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Questions from the Met
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message 301:
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Heather
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Jun 25, 2011 08:12PM

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1.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CgOM4V...
2.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z6orHe...
3.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITILwr...
4.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jYvLdf...
5,) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCbVeH...
6.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MeEhKr...
7.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CAYUb3...
8.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atlhpw...
9.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_sIk8...
10.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Orirn-...
11.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rhy49d...
12.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGWivW...
A few shorts from the film -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHp8hD...
Charlotte discovers Emily's poems.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RCJcW9...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=483-QU...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwmX3p...


I like the Three ages of Man. I think that's the work that Claudel is most famous for.

I do think there is some senusality in Rodin though. The house has been made into a really great museum.
http://www.musee-rodin.fr/slpte-e.htm

Wasn't that one above the 'Age of Maturity?' I read that Camille did it with herself as the girl, Rodin as the man, and Rose (his wife) as the older woman behind him. It has that symbolism too. I love it!

It's amazing how many pieces Rodin did and the quality of his work.
to me sculpture has to be the hardest (no pun intended) medium of all the arts.

I agree. I think that is why it is my most favorite medium.


1.) http://www.youtube...."
Oh my goodness, I never knew such one existed. Too bad I'm not good with French :(

Armorer Hermes Knauer


Left Wing

Central Panel

Right Wing
One could examine this forever and not totally grasp every detail. There are many other examples like this. I found that while studying Renaissance art the symbolism abounds.

Also I'm not sure an artist knows why they put in certain details but then other viewers see a great deal of significance from the detail being a part of the painting.


P.S. Heather I really enjoy your group. You're doing such a wonderful job constantly bringing the members to great works of art! I applaud you!






Completing the tour of the American Period Rooms, the Frank Lloyd Wright (1867–1959) living room exemplifies one of Wright's most important contributions to modern architecture: the idea of dynamic spatial continuity. The room is not a single volume but a series of levels. The oak furniture and other objects in the room have been installed using both a floor plan that Wright made for the room and a photograph of the interior that appeared in a 1942 survey of Wright's work. To the architect, the exterior and interior design and the furnishings of a house were all part of an integrated whole.
This room—originally the living room in a country house for Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Little—allows visitors to truly experience a pleasure that is rarely available to the public: a Wright-designed domestic space. Installed in the Museum as a freestanding pavilion, much as it was on its original site, it is a complete work, designed by an artist with a highly individual aesthetic.
http://www.metmuseum.org/works_of_art...
How would you define “chic”? Which works of art are particularly chic?

adj. chic·er, chic·est
1. Conforming to the current fashion; stylish: chic clothes; a chic boutique.
2. Adopting or setting current fashions and styles; sophisticated: chic, well-dressed young executives. See Synonyms at fashionable.
n.
1. The quality or state of being stylish; fashionableness.
2. Sophistication in dress and manner; elegance.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/chic
I had to look it up. I know how to use the word but I needed a concrete definition.
I like the room. I have never been there but am looking forward to seeing it one day. What is chic really mean today? If it isn't chic now, was it when Wright built it? Fashions change, obviously, and I don't agree that one can compare a work of art of a certain time-period to today's standards.
Aside from the colors (which are actually becoming the 'fashion' again), I think the room still has the modern feel. Maybe I am not current with today's architecture but as comparing it to modern art, I feel that it is quite up-to-date for it's time.

How would you define “chic”? Which works of art are particularly chic?"
When hear “chic” I think --cosmopolitan, in vogue, sophisticated, stylish, & urban. When I think of Frank Lloyd Wright's architecture (Fallingwater; Prairie School/Robie House), I think --"rustic, rural, handcrafted, simple, organic." Wright is quoted as saying, “Nature is my manifestation of God. I go to nature every day for inspiration in the day's work. I follow in building the principles which nature has used in its domain.” It appears that the two are opposite.
[image error]
The Richmond Room, 1810-11 (Baltimore, MD)
Then I looked at all the period rooms in the MET’s new American Wing. At first I checked out the more “ornate” rooms like The 1810 Richmond Room, with its scenic wallpaper of Paris; or the 1852 Rococo Revival parlor in the "French taste;" and the 1868-70 Renaissance Revival Parlor which indicated “affluence and authority, as well as a cosmopolitan outlook”.
But then I thought that despite that the 1680 Samuel Hart Room (and rooms from 1695—1793) are simplistic and minimal in the number of items, to the family who lived there, these few items were probably their way of displaying their wealth and good fortune.

Samuel Hart Room, ca. 1680 (Ipswich, MA)
I know that at the Wadsworth there is the earlies American painting of a young lady named Elizabeth Eggington, 1664. Paintings were one way families could show their wealth.
http://insight.ccsu.edu/luna/servlet/...
Further searching on Wiki --“chic” is a French word, established in English since at least the 1870s.


I have seen the “large” American paintings above. This is how they are displayed (somewhat odd). You can see them eye to eye, behind the glass. They have a huge collection, it would be impossible to do it any other way.
I am so impressed with the tiny works. This is only 3 21/32 inches x 2 13/16 inches!!

Susan Hayne Simmons (Mrs. Manigault Heyward), ca. 1813, Robert Fulton (American, 1765–1815), Watercolor on ivory!! 3 21/32 inches x 2 13/16 inches.

A Shipwreck during a Tempest, 1782, Jean Baptiste Pillement (French, 1727–1808), Pastel on gessoed canvas, 24 3/4 inches x 36 inches!

Biblical sampler, 1768, Sarah Lawrence (American, b. 1758), New York City, Silk thread on linen.


Do you prefer the hushed, powdery texture of a Degas pastel or the bold, thick surface of a Van Gogh oil painting?
Nykia Omphroy

"'Look how much paint he used for the lamps.' I reached out and touched one of them gently, a small ridged dome on the canvas" The Night Cafe pg. 45
"A golden pottery vase of sunflowers stood against a cream background. Even in the dim light, the blossoms appeared to be so thick they were almost three-dimensional" pg. 45

The word chic to me mainly is used in regard to fashion and to some degree could describe interior design. With the state of much culture these days I can't say I use the word a lot but I know what it is when I see it.
I probably prefer smooth finish to thick, but it's color and composition, and what images evoke, that make or break art for me.

So I prefer each, when used by a master. :)

Narrator Jennifer Meagher argues that embracing in dance allows us to break down some of the taboos we have about physical closeness. Which works of art do you think illustrate her point?
There are so many works of art that depict couples in an embrace. Which scene best portrays love and connectedness?

of course:

The Waltz Camille Claudel
My husband, even after our separation, gifted this to me a few weeks ago. He does have a heart! (sometimes).

The Kiss Rodin

Eternal Spring Rodin

The Three Graces Canova
Ok, so this isn't a couple embracing but I think the idea of 'connectedness'. Don't you think?
I also have a painting done by our own Ed Smiley called The Embrace
I have a statue my brother brought me back from Mexico which is a silouette of of the face of a woman with the side view silouette of the man kissing her cheek. It's beautiful.
Here are a few that I would like to own next!

Bronze Hands
I LOVE this one:

Endless Love Bali Carved Abstract Wood


Books mentioned in this topic
Leaving Van Gogh (other topics)Point and Line to Plane (other topics)
Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling (other topics)