Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Dale Chihuly at the De Young Museum - Continued


DSC02660  Dale Chihuly

This post is a continuation of my previous post touring Dale Chihuly's exhibit at the De Young Museum during the summer of 2008.

My favorite part of the 12,000 square foot installation was the Boat Room, where two wooden boats were placed on highly reflective black glass.

DSC02651 Dale Chihuly canoe reflection 


One boat was filled with Nijima Floats, inspired by the small Japanese fishing floats Chihuly used to find on the shores of Puget Sound when he was a child. 

The Ikebana Boat, was filled with glass floral forms.

DSC02247  Dale Chihuly


_____

The Chandelier Room housed Chihuly's iconic designs. 
I'd seen a chandelier in a Barcelona restaurant when I was traveling. There was a chandelier hanging at eye level over each table, because the room had a low ceiling. And it was really beautiful. I loved this idea of hanging a chandelier at eye level. It triggered something that said that now I could make a chandelier, because it doesn't have to be functional.
--Dale Chihuly 
DSC02257  Dale Chihuly


...The parts can be bulbous, long and twisted, short and spiraled, or even frog-toed. Hung together, the many pieces that make up each Chandelier create a unified, though complex, composition.
--Dale Chihuly

DSC02255  Dale Chihuly

DSC02256  Dale Chihuly

Orange Hornet Chandelier was installed in my old loft space in the Railway Building. One great story is that the color was so intense at night, with low voltage light on, we used to get calls because people thought the space was on fire. I always liked that one.

--Tracy Savage, Savage Fine Art, Portland, Oregon



DSC02253  Dale Chihuly


The blue Urchin Chandelier provided a wonderful contrast in texture.

DSC02652 Dale Chihuly blue sea urchin


_____


 The Macchia Forest looked like a prehistoric garden.


I pushed Billy Morris to make Macchia bigger and bigger and bigger. By the time we got done, we were making Macchias about three feet high and three feet wide. At the time, that was the largest glass I'd ever made, and some of the largest glass that had ever been made.
--Dale Chihuly


DSC02643 Dale Chihuly


Pushing the envelope of the medium comes with risk and reward:
It's important that we lose pieces. You get there faster, I think, by losing pieces, because you're pushing yourself and you know how far to come back.
--Dale Chihuly

Yet Chihuly and his team never strayed from their artistry; they didn't create these just for the sake of their grand scale. 

DSC02646 Dale Chihuly

_____

I have a special affection for this red and black object, showcased on the Venetian Wall, because it looks like three-dimensional calligraphy.

DSC02629 Dale Chihuly

Putti are these little characters, they're male, and they were used in Renaissance and Baroque times, and they were put up in the churches, or in the paintings--they were carved out of wood or made of plaster. And they were meant to make people feel good. And to get people together...and maybe they were a little mischievous. They were just meant to suggest a good time, and they looked good. And they probably made people think about youth and this was a great symbol.
--Dale Chihuly

DSC02628 Dale Chihuly


_____

I felt like I was on an exotic snorkeling excursion when I walked under the Persian Ceiling 

DSC02263  Dale Chihuly


I caught myself spotting for Putti swimming among the aquatic forms.

DSC02656 Dale Chihuly

Although Chihuly forms are essentially abstract, they seem nature-based. The undulating sides, swirling lips, and progressively spaced stripes suggest they may have been shaped by eddying water or gusts of wind. Though the scalloped edges are in fact stationary, their apparent fluidity hints at potential movement like the swaying of organisms responding to tidal changes. 
--David Bourdon, "Chihuly, Climbing the Wall"
Art in in America, June, 1990

DSC02269  Dale Chihuly

_____

Mille Fiori  looks like it came directly from Lewis Carroll 's imagination. This grand glass garden rises out of a 12' x 56' reflective platform.

DSC02662  Dale Chihuly

People have asked what inspired me to do the Mille Fiori. It wasn't so much trying to replicate plants as it was a way to work with all the techniques we've learned over the last thirty-five, forty years.
--Dale Chihuly

DSC02664  Dale Chihuly

The idea of the Nijima Floats was not only to make them big, but to use a lot of color in different ways. 

--Dale Chihuly

DSC02668  Dale Chihuly

DSC02669  Dale Chihuly

DSC02666  Dale Chihuly

I have to say that it gives me great satisfaction that I am often able to bring members of the public into a museum, who don't normally go to museums, and that the membership increases. So a new type of person is brought in to see my work, and not only my work, whatever else is inthe museum at that time. 
--Dale Chihuly

I dedicate these two posts to John Edward Buchanan, Jr. whose collaboration with Dale Chihuly brought 400,000 visitors to the Fine Art Museums of San Francisco. He lost is battle with cancer on December 30, 2011.

Update (April 17, 2012): Click here to see how Chihuly repeats many of these components for the exhibit at the Halcyon in London.
_____
All quotes from: Chihuly, Dale. Chihuly: 365 Days. New York: Abrams, 2008. Print.

Friday, January 13, 2012

Dale Chihuly at the De Young Museum

DSC02618 Dale Chihuly - Saffron Tower


After I watched "Chihuly: Fire & Light" on PBS last week, I was inspired to dip into my photo archives to find the photos I took during the "Chihuly at the de Young" exhibit in the summer of 2008. 

Director John E. Buchanan Jr. expertly lured Dale Chihuly to come to San Francisco. He leveraged the excitement of the shiny new De Young Museum building and promised an astonishing 12,000 square feet of gallery space to showcase four decades of Chihuly’s illustrious career as a glass artist. The crowning glory was Buchanan’s sweeping gesture of granting full artistic license, which sparked Chihuly and his team of world-class glassblowers to create new pieces for this exhibit. The 400,000 visitors that viewed the show are a testament to the genius of this magical collaboration.
___

I still miss the 30-foot saffron neon sculpture that stood proudly in the Pool of Enchantment during the show. It was spectacular during the day and at night.

___

Glass Forest #3 is one of the earliest pieces and has not been viewed in the US since 1972 [1]. This installment represents Chihuly’s early experiments with neon. The milk glass gives the appearance that the long tubes are white hot.

DSC02231 Dale Chihuly - Glass Forest #3
___

My son’s favorite of the entire collection is Neodymium Reeds on Logs, 2004 with larger-than-life reeds rising dramatically like stalagmites from birch logs. The violet neon continues the soothing cave-like atmosphere. See the full scale of the installation here.

I made the first Reeds in 1995 at the Hackman factory, a small glassblowing shop in Nuutajarvi,k Finland. Unlike other factories, the Hackman facility had very high ceilings, which inspired me to make these elongated forms.[2]
--Dale Chihuly

DSC02241  Dale Chihuly

___

Persian Wall, 2008 is a grand installation made especially for the De Young Museum.
The Persians – that’s one of the most difficult series to describe. It started off that they were geometric shapes. I think it was a search for new forms. We worked for a year doing only experimental Persians – at least a thousand or more...

DSC02238  Dale Chihuly


Sometimes the Persians became very Seaform-like...


DSC02239  Dale Chihuly


DSC02236  Dale Chihuly

...or they became very geometric. [2]
          --Dale Chihuly

DSC02237  Dale Chihuly

 See an image of the full wall here


___


The Tabac Basket Room ’s dark lighting evoked the feeling of stepping into a smoke-filled teepee. Pendleton trade blankets covered one wall...

DSC02638 Dale Chihuly

… and woven Indian baskets and their glass counterparts glowed on the opposite wall.

DSC02636 Dale Chihuly

The center of the room showcased the pieces that retained the same organic palette and feeling...

DSC02639 Dale Chihuly


...yet transcended the original basket shapes.


DSC02640 Dale Chihuly

***

Though he has been creating cylinders for over thirty years, Chihuly hadn’t created any in black until the De Young exhibit.

DSC02261  Dale Chihuly

Drawing inspiration from his extensive trade blanket collection, Chihuly “painted” woven images by fusing glass rods onto the cylindrical forms…

DSC02260  Dale Chihuly

… which appear to glow against the black "canvas" and their bright interiors.

DSC02258  Dale Chihuly


More on this show later.


[1] San Francisco Sentinel
[2] Chihuly, Dale. Chihuly: 365 Days. New York: Abrams, 2008. Print.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Traditional Quilts of California at Pacific International Quilt Festival XX

DSC06997 Crazy in Black and White

California quilters had a productive year this year. Here is a sampling of my favorite traditional quilts that were shown in the Pacific International Quilt Festival XX.

Geraldine Nall's miniature wall quilt stopped me in my tracks. She used a mind-boggling 6,300 pieces of fabric to create a quilt that is a mere 23" square. Using only the pineapple blocks pattern, Nall created 140 tiny 1 1/2" to 2 1/2" squares. The result is a stunning, balanced interplay of black and white.

  DSC06998 Crazy in Black and White

Diana Tatro belongs to a group of sixteen quilters that exchanges quilt blocks each year.

DSC07007  Bloomin' Baskets

This year's red and white basket theme created the building blocks that produced a beautiful quilt with unity and rhythm.

DSC07008  Bloomin' Baskets

Holly Casey drew inspiration for this striking blue and gold Dizzy Geese quilt from a book by L. Amanda Owens and Patricia Wilens. I like the trend-setting geese in the lower right corner.

DSC06861 Dizzy Geese

Clem Buzick and Ann Helbling created "Maritime in Red"...

DSC06987 Maritime in Red

...with intricate quilt motifs.

DSC06988 Maritime in Red

Next time, the innovative quilts. 

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Stanford Pumpkins 2011

DSC07127 Stanford Pumpkins 2011 - ghoul

The Stanford University art students turned in their homework last night. Their assignment was to carve a pumpkin that says "Boo".

DSC07104 Stanford Pumpkins 2011 three

DSC07102 Stanford Pumpkins 2011  - face

DSC07117 Stanford Pumpkins 2011

DSC07112   Stanford Pumpkins 2011 - giraffe

Just when you thought you've seen every imaginable design, take a look at this one:

DSC07116 Stanford Pumpkins 2011 - jigsaw

See previous years' Stanford Pumpkins here and here.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Crochet Coral Reef Sculptures Explain Mathematics

Image from here.


My thanks to Patricia Powell Kessler for posting this TED video on the sidebar of her blog. This talk appeals to me on so many levels. Margaret Wertheim discusses marine biology, the mathematics of hyperbolic geometry, textiles, folk art, environmental activism, and the passion of spontaneous creativity.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Inside The Getty


IMG_6993 John Singer Sargent
Portrait of Thérèse, countess Clary AldringenJohn Singer Sargent, 1896.
Oil on canvas, 90 x 48 in. (228.6 x 121.9 cm).
Renée and Lloyd Greif, Los Angeles, California
Article here.

I wrote about the architecture of The Getty Center in my last post and the stunning Rembrandts a couple of posts before that. Today I will feature a few more of my personal favorites from The Getty Museum.


Stepping backwards in time, I begin with the John Singer Sargent's Portrait of Thérése, countess Clary Aldringen. Sargent's life-sized portrait stands tall and proud in the gallery.

Source: The Getty

His quick brushstrokes express the compelling presence of his statuesque subject.

IMG_6994 John Singer Sargent
Portrait of Thérèse, countess Clary AldringenJohn Singer Sargent, 1896.
Oil on canvas, 90 x 48 in. (228.6 x 121.9 cm).
Renée and Lloyd Greif, Los Angeles, California
Article here.


According to a Getty article the countess is portrayed here after she's had three children. I'm consoling myself by believing that she paid Sargent handsomely to shrink her waistline into an impossibly small hourglass.


IMG_6995 John Singer Sargent
Portrait of Thérèse, countess Clary AldringenJohn Singer Sargent, 1896.
Oil on canvas, 90 x 48 in. (228.6 x 121.9 cm).
Renée and Lloyd Greif, Los Angeles, California
Article here.

Since my love affair with Paul Cézanne started last fall, I continue to be inspired to see his work. In stark contrast to the regal presence of the Sargent portrait, Cézanne's melancholy pose for this young Italian woman does not convey an ounce of vanity. 

IMG_7010 Paul Cezanne - Young Italian Woman at a Table
Young Italian Woman at a Table
Paul Cézanne, French, about 1895 - 1900
Oil on canvas,  36 1/8 x 28 7/8 in.
Description here.

I am in awe of Cézanne's commitment to understand the use of space on the canvas using the same familiar props over and over again. Above all, I was thrilled to see the budding spark of cubism in the background.

IMG_7012 Paul Cezanne -Still Life with Apples

Still Life with ApplesPaul Cézanne  (1893 - 1894), French
Oil on canvas, 25 3/4 x 32 1/8 in.
Description here.


While Cézanne used his props as a constant to explore the use of space, Claude Monet studied the effects of light on the same landscape. He painted these haystacks at least thirty times as the seasons changed . The light  in this example is wondrous.


IMG_7006 Claude Monet - Wheatstacks, Snow Effects, Morning
Wheatstacks, Snow Effect, Morning, Claude Monet
French, Giverny, 1891
Oil on canvas, 25 1/2 x 39 1/4 in.
Description here.

A mere 75 kilometers away from Cézanne's Aix-en-Provence, Vincent Van Gogh painted Irises in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence. Each iris is captured as a portrait. One by one, each is expressed with its individual attitude, height, and angle. The strength of the explosive blues are given by the orange flowers in the background and the rust earth in the foreground. Can you imagine this painting without these essential reds? Of all the works of art I saw this day, the movement in this dynamic painting was the crescendo of the day.

 
IMG_7008 Irises by Vincent van Gogh

IrisesVincent van Gogh
Dutch, Saint-Rémy, France, 1889
Oil on canvas, 28 x 36 5/8 in.
Description here.

Stepping back more than one hundred years, I found Augustin Pajou's bust of an ideal female head. She is beautiful and demure with every hair in place.  She was designed as a model to ornament a balcony in Versaille. To see the companion sculpture, click here.

IMG_7005 terra cotta bust
Ideal Female Head, Augustin Pajou (1769 - 1770 ) French
Terracotta on white marble socle
Description here.




Albert Cuyp paintings always get my attention because he is a household name in Amsterdam with a street, outdoor market, and even a supermarket chain named after him. His paintings always convey the essence of the Dutch low countries.

IMG_6967 Aelbert Cuyp
A View of the Maas at Dordrecht, Aelbert Cuyp
Dutch, Dordrecht, about 1645 - 1646
Oil on panel, 19 3/4 x 42 1/4 in.
Description here.

I can understand why Frans Hals is my mother's favorite Dutch portrait artist. The Getty Center and the Rijksmuseum jointly conserved these 400-year-old paintings with beautiful results.

IMG_6969 Frans Hals
Lucas de Clercq and Feyna van Steenkiste
Frans Hals, the Elder (c. 1580 – 26 August 1666), after conservation
Description here.

The oldest piece I include here is the soft pink glass and gold-leaf Pilgrim Flask from Murano.

IMG_6942 glass bottle
Unknown
Italian, Murano, late 1400s or early 1500s
Free-blown colorless (slightly pink) glass with gold leaf, enamel, and applied decoration
14 13/16 x 7 7/8 in.
Description here.


I'm hoping, by posting this, that I will return to that extraordinary island before long. 


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