Category: 19th Century Dog Art

  • My Word For 2015: Function

     

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    Girl in Forest with Basket of Mushrooms and Dog, 1890s print

    As a Nevada County tradition, out local poet, Molly Fisk, invites us to choose a word for the new year.  

    Everyone gets into it.  Some people have known their 2015 words for months.  Some wait until February.  Molly says there's no rush.

    Mine came to me yesterday.  It's "function."

    I toyed with "mindfullness," but it was too detached at a time in my life when dryers, coffee makers, car batteries, and cells within me are malfunctioning. 

    And, as I mentioned in this interview, I've been struggling with art's function in post-Great-Recession America for some time.

    Function: (noun)

    1. the special purpose or activity for which a thing exists or is used

    2. the job or duty of a person

    3. a large ceremony or special event.

    Function: (verb)

    1. to work or operate

    2. to have a specified funtion, role, or purpose

    The fun part comes looking up the etymology of your word because there are always surprises:

    Function (n) – 1530s, "proper work or purpose," from Middle French fonction (16c.) and directly from Latin functionem (nominative functio) "performance, execution," noun of action from functus, past participle of fungi "perform, execute, discharge," from PIE root *bheug- (2) "to use, enjoy." Use in mathematics probably begun by Leibnitz (1692).

    I didn't expect  "performance" or "to enjoy"  in the definition.  I was just hoping to function in 2015.  But it gives me courage…excitement, even.

    The best part is that function comes from the Latin word, functionem, and its past participle is fungi.

    In Italian fungi means mushrooms, the focus of my art, my cooking (mushroom barely soup defrosts in my fridge right now), my health (I've just been reading about the curative properties of shiitake mushrooms), and my long walks with Tyler Foote, who loves mushrooms even more than I do.

    I thought "function" was going to be a workhorse word, dry and practical. But like my favorite fungi, the word has depth and meatiness. It has umami, the 5th sense of savory flavor, a perfect word partner for 2015.

    I'd love to hear your word if you feel like sharing.

    Also, Molly Fisk has just released a new book of her fabulous radio essays entitled Using Your Turn Signal Promotes World Peace: More Observations from a Working Poet. You can order it here.

    The 19th century print of the of the girl and her dog collecting mushrooms is available at Martin2001's Etsy Shop.

    Happy New Year!

  • Tyler Foote by Clair Hartmann

     

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    Tyler Foote by Clair Hartmann, 2014

    North Carolina artist and DAT favorite, Clair Hartmann was so inspired by Tyler Foote Finds: A Compendium of My Ignorance, she asked for a trade: a print of the installation and a DANK Koan in return for one of her imaginary realism portraits of Footey.

    Of course my answer was yes. Clair's portrait of my beloved Darby (1994 – 2011) is one of my treasured possessions, my screen saver, and it was featured in "Modern Dog Magazine."

    Clair's Tyler Foote portrait pays homage to his passion for nature by representing him as Alexander Von Humboldt (1769 – 1859) Prussian explorer, naturalist, and father of botanical and field biogeography…

     

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    Alexander von Humboldt by Franz Xaver Kleiber

     

    I adore it.

    Visit Clair Hartmann's website to commission a portrait of your pet, either classic or imaginary realism style.

    She offers a 25% discount for anyone who works for a non-profit animal rescue and gift certificates for the holidays are available.

    Her Chumley Calendar, a celebration of her own pup, is a gorgeous cross-section of her styles.  Order it here.

    Thank you, Clair.

    xo, Moira and Tyler Foote

    P.S. Watch a brief TED Talk lesson on Alexander von Humboldt, the most famous person you never heard of.  Clair's painting may help give him the recognition he deserves.

  • Tyler Foote at The National Hotel by Mara Casey

     

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    Tyler Foote at The National Hotel by Mara Casey, 9.16.14

    LA-based dog photographer Mara Casey and I have been online friends for over seven years. Last weekend we finally met when she came to Nevada City to look around and take some photos of Tyler Foote.

    This one, at The National Hotel, the oldest continuously operating hotel in California built in stages from 1854 – 1857, is my favorite.

    Thank you so much, Mara!

    See more of Mara's dog (and child) photography at Mara Casey Shoots.

  • In The Company of Dogs and Cats at Blanton Museum of Art

     

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    L’Artisan Moderne Poster by Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, 1896

    Now on view at the Blanton Museum of Art at The University of Texas at Austin, In the Company of Dogs and Cats, featuring over 150 works by masters such as Albrecht Dürer, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, William Blake, Francisco Goya, Paul Gauguin, Takahashi Hiroaki (Shotei), Pablo Picasso, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Edward Hopper, Louise Bourgeois, and others.

    The museum is keeping most of the included works out of the press, but shared L'Artisan Moderne Poster by Henri Toulouse-Lautrec. I've never seen it before. Wonder what other dog-art treasures they have? If you go, let me know.
    Exhibition runs until September 21, 2014.

    Visit Blanton Museum of Art for more information.

  • Dusk, or a Round of Croquet by Pierre Bonnard

     

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    Dusk, or a Round of Croquet by Pierre Bonnard, 1892

    Via Musée d'Orsay, Paris, France.

  • Miss Beatrice Townsend and Her Dog by John Singer Sargent

     

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    Miss Beatrice Townsend and Her Dog by John Singer Sargent, 1882

    This painting looks like all my nieces combined and my sister's dog Danny.

    J'adore.

    Via National Gallery of Art.

  • Watch Elizabeth Warren and Thomas Piketty Discuss Capital in the 21st Century

     

    Alfred De Dreux 1857 - dog in an armchair

     

    Dog in Armchair by Alfred De Dreux, 1857

    Tonight, Monday, June 2 at 8:30 pm ET/5:30 pm PT, watch Thomas Piketty and Senator Elizabeth Warren discuss the new Gilded Age in America and Piketty's 700-page surprise bestseller, Capital in the Twenty-First Century, at MoveOn.org.

    Submit your questions here.

    Read Paul Krugman's review of Piketty's "magnum opus, [one] of the most important economics book of the year – and maybe of the decade," at The New York Review of Books.

  • Dog Artist Mary Cassatt

     

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    Woman on Striped Sofa with a Dog, by Mary Cassatt, 1876

    When I wrote The Cool Girls post a few weeks ago, I spent a lot of time rediscovering Mary Cassatt and decided she is an ideal artist to feature in honor of Mother's Day this weekend.

    She masterfully captures the mother/child bond and the mother/dog bond. Interestingly, she never married or had children, a good reminder that there are many ways to live one's life.

     

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    Susan on a Balcony Holding a Dog by Mary Cassatt, c. 1883

     

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    Little Girl in a Blue Armchair by Mary Cassatt, 1878

     

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    Woman by a Window Feeding her Dog by Mary Cassatt, 1880

     

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    Happy Mother's Day to all you Moms of every kind of creature.

  • The Cool Girls by (Dog) Artist Roseanne Burke

     

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    Roseanne Burke with Harry and Lyra by Moira McLaughlin, 2014

    For the last year, my friend Nevada City artist Roseanne Burke, has been working on a series of 20 encaustic portraits of women artists. As she shared her subjects with me, I began to see a trend; these women loved dogs. Many, like Frida Kahlo, Georgia O’Keeffe, Virginia Woolf, and Marilyn Monroe, I had already featured here on Dog Art Today. A few, such as Mary Cassatt, Josephine Baker, Beatrice Wood and Ruth Asawa, required some research that turned up wonderful photographs and paintings of the artists with their canine companions.

    In the end, it turned out 90% of the women had dogs. And Roseanne has two pups. So, although her exhibition, The Cool Girls: Encaustic Portraits of Remarkable Women, which opens this weekend, doesn’t include a single dog, I see it as much as a celebration of dogs as muses as women as artists.

    I asked Roseanne if I could interview her about this dog/artist connection and she graciously agreed.

    Moira McLaughlin: What was the initial spark of inspiration for this series?

    Roseanne Burke: I had always been intrigued by encaustics, a process of painting with hot wax. And in 2013, I took workshop on it with local artist, Deborah Bridges. Although I had not done much portraiture, as I experimented with the medium, I immediately saw possibilities that I wanted to explore.

    That same year, I watched the PBS documentary Makers: Women Who Make America about the struggle for women’s equality in the United States during the last half of the 20th century. Narrated by Meryl Streep, it featured interviews and archival footage of women from all social strata, from politicians and television stars to flight attendants, coal miners and phone company workers. As a woman who came of age in the 1970’s, I was struck by how hard so many women had fought for the rights we now enjoy and how much we stand to lose if we don’t stand up to the current political backlash against us. The Cool Girls is the intersection of these two events.

     

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    Mary Cassatt by Roseanne Burke, 2014

     

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    Mary Cassatt with Her Dog by Edgar Degas

    MM: How did you define “remarkable” and make your selections?

    RB: I chose women whose work inspired me personally, who were internationally recognized for their art, and who did other remarkable things with their lives. My research on one woman would lead me to others. And, as I learned how multifaceted each one was, I discovered these women had accomplished so much more than I had been aware of, especially socially and politically. That brought the project full circle for me, since the recent attempts to limit women’s rights was one of the inspirations of the series.

     

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    Josephine Baker by Roseanne Burke, 2014

     

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    Josephine Baker with Baby Girl and Fifi, 1928

    MM: Do you see a correlation between dogs and art and how would you describe it?

    RB: Dogs are love wrapped in fur. No matter how you are feeling about yourself on any given day, your dog loves you and thinks you are the best. I think artists often go through periods of frustration, self-doubt, artist’s block, and have pretty negative feelings about their work and perhaps their own value. Having a dog, an animal who absolutely loves you unconditionally, just makes you feel valued and sets you back on the right mental path. Maybe that's why so many of these artists had dogs.

     

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    Frida Kahlo by Roseanne Burke, 2014

     

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    Frida Kahlo and Her Dog

    MM: Did you discover other similarities between the women?

    RB: The biggest similarity was their need to create their art. Many of them faced huge economic, social and political obstacles, but the forged ahead and made their art regardless.

    MM: What surprised you the most in your research?

    RB: I was really surprised by how many connections there were between the women. Some were subtle, for example the subject of Toni Morrison’s master’s thesis was suicide in the writings of Virginia Woolf. Some were direct; Josephine Baker and Frida Kahlo were lovers.

    I was also reminded of the power of “sisterhood” as I discovered how these women helped and supported each other. For example, when Yayoi Kusama was having financial problems, Georgia O’Keeffe helped her to find a gallery and patrons and even offered her a place to live. And when Beatrice Wood was in her eighties and wrote her autobiography, Anaïs Nin convinced her own agent to represent her. These generous acts lead me to reflect with gratitude on the fellow artists (men and women) in my life who share information and experiences and help me make sense of the whole process.

     

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    Billie Holiday by Roseanne Burke, 2014

     

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    Billie Holiday with Her Boxer Mister

    MM: You began this series with one dog, Harry, your sweet, mellow 11-year-old Australian Shepherd mix, and then adopted Lyra, a rambunctious 12-week-old Terrier mix. I know you to be a meticulous planner. Do you think you were channeling the fearless spontaneity of one (or more) of these women when you got a puppy in the middle of preparing for this ambitious solo show? If so, who?

    RB: My partner Jim and I had been planning to get another dog for the past two years. I had been looking on Petfinder.com and had applied for a few puppies, but they didn’t work out. When we saw Lyra, we arranged to meet her a few days later and decided that she was the one.

    Once we made the decision, I knew it would all work out. I am a meticulous planner, but sometimes you just have to make a bold move. Everything of value in your life requires some effort or sacrifice. I could definitely use more sleep since we got Lyra, but she is so joyous, spunky, curious, and spontaneous and adds so much to our lives. I don’t really see myself as channeling the spontaneity of any particular woman, but dogs just make your life better – and most of the women seemed to have thought so too.

     

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    Beatrice Wood by Roseanne Burke, 2014

     

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    Beatrice Wood with Her Dachshund, Ojai, Califronia, 1960

    MM: How have Harry and then Lyra informed your work?

    RB: Dogs just make you happy. And I do better work when I’m happy. They help me to stay in the moment and stay focused on the now. Even though Lyra demands a lot of time, strangely that has helped me stick to a very organized and regimented schedule. I’ve actually made more art since I got her.

    MM: You are an avid reader of Dog Art Today and my best tipster, so I know you know your dog art. What are your three favorite pieces of dog art?

    RB: Birmingham 63 by Jack Levine, 1963, Noel and Bob by Joan Brown, 1964, and Puppy by Jeff Koons, 1992.

     

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    Georgia O'Keeffe by Roseanne Burke, 2014

     

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    Georgia O'Keeffe and Her Chows

    MM: I consider you a dog artist because you are a painter with dogs. And, I love the one painting I know of yours that features a dog, Ike’s Quarter Cafe. Do you have plans to paint your own dogs in upcoming works?

    RB: I had always planned to commission a painting of Harry from one of many wonderful “dog artists.” Since we got Lyra, I’ve been taking lots of photos of the two of them together, and have been encouraged to do a painting, so we’ll see. Right now, I’m pretty focused on the women.

     

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    Alice Walker by Roseanne Burke, 2014

     

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    Alice Walker with Her Dog Miles by Scott Campbell

    Thank you, Roseanne.  I'm so inpired by these women and your "remarkable" work.

    Visit Roseanne Burke's website to see to see all 20 women.

    If you’re near Nevada County, please come to the opening reception for The Cool Girls: Encaustic Portraits of Remarkable Women this Saturday, April 26 from 4 – 7 pm.

    Szabo Vineyards Tasting Room
    316 Broad Street
    Nevada City, California 95959
    Exhibition runs until May 30, 2014.

    Well-behaved dogs are welcome.*

    *Tyler Foote was asked to leave after barking at a sassy Dachshund.

  • Madame Charpentier With Her Children and Dog by August Renoir

     

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    Madame Georges Charpentier With Her Children and Dog by August Renoir, 1878

    Love this.

    Via Pinterest via The Met.