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RE: Let's discuss Pictorial Art.
3/1/2011 10:04:50 PM

Fascinating Roger! I will have to compare with butterflies and see which goes with which, that should be interesting.

Thank you for making me aware of this.

Love,

Sara

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RE: Let's discuss Pictorial Art.
3/1/2011 10:12:57 PM

Roger, it is beautiful and one could stare at it for a long time. Makes me wish I could have had that daughter.

Now, I simply think the portrait of Lady Agnew is divine. It is much better than any portrait taken by a camera could be.

Thank you,

Sara

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RE: Let's discuss Pictorial Art.
3/5/2011 1:01:19 AM
The art I had seen here are so lovely and wonderful it was a big wow for me. I pay tribute to all those artist who had done such lovely works.

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Roger Macdivitt .

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RE: Let's discuss Pictorial Art.
3/5/2011 6:13:41 PM

Sara and Fernando.

Just a reminder that every little piece of art that we produce has value. There is love and feeling and inspiration. Money can never buy those things but you can give these things to those that you wish to share with.

Roger

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: Let's discuss Pictorial Art.
3/5/2011 10:00:34 PM
Quote:

I don't know if Sara saw the last posting here a while ago.

Sara is one of those who loves butterflies. I know that she will love those letters.

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My favourite painting

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What a bold statement.

It took me a long time to decide.

The world is full of wonderful images. Some images have only been possible with the growth of technology, yet, I'm drawn back to images that made an impact upon me a long time ago.

My decision was based upon many things, too numerous to say here, but, suffice it to say "It tugs at my romantic side".

I love children. Their innocence, their mischief, their competitive zest for life and their inquisitive nature. Girls in particular soften my heart.

Being a father of two daughters and grandfather of three granddaughters I have been lucky enough to watch their progress in life. My new grandson has a big act to follow.

Anyway, I ramble.

A little over a week ago I had the fortune to take my granddaughter to London, England, to The National, Tate Britain and Tate Modern galleries. In our short trip I was lucky, once again, to see my all-time favourite picture. With all of the great English artists I could have chosen with their work exhibited near to me, I choose an American artist.

AND HERE IT IS, MY FAVOURITE PAINTING

Just as it appears in the gallery.

Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose

by

John Singer Sargent

American Painter
1856-1925

John Singer Sargent was an American painter by birth-right. He loved his country yet he spent most of his life in Europe. He was the most celebrated portraitist of his time but left it at the very height of his fame to devote full time to landscape painting, water colors and public art.

He was born in Florence, to American parents and traveled extensively throughout Europe. His parents never settled back in America, not stepping foot in the States himself until right before his 21st birthday to retain his citizenship.

He was schooled as a French artist, heavily influenced by the Impressionist movement, the Spanish Master Velazquez, the Dutch Master Frans Hals, and his teacher Carolus-Duran . He was the darling of Paris until the scandal of his Madame X painting at the 1884 Salon.

Discouraged at the rejection, even considered leaving art at the age of 28, he left Paris and settled (if that word could ever be used for him) in England where he reached the height of his fame. To be painted by Sargent was to be painted by the best.

Although England would be his home, he never stopped traveling and he never stopped painting. To describe Sargent is to say that he painted. It was his life and yet he had a deep appreciation for music and all art forms and went out of his way to promote other artists -- for this selflessness he was greatly loved.

Extremely bright, extremely gifted, an intense hard worker, he was the last great generalist. It is hard to put a label on him for he could master so many different painting styles. He was an Impressionist, a Classical Portraitist, a Landscape Artist, a Water Colorist, a Muralist of public art, and even started sculpting at the last of his life. He was all of these things and yet he was none of them in total.

He once said that the knowledge of a technique for an artist, such as Impressionism, "does not make a man an Artist any more than the knowledge of perspective does -- it is mearly a refining of one's means towards representing things and one step further away from the hieroglyph".

He is often passed by, not studied, or dismissed because he was never a radical artist or trend-setter. He always worked within the wide, rich textured pallet of known and established styles. Yet his brilliance was in fusing these elements together and for this he has never fully gotten credit.

His output was prodigious. Working dawn til dusk in some cases -- even on vacations, and sometimes seven days a week. Between 1877 (when his work really started taking off) and 1925, he did over 900 oils and more than 2,000 watercolors along with countless charcoal sketch-portraits and endless pencil drawings.

He painted two United States presidents, the aristocracy of Europe, the new and emerging tycoons and barons of business -- Rockefeller, Sears, Vanderbilt; and he painted gypsies, tramps, and street children with the same gusto and passion. He hiked through the Rocky Mountains with a canvas tent under pouring rain to paint the beauty of waterfalls, and painted near the front lines during World War I to capture the horrors of war. He painted the back alleys of Venice, sleeping gondoliers, fishing boats and the dusty side streets of Spain. He painted opulent interiors and vacant Moorish Ruins. He painted the artists of his time -- performers, poets, dancers, musicians, and writers -- Robert Louis Stevenson, and Henry James. He painted the great generals of the Great War, and the Bedouin nomads in their camps. He painted grand allegorical murals, and his friends as they slept.

And he painted . . . .

Where others kept journals, John Singer Sargent painted his, and his life can easily be chronicled by these records in color and canvas. He loved people, yet was intensely private. And he loved his family deeply and devotedly, though he never had a family himself (was childless and never married). He was simply, a great man and a great Artist.

Carnation, Lily, Lily Rose is a beautiful celebration of childhood and joy and even more of light. Light is the artists biggest challenge, need and joy.

Sargent captures a beautiful moment in time which brings a tear to my eye. These beautiful little girls, captured in a moment of gentle discovery, awe and shared joy have their faces so wonderfully lit by the light from their newly lit paper lanterns.

Youth, delicate paper and a tiny flame......all too fleeting, but, oh such a coming together.

Here is a full on copy of Sargents painting.

Please spend five minutes just taking in the beauty.

Life is a luminous halo, a semi-transparent envelope surrounding us from the beginning of consciousness to the end.
Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), Bri
tish writer and essayist

Of this painting, often considered his masterpiece, Sargent said: A fearful difficult subject.



Hello Roger,

I have been following this thread with great interest yet only now have I found a little time to post. I had seemed to note that this photo above that you posted of your favorite painting (a favorite to me from now on, too) is considerably more yellowish in color than the one you took at the gallery, and I was looking for another good version of it that was more like this latter. Finally I think I have found it at www.artrenewal.org (The Art Renewal Center), a great source I have always trusted to get reliable photographs of master works in big format. And here is, in that version, your favorite painting: Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose by John Singer Sargent.

Hugs,

Miguel

P.S. If you click on the picture you will be taken to a page where you can see it enlarged and even have the opportunity to view it in high resolution version.

John Singer Sargent - Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose (1885-1886)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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