Thursday, October 13, 2011
Source 3 : Bill Viola and Joseph Cornell
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Source 3: Jenny Saville
Jenny Saville is a current painter who's work I look at constantly as a source for my own. I am interested in how she uses the human figure as a vehicle to confront tensions surrounding the body as a living mass of meat. Saville's paintings are sumptuous representations of full bodies, often as a commentary as to how the female form is seen and criticized. Her impasto paint and lush qualities of her images draw me in as a viewer like looking at a frosted cake; I can anticipate how delicious it is. Yet a skin crawling feeling comes over me when viewing Saville's paintings.
These portraits are not of individuals, but of meat and mass, cut up, rearranged, and amplified. I am drawn to these images because they are such (gore)geously rendered images of body discomfort. Her work is beautiful to look at a first glance, disturbing in honesty, and yet undeniably hold my attention. Saville uses gore, scaring, fat, wounds in tandem with lushly painted flesh, which has been developed skillfully though layering of paint. The figures and images she chooses to render are often confrontational and put me on edge.
Saville paints her bodies that are reminiscent of Ruben's overtly lush female figures or of Rembrandt’s Slaughtered Ox. Her figures are often on display, splayed open across the canvas. The figure is unapologetic in her realness, but there is a great sorrow to be found in the details of the painting. Tension is derived from opposing small and large elements within the compositions. Issues of self-awareness are played with as single, smaller areas impose themselves upon the larger surrounding masses of each image. One example of this is clear in Saville's Hybrid (Figure2,) where the nakedness of a large woman ripples over the canvas, her hands gripping her own flesh. The point at which her left hand forcefully hangs onto and amplifies the fat of her stomach. This gesture is something that people do all the time in the mirror, but it becomes lude seen in the public realm.
Figure 2: Hybrid, Jenny Saville, 1997
Saville’s paintings are much larger than life size, adding to the generous quality of the flesh being depicted. The paint quality is strongly pigmented and gives a highly sensual impression of the surface of the skin as well as the mass of the body. She sometimes adds marks onto the body, such as white "target" rings. Plan (Figure 3) employs contour lines that are reminiscent of topography maps, giving an allusion to land masses. These rings also highlight Saville’s interest in cosmetic or reconstructive surgery. Something hidden or private is always being revealed in this work. While Saville’s bodies seem to be aware of what they are and they challenge the viewer’s gaze by sharing these private moments of reflection.
Figure 4: Pressure, photo inspiration, Avery Lucas, 2011
Figure 5: Pressure, drawing, Avery Lucas, 2011
Figure 6: Pressure, in process piece, Avery Lucas, 2011
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Erik Wilhelmsen source 3 - Rothko
[1]Erik Wilhelmsen
Third Source- Mark Rothko
October 11, 2011
There are two main aspects to Rothko’s paintings that I’m looking at as a source to my work: monumentality of size and the multi-form blocs in his classic paintings that contrast, relate, and disguise what is underneath. Rothko’s contemporaries known as the New York school all created large works. “Rothko stated explicitly that he painted large paintings because ‘I want to be very intimate and human…however you paint the larger picture, you are in it. It isn’t something you command”(1). A primary concern Rothko abstractly employed was human emotion. Art critic, Irving Sandler wrote, “ Rothko’s mature work enlists the viewer as a substitute for the absent performer, that his pictures effectually cast the viewer as ‘an actor who plays his solitary self”(2). The size of his paintings as well as display in which his paintings often surround the viewer in a solitary room encompass the viewers space. (Fig. 1)

Fig. 1 Rothko Chapel, Houston
Typically Rothko’s classic paintings termed multiform paintings consist of one or a few blocs with a division between the colored blocs and surrounded by a frame or border. (Fig.2) To describe Rothko’s work some critics used the word façade. “The term façade is a face or front, often of a building – something solid, if not impermeable. The term façade also implies that something more lies behind what is visible, that the face itself is an artifice or an enticing disguise for something unexpected and possibly unwelcome behind it”(3). I believe this is an appropriate metaphor of the experience while viewing Rothko’s paintings. Through the division of space and large voids within the rectangular blocs the empty space seems to reflect back toward the viewer.
Fig. 2. No. 18, 1951 (207” x 170.5”)
Camille Chedda: Source (3) - David Hammons
One such piece is In The Hood (fig 1.) in which Hammons displays the severed hood of a green sweatshirt. The title of the work is a play on words, which calls attention not only to what the object is, but also to where it is typically seen. Colloquially, 'hood' refers to poverty stricken, violent African American neighborhoods, and the sweatshirt is stereotypically what such a person within that community might be seen wearing. This torn hood calls attention to a people who may feel just as discarded and socially decapitated as this exhibited object.
In Installation View (Fig 2 & 3), Hammons displayed several abstract paintings on canvas which were concealed by large sheets of garbage bags, thick fabric and furniture. In some pieces the plastic and cloth are glued directly unto the paintings, while in others, they hang from the top of the canvas creating a veil. He has hidden these paintings behind worn and torn coverings, thereby desecrating the commodity of art. Or perhaps the coverings are meant to protect the sacred paintings beneath.
Like Hammons, I have used a non-traditional material in my artwork. In combination with the painting tradition of self-portraiture, the plastic bags communicate conflicting ideas about personal and social identity. The portrait gazes directly out at the viewer from inside the transparent bags. The bags remain utilitarian, cheap, disposable items, while the portrait infuses them with new personal and social meaning.
Lilita Krys 10/11/2011
Influence #3
Viennese expressionist Egon Schiele has been a commanding influence in my work. In his paintings and drawings Schiele draws attention to human psyche, through expressive poses, angularity, anxious lines, and a limited color palette. Nude self-portraits and portraits are indicative to the artist"s own sexual perversity – exhibitionism and voyeurism.
My main interests in Schiele’s work are his superior draftsmanship, expressive quality of the poses, and that of the color, and creation of space without using any actual surrounding. In his
Seated Nude Male, (See Figure 1: Seated Nude Male, by Egon Schiele) a man is seated by means of his curvature into a suggested space. Through bent knees, perspective of femurs, and the leaning of his upper body, Schiele constructs a third dimension. In my paintings I eliminate most of the surroundings in favor of expression of the body (See Figure 2: Reclining). Unlike Schiele’s work, my painting has shadow which is used to suggest the space, and chair. An agitation and angularity in the Seated Man, is reversed into lifelessness in the Reclining, yet both of them are traumatized by the space, loosing their body parts.
In another painting (See Figure 3: Reclining Woman with Legs Apart, by Egon Schiele), a half-naked woman is displaying the intimate parts of her body. The painting’s composition and sexual tonality is echoed in my Floating III (See Figure 4: Floating III). Open legs and a shallow angular perspective are seducing a viewer to step into a very intimate personal space. In Shiele’s it is a voyeuristic experience for a male (presumably). My work is a view at other people’s expressive body qualities (in this instance, a couple), layered over my intuitive psychological responses to them, and a creation of my personal symbolic language in painting.
A portrait of a couple (See Figure 5: Embrace (Egon and Edith Schiele, by Egon Sciele), is a visually dynamic portrait of a relationship. In a Couple I (See Figure 6: Couple I) the poses are more static, where intensity of Shiele’s Embrace strives to show through an awkward head stand of the woman supported from falling by the male’s penis and his head.
In all Shiele’s works, a limited color palette is an important instrument for expressiveness. All combination are used to reflect a certain quality of the subject’s state of mind, rather then a realistic representation of skin or clothes. This aspect of his work is burgeoning in my mind, and as it will form into my own symbolic language, a new body of work will be communicated.
List of Figures:
Figure 1
Egon Schiele, Seated Nude Male, 1910, oil and gouache, 152.5 x 150 cm
Figure 2

Liliya Krys, Reclining, 2011, oil on board, 30” x 30”
Figure 3

Egon Schiele, Reclining Woman with Legs Apart, 1914, gouache and pencil, 30.4 x 47.2 cm
Figure 4

Liliya Krys, Floating III, 2011, oil on board, 40” x 48
Figure 5

Egon Sciele, Embrace (Egon and Edith Schiele), 1915, gouache and pencil, 52.5 x 41.2 cm
Figure 6

Liliya Krys, Couple I, 2011, oil on board, 48” x 40”
Ernesto Neto’s multi-sensory environments create interactive spaces for the viewer through the use of sight, touch and scent. Neto describes his work as "as a place of sensations, a place of exchange and continuity between people."[1] I am not so much drawn to the interactive nature of Neto’s work, but his ability to use scent, and the oddly familiar to trigger emotions. Neto often engulfs the viewer in soft, stretchable fabric, which diffuses light and takes advantage of the inherent comfort of the womb. (Figure 1). 
Figure 1:Celula Nave by Ernesto Neto
In Intimate Immensity, Cliff Lauson writes “Through the presentation of familiar objects and structures, the normative relationships between complete strangers in public spaces are paradoxically de-familiarized as an interaction becomes shared as a communal experience.” [2] As Neto does, I hope to trigger specific emotions in my viewer with my use of gesture and placement of my foms.
Ernesto Neto illustrates the complexities of human relationships and represents them through his use of space. Neto encourages communal comfort by transforming each space into a place where many people can experience his works, together.

Figure 2:Glip Family, Ernesto Neto
Though Neto concentrates on this communal experience, his work has consistently been about action and reaction. In ABA one of his very early works, Neto connects 2 sheets of iron with a nylon thread, presenting the anticipation of the threat of separation. In my work I hope to represent this same anticipated awareness of the dependency of collaborating entities. 
Figure 3: ABA by Ernesto Neto
In Genta Grassa (Figure 4) I used the same ideas of action and reaction. I presented a series of sugar-filled forms, some of which had toppled over under their own weight. I used both fallen and upright forms to provoke the viewer to create there own hypotheses as to what might have occurred with the failed forms and what the future of the still standing, overfilled forms might be.
Waste of time, sorry
Later,
Hank
Neri is renowned for painting on Italian Carrara marble. He drove the Italians to complain that he “had no respect,” Selz 24, because the material was normally treated according to historical convention. Neri found it exciting to add to a naturally beautiful material without inhibition. Albright, 59. I use bronze in a similar way, as a historically significant material that asks for treatment of color. Rather than patina, I use oil paint on the surface of bronze to achieve the color I require for the piece.
Figure 7. Left: Manuel Neri, Escalieta No.2, 1988. Right: Sara Heiderich, Unspoken Plea, 2009.
Texture plays an equally important role as color in Neri’s sculpture. The method in which he cuts away at the figure is a “simultaneous sense of creation and destruction of the human form.” Nieto, 53. He physically creates texture by adding in some areas and gouging away in other areas. The manner in which he attacks the surface of the figure balances the smooth, lovingly modeled areas. When I approach texture in my studio, I let the material command the texture while carefully modeling the form of the pieces. The result is a skin texture that read as both growth and decomposition.
Figure 8. Left: Manuel Neri, Mujer Pegada No. 2, 1986. Right: Sara Heiderich, Come Closer, 2010.
When I look at Manuel Neri’s drawings and paintings I am again drawn to his use of color and texture. Loose marks compose the outline of a general figure. Then he applies color in large swatches on and around the body. Energized mark making is something that I find exciting when I do quick gesture drawings: so much that I carry over the scribbled line quality to more developed drawings. Neri’s rigorous marks are often alongside sensitive contour lines of the edges of the body. I enjoy the resulting figure that holds a vibrant liveliness while remaining an anonymous symbol of humanity.
Figure 9. Left: Manuel Neri, Untitled (Red Figure), 1990. Right: Sara Heiderich, Old Man with Staff, 2008.
Selz, Peter. “Figural Poetry: A Conversation with Manuel Neri,” Sculpture, (October 2006)
Albright, Thomas. “Manuel Neri’s Survivors: Sculpture for the Age of Anxiety,” ARTnews (January 1981)
Nieto, Margarita. “Manuel Neri,” Latin American Art. (Fall 1989)









