pages from a 1932 edition of Tales of Hoffmann while more of the Baudelaire pictures can be found on various bookdealers' sites. As to the artist, we're told he was an Italian living in Paris, and this French site has a small list of his illustrated editions. It's frustrating to see that Les Paradis Artificiels is among these; what did he make of Baudelaire's opium visions?
Tales of Hoffmann (1932).
Tales of Hoffmann (1932).
Tales of Hoffmann (1932).
Tales of Hoffmann (1932).
Tales of Hoffmann (1932).
Les Fleurs du Mal (1933).
Les Fleurs du Mal (1933).
Les Fleurs du Mal (1933).
Les Fleurs du Mal (1933).
Les Fleurs du Mal (1933).
Poster design (1948).
Elsewhere on { feuilleton }
• The illustrators archive
Previously on { feuilleton }
• The Tale of Giulietta
• Carlos Schwabe's Fleurs du Mal
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