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 Wednesday, August 08, 2007
J.M.W. Turner on Power of Art
Posted by jessica

Turner.jpgAbout two weeks ago I caught an episode of Simon Schama’s PBS series, Power of Art, featuring Joseph Mallord William Turner. As in the rest of the eight-part series, this episode focuses on one work. And what a work it is: Slave Ship (Slavers Throwing Overboard the Dead and Dying, Typhoon Coming On) (1840; oil on canvas). Here, also as in the rest of the espisodes, Schama offers historical, cultural and artistic insight on that which he calls “the greatest British painting of the 19th century,” accompanied by re-enactments here and there. I’ll admit that before this hour-long special, I’d been most fond of Turner’s use of color, but Schama opened my eyes to the social consciousness and emotional force behind the master’s works.

As Schama says, “For Turner, art was not a placebo. It needed to wreak havoc like the storm, to have the force of an avalanche or an inferno. Great painting, his painting, needed to risk disaster, the better to communicate it.”

Sadly, the series is over; however, PBS has a fantastic website devoted to it—complete with interactive features that “explore the painting” and a map that shows which museums hold these major works—and Schama also wrote a book by the same name.

To read more on Turner, click here.




8/8/2007 1:03:47 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, August 06, 2007
Edward Hopper: House Painter
Posted by Kelly

Hopper.jpgAn iconic image of big-city loneliness, Nighthawks is perhaps Edward Hopper’s best-known painting, but it was his cheerier The Mansard Roof that put him on the map. The light-filled watercolor depicts a real-life sea captain’s mansion that still stands in the Rocky Neck neighborhood of Gloucester, Massachusetts, where the artist painted a number of other prominent Victorian homes during his summers in the seaside city in the 1920s. You can find pictures of some of these homes and learn more about Gloucester's inspiration for Hopper in an interesting piece on npr.org.

Then relatively unknown, Hopper got $100 for The Mansard Roof in 1923. Today, the watercolor is part of a retrospective show of Hopper’s work at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

The show only runs through August 19, so you’ll need to hurry to catch this rare exhibition of Hopper’s work, with nearly 100 of the artist’s most celebrated paintings, watercolors, and prints.


To find out more about Hopper and his work The Mansard Roof, click here.





8/6/2007 10:16:36 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
Welcome!
Posted by Kelly

One of the frustrating things about editing a bi-monthly magazine is that we can’t be very fast on our feet. Because of our production schedule, so many interesting stories and events become old news by the time we can comment on them in print. Alas, that’s the beauty of a blog: the ability to share information fast!

We’ll be here several times a week sharing interesting news stories, as well as outtakes from our interviews with leading watercolorists and our take on hot topics in the art world at large. So join us!

To make sure you don’t miss out on any new blog entries, be sure to enter your e-mail address into the Free Updates box at the top left of your screen, and we’ll let you know anytime something new is posted.



8/6/2007 9:27:14 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [4]