Category: 19th Century Dog Art

  • Dog is Key to Stolen Paul Gauguin Painting

     

     

    Click here to view video on Dog Art Today

    Did you hear this crazy true-crime story about the Italian auto worker/art lover who paid 45,000 Lire (approximately $100 adjusted for today) for two paintings at the Italian Railways lost and found auction in 1975?

    The paintings turned out to be Fruits on a Table with Small Dog by Paul Gauguin, and Woman with Two Arm Chairs by Pierre Bonnard.

    They were stolen from a London art collector in 1970 by two men posing as burglar alarm technicians.

    Authorities think the thieves abandoned the paintings on the train due to fear of customs.

    The paintings hung on the auto worker's kitchen wall for close to 40 years. Their identity was only discovered when the man died and his son decided to sell them. Upon researching the paintings, he realized that the dog look very similar another Paul Gauguin dog painting.

    Now, it's been discovered that the original owner died and left no heirs.

    The paintings are worth between $14 million and $40 millions.

    Who should get to keep them?

    P.S. In other art heist news, I just watched four seasons of "White Collar" on Netflix. It's corny, con man, forgery, buddy-genre fun.  I really enjoyed it.

    P.P.S. I wish there was an undiscovered Bonnard Dachshund too.

  • Irish Wolfhound Painting After Rousseau by Joel Pelletier

     

    Dreaming-with-orson-by-joel-pelletier

     

    Dreaming with Orson by Joel Pelletier

    Joel Pelletier painted Dreaming with Orson, his homage to Henri Rosseau's The Sleeping Gypsy, to celebtate his Irish Wolfhound's unexpected 11th birthday.  It's on a canvas equal to the original's dimensions and to the majesty of the breed.

    I thought it would be perfect to celebrate St. Patrick's Day too.

     

    Joel-pelletier-sleeping-with-irish-wolfhound-black-white-photo

     

    Joel and Orson with Dreaming of Orson

     

     

    The-sleeping-gypsy-by-henri-rousseau-1897

     

    The Sleeping Gypsy by Henri Rousseau, 1897

    See more at Joel Pelletier.

  • Holland Cotter on the Ugly Truth About the Art World

     

    The-Public-Be-Damned-Gilded-Age-cartoon-by-Frederick-Burr-Opper-1882

     

    The Public Be Damned* by Frederick Burr Opper, 1882

    I would really like you to read Holland Cotter's NYT article, "Lost in the Gallery-Industrial Complex," and let me know what you think. 

    Are you making a living as an artist?

    Leave a comment or email me privately.

    * "The Public Be Damned shows the tremendous amount of control that monopolies had during the Gilded Age; they were controlling the congress, the legislature, and the American people. The cartoon was created by Frederick Burr Opper in 1882 and was published on the front page of "Puck" magazine in New York City. The cartoon was created during a time when the nation was dominated by big businesses and business titans like William Vanderbilt and Andrew Carnegie. Frederick Opper was a well known cartoonist, and he drew political cartoons, comic strips, and panel cartoons. Opper drew many effective political cartoons against trusts and monopolies." via Mr. Woodward's AP U.S. History Class.

  • Claude Monet: Dog Artist

    Victor-Jacquemont-Holding-a-Parasol-by-Claude-Monet-1865

    Victor Jacquemont Holding a Parasol by Claude Monet, 1865

    Via WikiPaintings by way of Pinterest.

  • Good Friends by William Merritt Chase

    1+William+Merritt+Chase+(1849-1916)+Good+Friends

    Good Friends by William Merritt Chase (1849-1916)


    Via Barbara Wells Sarudy's lovely and informative blog It's About Time.

  • Édouard Manet’s Balcony in Venice

    Manet_1868_The-Balcony_WIK

    The Balcony by Édouard Manet, 1868-69


    I spent several hours this morning looking for contemporary dog-art works at the 55th Venice Biennale. I got nothing.   But it doesn't officially start until tomorrow, June 1, 2013, so I'm hoping some will appear.


    In the meantime, "Manet. Return to Venice" is drawing 1,700 visitors a day at the Palazzo Ducale according to The New York Times.


    I am a homebody, but art in Venice with dogs makes me wistful for a visit, or maybe just a Bellini on my front porch.

  • Dog in Mourning by Henry Bacon

    Dog-in-mourning-henry-bacon-1870

    Dog in Mourning by Henry Bacon, 1870


    I had the privilege to attend Boston College, class of 1989.  Patriots’ Day, the day of the Boston Marathon, is an event like no other.   Picture July 4th, spring break, and the Super Bowl rolled into one.  Yesterday broke my heart.  Boston will recover, but that beautiful, heady, quintessentially New England civic celebration is now history.

    Via Museum of Fine Arts Boston.

  • Dogs Being Gay

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    Oscar Wilde trade card via Glazed and Confused

    In the late 19th century, Oscar Wilde was a passionate proponent of Aesthetics, a movement that emphasized aesthetic values over socio-political themes in literature, fine art, and music.  In 1887 Wilde established himself as an art critic by reviewing an exhibition of London's anti-establishment Grosvenor Gallery.  He and the devotees of the gallery, whose interiors were green and yellow, dressed in those colors.  And the similarly clad sunflower became the perfect accessory.

    According to Nancy Rutman in her "Sunflower Power" article for Organic Gardening….

    "The unconventional Aesthetes were lampooned in Punch magazine and satirized in the 1881 Gilbert and Sullivan operetta Patience, which included the following lines:


    A pallid and thin young man,
    A haggard and lank young man,
    A greenery-yallery, Grosvenor Gallery,
    Foot-in-the-grave young man!


    The success of Patience in England inspired Wilde's overseas
    tour and launched him as a celebrity, but its stereotypical characters
    caricatured the sexuality of Aesthetic leaders.  So some of the fans who
    wore sunflowers to Wilde's lectures surely wore them as the 19th-century
    equivalent of the gay-pride rainbow flag.

    The modern connotation of the
    word gay may stem from the fact that it was an acronym for Green And
    Yellow. Greenery-yallery."  (Read the full article.)

    In honor of the U.S. Supreme Court hearing arguments for federal recognition of same-sex marriage this week, I've selected some dogs and sunflowers.

    Aesthetic-garland-stove-oscar-wild-trade-card-1882

    Aesthetic Garland Stove Oscar Wild Trade Card with Pug, 1882 via ebay

    Stanley-Spencer-Sunflower-and-Dog-Worship

    Sunflower and Dog Worship by Stanley Spencer, 1937

    Sunflower-hill-todd-young

    Sunflower Hill by Todd Young via Etsy

    Sunflower-and-dog-gary-shontah-bertram

    Sunflower & Dog by Gary Shontah Bertram via flickr
    Sunflowers-and-dogs-topaz

    Sunflowers & Dogs by Topaz via flickr

    "Be yourself; everyone else is already taken."

    – Oscar Wilde
  • Tousled Man and Wiggly Dog

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    Tousled Man and Wiggly Dog , Unidentified Photographer, ca. 1870

    Inscription: (in pencil, inside case) "75" (label, pinned inside case, in ink) "ambrotype of touseled man trying to quite a wiggly dog for the picture-taking"

    Via George Eastman House.

  • Breton Girls Dancing, Pont-Aven by Paul Gauguin

    Breton-girls-dancing-pont-aven-paul-gauguin

    Breton Girls Dancing, Pont-Aven by Paul Gauguin, 1888

    The children are on fall break and harvest is in full swing here in Nevada County, California. It kind of looks like this Paul Gauguin painting: flowers, aprons, dogs, dancing and Danskos.

    Via the National Gallery of Art.