Alice Neel

Alice Neel, “Hartley”, Oil on Canvas, 1965, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Alice Neel was one of the great American painters of the twentieth century. She was also a pioneer among women artists. A painter of people, landscape and still life, Neel was never fashionable or in step with avant-garde movements. Sympathetic to the expressionist spirit of northern Europe and Scandinavia and to the darker arts of Spanish painting, she painted in a style and with an approach distinctively her own.

Neel was born near Philadelphia in 1900 and trained at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women. She became a painter with a strong social conscience and equally strong left-wing beliefs. In the 1930s she lived in Greenwich Village, New York and enrolled as a member of the Works Progress Administration for which she painted urban scenes. Her portraits of the 1930s embraced left wing writers, artists and trade unionists.

Neel left Greenwich Village for Spanish Harlem in 1938 to get away from the rarefied atmosphere of an art colony. There she painted the Puerto Rican community, casual acquaintances, neighbours and people she encountered on the street. In the 1960s she moved to the Upper West Side and made a determined effort to reintegrate with the art world. This led to a series of dynamic portraits of artists, curators and gallery owners, among them Frank O’Hara, Andy Warhol and the young Robert Smithson. She also maintained her practice of painting political personalities, including black activists and supporters of the women’s movement.

In the 1970s, Neel began to paint portraits of her extended family as well as a major series of nudes. Neel’s nudes played with the conventions of eroticism while asserting the female point of view.

Neel exhibited widely in America throughout the 1970s and in 1974 she held a retrospective exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. She was regularly invited to lecture on her work and became a role model for supporters of the feminist movement. She was elected a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters (now the American Academy of Arts and Letters), the highest formal recognition of artistic merit in the USA, and received a number of national awards including the International Women’s Year Award in 1976 and the National Women’s Caucus for Art Award for outstanding achievement in the visual arts in 1979. She died in 1984.

Thanks to http://urgetocreate.tumblr.com

Charlie Deck

Charlie Deck, “Oilmetal”, Computer Graphic, Animated Gifs

Charlie Deck is a creative technologist living in New York. His work includes data visualizations, apps, games, hacks and sandwiches. Some of which are published through his company Mode of Expression: http://modeofexpression.com.

Image reblogged with many thanks to the artist’s site: https://bigblueboo.tumblr.com/about

Marvel Comics: Jack Russell

Jack Russell: Werewolf by Night, Marvel Comics

Jack Russell can transform himself into a werewolf, which is a human/wolf hybrid of supernatural origin, through sheer force of will, usually by meditating on the image of a full moon. While in that form, he retains his normal intellect, is capable of speech (with some difficulty), and looks more like the classic werewolf. During a full moon, however, he changes involuntarily, loses his cognitive abilities, and looks more like a wolf than a human.

Paul Gustave Dore

Paul Gustave Dore, “The Neophyte (First Experience of the Monastery)”, Oil on Canvas, 1866-68, 57 x 107 Inches, Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, Virginia

Gustave Doré is famous for his drawings for books like The Bible, Don Quixote, The Raven, Paradise Lost, Divine Comedy and The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. He also produced several paintings. This is a rather haunting painting by Doré. On the painting we can see a group of monks, probably singing or praying together. In the middle there is a young monk. He is a neophyte, someone who has just joined the group. The contrast between the older monks and the young monk enhances the known inexperience of the neophyte.

James Guppy

James Guppy, “Sycorax”, Acrylic and Varnish on Linen, 2010

Since his early life in England, James Guppy has never been far from a brush or drawing pen.  Fifteen years as a mural artist taught him how to paint and the importance of engaging and speaking to the viewer.

He emigrated to Australia in 1982 and in 1989 he began exhibiting his own work as a fine artist.  Besides his regular exhibitions in Sydney and Brisbane, he has exhibited in New York and Houston, Texas.  His work has won many awards and is held in public and private collections both here and abroad.

James has an M Litt in Visual Art from Lancaster University in the UK.  He began teaching in 1979 and has since lectured in universities in the UK, the USA and Australia.

Please credit James Guppy when re-blogging this image. Thanks.

Pierce Brown: “The Words Wake the Mind”

Photographer Unknown, (White Tiles and a Man)

“I look at him for a moment. Words are a weapon stronger than he knows. And songs are even greater. The words wake the mind. The melody wakes the heart. I come from a people of song and dance. I don’t need him to tell me the power of words. But I smile nonetheless.”

-Pierce Brown, Red Rising

Michelangelo

Michelangelo, “The Crouching Boy”, Marble, 1530-34

Despite its small size, this sculpture creates an impression of monumentality, unity and inner force. The image of the crouching boy is suffused with sorrow, a mood which suggest that this sole work by Michelangelo in the Hermitage was intended for the Medici Chapel in the Church of San Lorenzo, Florence.

The figure is exceedingly expressive; though the head is bowed and the face hardly visible, the taut muscles of the body produce a striking impression of the great inner strength that enables one to withstand the pain.

Some scholars see here an allegory for the unborn soul, while others see the figure as a wounded soldier or a spirit of mourning. Yet others believe that this sculpture is a reflection of the depression suffered by many Florentine citizens during the years of the Spanish invasion.