Fantastic work + dreamy music + excellent review = thank you Kate ‼️
@jhb6124911 ай бұрын
Nice music. Interesting work. Thanks to you both.
@johnjones371411 ай бұрын
Thank you James for reminding me of Hantai. Always enjoy hearing about technique. And thank you Kate
@stepladder1311 ай бұрын
Great show! Great singer!
@salvadorblancocasalins652611 ай бұрын
particular and nice show
@superfly244911 ай бұрын
Thanks, James and Kate
@singlespies11 ай бұрын
Thanks James! Great job getting a French singer, too!
@thirdrockjul222411 ай бұрын
Thank you Kate! ❤
@julienporisse990211 ай бұрын
Simon Hantaï born in Hungary in 1922 and died in Paris in 2008. I visited Georges Pompidou museum in 2013 for his retrospective and… the sheer scale, and nature of his work was as impressive as it was almost frightening. Here was a painter who did not wait for tomorrow. Painting very large canvases, although folded tied up and dipped in large contaiof dye or paint. He is easily recognizable as nobody does his kind of art. It’s big scale, it’s original, it’s Hantaï
@simonlinke111 ай бұрын
Thank you Loren, that's a very interesting show very well described by you. Is it possible that last painting on the back wall was not folded at all? I ask, partly because it precedes the other works in the show which suggests it's formative, but mainly because of the material challenge of oil paint. As you mention, there's the issue of drying times which would make the construction of the painting impossibly complex, but also the question of cracking and delaminating that would result from extreme tensioning and bending of the canvas. I wondered (from the video obvs) whether instead if it was painted with a palette knife, and that was how the shard effect of the composition was created? You mention BMPT and Soulage etc. and the challenge David Reed talks about in relation to Pollock, and it got me wondering whether Riopelle might also have been an influence both in terms of compositional design but also in process, with this particular work? It's a fascinating period especially in terms of Paris and the response of artists there, partly to the legacy associated with the history of that city but also the processing of developments in NY in the 40's and 50's. Thank you for taking the time to show us this show.
@jameskalm11 ай бұрын
Nice to hear from you Simon. As I relook at the footage, and think about seeing this piece in person, I do think it was a bit different from the other works, probably because it was darker, and much more heavily painted. It looked to me like it had at least three coats of paint, starting with a dark grey, then dark green and blue, and maybe the rumples were smaller(?) As to the problem of cracking, if the rumpling and re rumpling was done fairly quickly (for oil paint) the surface would remain soft enough to manipulate it with out cracking. As to the pallet knife, maybe (?) If you go to the video at 5:38, the wall label gives descriptions of Hantaï’s various techniques for the rumpling/folding he developed over time. Also, I’m sure Hantaï was very engaged with all the hottest, most recognized art movements happening in Europe during the fifties and sixties and Riopelle was certainly in the mix…JK
@simonlinke111 ай бұрын
@@jameskalm thanks Loren. Looking forward too the next one!
@samjgardner11 ай бұрын
May I ask the name of the KZbin art documentary you mentioned? Thanks, Kate!
@jameskalm11 ай бұрын
Sure @samjgardner here's the link kzbin.info/www/bejne/qpm0k6uOa8Sboacsi=7YUwvuQTRCV3d-LH
@melkerart179311 ай бұрын
Interesting how art can resemble science and vice versa. These paintings may be inspired by x-ray crystallography of proteins which began in the late 50s.
@somemovingpictures11 ай бұрын
"How to overcome the aesthetic privilege of talent" Really? I imagine one should also consider how to perform at Carnegie as an untalented musician, or how to transform yourself into James Tyrone in "Long Day's Journey Into Night" when given no acting ability . . . "How to overcome the aesthetic privilege of talent" or "How to fake it when you can't make it" . Good God in heaven!
@edwardferry824711 ай бұрын
He was a trained artist. He might not be to your particular taste but he’s an important figure in experimental painting, he represented France at Venice one year. He was far from a fake, he devoted his life to exploring painting and art. 🙏
@Allenmayesallenmayes11 ай бұрын
@@edwardferry8247 who gets to be successful and who doesnt.
@somemovingpictures11 ай бұрын
@@edwardferry8247 Although I found the work to be banal personally, my displeasure was not with the work of Simon Hantai but rather the ridiculousness of the phrase "overcome the aesthetic privilege of talent."
@jameskalm11 ай бұрын
@tralexan Whatever one might think of the work, its aesthetic framework, or the recognition he’s received, you have to admit that a statement like this is intentionally provocative. I see it as a precursor to the whole Postmodern, deconstructivist notion of “deskilling”, and a kind of Neo-Dada contempt for society’s accepted norms…JK
@Allenmayesallenmayes11 ай бұрын
@@jameskalm you can't hide the disquiet that most of us feel about pompous over rated artists