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    Beyond the Canvas

    An art blog with opinions

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    • All Posts
    The Unforgettables: Parmigianino's Self-portrait in a Convex Mirror Kunsthistorisches Museum, Wien
    Beyond the Canvas
    • May 17, 2020
    • 2 min

    The Unforgettables: Parmigianino's Self-portrait in a Convex Mirror Kunsthistorisches Museum, Wien

    It's Mannerist week chez Fran. With its slightly unnatural proportions, that cheeky Bronzino got me thinking about the creation of illusion in painting, so I went trawling through the photos I took in Vienna 3 years ago and I picked out this gem. Parmigianino paints himself at the centre of this rounded panel, his exaggeratedly large right hand thrust to the foreground. Everything around him appears distorted, as if the room is collapsing, maybe even spinning. In contrast, hi
    18 views0 comments
    The Unforgettables: Bronzino's Portrait of a Young Man - The Met, New York
    Beyond the Canvas
    • May 13, 2020
    • 1 min

    The Unforgettables: Bronzino's Portrait of a Young Man - The Met, New York

    Just like we love real people, I hereby decree that it is entirely acceptable to have feelings for the subject of a painting. For I have been on many dates with this impertinent young lad who, in turn, has consistently failed to reciprocate my attentions. Ah, unrequited love. Bronzino is one of the masters of Italian Mannerism, aka Renaissance on steroids, a style that is wedged between the High Renaissance and the Baroque (c. 1520 onwards). Mannerists moved away from the h
    51 views1 comment
    Flashback no. 9: teamLab at Grande Halle de la Villette, Paris (26 May 2018)
    Beyond the Canvas
    • May 8, 2020
    • 2 min

    Flashback no. 9: teamLab at Grande Halle de la Villette, Paris (26 May 2018)

    teamLab hail from Japan, they are an interdisciplinary collective of artists, programmers, engineers, CG animators, mathematicians and architects whose practice 'seeks to navigate the confluence of art, science, technology, and the natural world'. With their own digital museum in Tokyo and a growing number of indoors and outdoors solo installations around the world, they also boast a presence in some of Asia Pacific's most prominent museums. Immersive experience is a buzz wor
    18 views0 comments
    Flashback no. 8: Aleksey Sundukov at Russian State Museum, Saint Petersburg (19 September 2018)
    Beyond the Canvas
    • May 2, 2020
    • 2 min

    Flashback no. 8: Aleksey Sundukov at Russian State Museum, Saint Petersburg (19 September 2018)

    The museums I have visited in Russia (Moscow and Saint Petersburg this far) have made a lasting impression on me. If we exclude the legendary Hermitage, which is for all intents and purposes like the Louvre, I found in their extraordinary collections a (quick and superficial) way to gain some understanding of Russian history through the development of its art. The State Russian Museum houses the world's biggest collection of Russian art, so really there is no better place to
    39 views0 comments
    Flashback no. 7: The Giacometti Gallery at Louisiana Museum, Humlebæk (29 Jun 2016)
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Apr 25, 2020
    • 2 min

    Flashback no. 7: The Giacometti Gallery at Louisiana Museum, Humlebæk (29 Jun 2016)

    Even on a very dark day, there was something strangely uplifting in the light that pervaded these rooms of the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 35 km north of Copenhagen. It may have been bucketing down like it only does in the summer, but Giacometti's magic was untarnished and, once again, the silent dialogue with his iconic statues could begin. His hieratic figures were patiently waiting, standing there like sentinels frozen in time and space. I have always been struck by th
    32 views0 comments
    Flashback no. 5: Joan Semmel at Jewish Museum, New York (26 August 2017)
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Apr 19, 2020
    • 2 min

    Flashback no. 5: Joan Semmel at Jewish Museum, New York (26 August 2017)

    We have all been there, we've all experienced that feeling when we step into a room and we feel a work of art is 'calling' us. And I, for one, love succumbing to that irresistible lure, to the power emanated by a painting that is working its magic leaving me humbled, intrigued and seduced. Well, this is exactly what happened on that rainy (if memory serves) day at the Jewish Museum in NYC, one of the smaller, but by no means lesser gems of New York's Museum Mile. So what does
    36 views0 comments
    Flashback no. 3: Robert Longo at Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, Moscow (19 October 2016)
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Apr 13, 2020
    • 2 min

    Flashback no. 3: Robert Longo at Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, Moscow (19 October 2016)

    Discovery no. 1: Gorky Park is a name I used to associate with a spy movie from the 80s. Now I know where it is, it took me well over an hour to walk there on a cold, wind-swept autumn day. The park, of which sadly I only saw a fraction, is also the home of Garage, founded in 2008 by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich and his former spouse Dasha Zhukova. Discovery no. 2: I had not come across the work of Robert Longo before, it was one of those unexpected and wonderful even
    19 views0 comments
    Flashback no. 2: Jaume Plensa, 56th Venice Biennale (11 October 2015)
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Apr 11, 2020
    • 1 min

    Flashback no. 2: Jaume Plensa, 56th Venice Biennale (11 October 2015)

    With permanent installations across the globe, Barcelona-born Jaume Plensa is the one of the doyens of large scale artistic projects in public spaces. Plensa uses thousands of letters and the shape of the human body to create sculptural works that convey great intensity combined with a mysterious serenity. With the aid of iron, glass and resin, he balances form and scale to give life to works that are both soothing and compelling. The theme of the heads of young women is a re
    21 views2 comments
    Flashback no. 1: The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (5 March 2017)
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Apr 8, 2020
    • 1 min

    Flashback no. 1: The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (5 March 2017)

    There are many reasons to visit the Getty Centre, which is nestled in the hills overlooking West Los Angeles. The first is probably its unique architecture, one of Richard Meier's most visionary and iconic achievements. The second is the oddly serene view that can be enjoyed from the beautifully landscaped gardens. The museum's collection is also quite impressive, and it was it difficult to pick just one work for this post. Then I remembered being struck by this delightful De
    16 views0 comments
    Looking back as we look forward
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Apr 7, 2020
    • 1 min

    Looking back as we look forward

    The reality that my 2020 travel plans (and the inevitable art 'intake' that was supposed to go with them) have all but gone up in smoke has now well and truly hit me in the face. Given a 2nd trip to Moscow was on the cards, the bad news is that there won't be any new rave reviews of Russian socialist realist paintings. The good news is that I can and will 'recycle' my old museum visits so there will be, among others, rave reviews of Russian socialist paintings after all. Ha.
    13 views0 comments
    Spring in art part 8: the day van Gogh comes to Fulham
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Apr 5, 2020
    • 1 min

    Spring in art part 8: the day van Gogh comes to Fulham

    Today is the most awaited day of my year. The hopeful and feverish monitoring of the evolution of the buds on my beloved pear tree culminates and ends on the day I wake up to find buds have turned into flowers. That day is today. White, fragile, ephemeral, beautiful and moving, trembling in the breeze against the clear blue sky. Today I’m feeling a little bit like Vincent in Arles. I also choose to live this day in contemplation and in awe of nature. This yearly gift is immen
    18 views0 comments
    Spring in art part 7: Steichen does a van Gogh
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Apr 2, 2020
    • 1 min

    Spring in art part 7: Steichen does a van Gogh

    Luxembourg-born Edward Steichen is one of the most influential photographers of the 20th century. He was one of the founders of the Photo-Secession, a movement that promoted the idea that photography was not just about accurately reproducing the world, but also about creating artistic imagery. Steichen and his peers adopted a more 'painterly' approach to photography using filters and soft focus to express their creativity and manipulate their images. Steichen, who had trained
    18 views0 comments
    Spring in art part 6: It's always spring in Mexico
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Mar 31, 2020
    • 1 min

    Spring in art part 6: It's always spring in Mexico

    I now realise this series has very much gone from 'spring in art' to 'flowers in art'. And granted, chances are Mexico is blessed with beautiful flowers all year round. But the point here is to celebrate the symbolism of flowers (rebirth, hope, beauty, love, you name it) as opposed to their seasonality, so here goes. That of Alfredo Ramos Martinez is a name I suspect won't ring many bells. Together with the more celebrated Rivera, Siqueiros, Orozco and, of course, Kahlo, he w
    27 views0 comments
    Spring in art part 5: van Gogh's Japanese connection
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Mar 29, 2020
    • 2 min

    Spring in art part 5: van Gogh's Japanese connection

    There is something particularly poignant about this painting. Maybe because van Gogh created this resplendent vision of spring mere months before he decided to take his own life. A gift to his beloved brother Theo and sister-in-law Jo for birth of their son Vincent Willem, the founder of the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, Almond Blossom is a joyful celebration of the awakening of nature and the arrival of new life. The Dutch artist had moved to Arles in the south of France in
    22 views0 comments
    Spring in art part 4: Magritte's mysterious encounters
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Mar 28, 2020
    • 2 min

    Spring in art part 4: Magritte's mysterious encounters

    One of the undisputed masters of Surrealism, Belgian René Magritte had a unique artistic perspective on life and nature. In his view "to be surrealist is to banish the notion of déjà vu and seek out the not yet seen." The 'not yet seen' in his paintings comes in the shape of everyday objects that he liked to twist and recontextualise in order to suggest new, dreamlike scenarios. Magritte's imagery is perhaps the most appealing and accessible of the Surrealist movement. His no
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    Spring in art part 3: Monet's wonderful floral obsession
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Mar 26, 2020
    • 1 min

    Spring in art part 3: Monet's wonderful floral obsession

    No celebration of the beauty of nature in Spring can be complete without dedicating one post to Claude Monet. Luckily for us, the Impressionist master's love for the representation of flowers and gardens in bloom knew no bounds. So much so, that he is quoted to have said that flowers were the reason he became a painter in the first place. This is an early Monet, he was only 24 when he produced this stunning picture. It's a lush cascade of lilacs, tulips, peonies, geraniums an
    11 views0 comments
    Spring in art part 2: One lilac does make the spring.
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Mar 25, 2020
    • 1 min

    Spring in art part 2: One lilac does make the spring.

    Expect to see plenty of Russian art on here for it is one major passion of mine. Places like the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow are where every day more I long to go back and lose myself until those rather stern-looking museum supervisors unceremoniously inform me that it's closing time. All in due course. Until that day comes, let's feast our eyes on this stunning piece by Russian-Soviet symbolist painter Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin. Although the artist is mostly known for his iconic
    15 views0 comments
    Spring in art part 1: David Hockney
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Mar 24, 2020
    • 2 min

    Spring in art part 1: David Hockney

    David Hockney is the celebrated doyen of British 60s pop art. The reason I chose this painting to kick off a short series of posts on Spring in art is because I liked the candor of what he said about it: "In this painting I wanted the sensation of very early spring, when the first leaves come out. They begin at the very bottom of the trees, and you don't see very much of the branches. They seemed to float. I loved that idea and that's what this painting is about. This was my
    25 views0 comments
    Good news: Spring is here!
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Mar 23, 2020
    • 1 min

    Good news: Spring is here!

    I have this inexplicably difficult relationship with exclamation marks, which I find offensive and mostly unnecessary. But the arrival of Spring has to be my favourite event in the year and, as such, it's okay to shout about it. So yes folks, Spring is here! Except I was so busy being worried and poring over the news that I almost missed it. Amid the global pandemic doom and gloom, 82-year old British artist David Hockney sends us a much-needed message of hope and positivity
    25 views0 comments
    Beyond the Canvas
    • Mar 19, 2020
    • 1 min

    An ode to the (closed) museum

    They keep coming in. My inbox is inundated with emails from museums (and art galleries) announcing their temporary closure, which is of course the only sensible thing to do. Join us on social media, they say, we will show you our collections. Call me old hat, but I don't think that even the most innovative technology can deliver a remotely comparable experience. There is something uniquely magical, almost mystical, about stepping inside a museum. As it happens, I just realise
    76 views0 comments
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