Tag: dutch

  • Downloading the Rijksmuseum: Masterpieces for Everyone

    Night watch-rembrandt

    Night Watch by Rembrandt van Rijn, 1642

    After ten years of renovation, Holland's Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam will reopen its doors on April 13, 2013. The national museum, built in 1885, is home to thousands of works from the 17th Century Golden Age of Dutch painting, including many renowned Rembrandts .  But, according to Wim Pijbes, General-Director of the Rijksmuseum, their 21st century vision for the museum is to be modern.

    To that end, they launched Rijksstudio, a groundbreaking online initiative featuring 125,000 high-resolution images available for download, printing, and manipulation for free.  Knowing that unleashing this toolbox onto the public might overwhelm, they strategically partnered with (and linked to) innovative on-demand print companies like ixxi (wall art), eeeeFUN (electric scooters), colormyinterior (wallpaper), and designskins (smartphone skins).

    And, to get the creative juices flowing, they asked leading international artists, designers, and architects to play around.

    Dutchrepublic11

    VW Van

    Rijksstudio-tattoo-droog

    Tattoo by Droog Studio

    My favorite is this video (yes there's a dog in it)….

    "Part of a Bigger Plan" by Christian Borstlap (click here to view)

    Mother-task-by-pieter-de-hooch-1658

    Mother Task by Pieter de Hooch, ca. 1658 -1660


    Inspired, I downloaded Binnenkamer met een moeder die het haar van haar kind reinigt, bekend als 'Moedertaak'  by Pieter de Hooch.

    Translation: Mother Task, Mom Picking Lice from her Child's Head.

    It's a wonderful painting of Dutch domestic life. But perhaps a little dark, no? 
    And, I really liked that dog.  What's he up to?   Watching another child go off to school?  Waiting for Dad to come home 'cause he's loose with the table scraps?  Maybe, he just doesn't doesn't want head lice.

    I made this…

     

    Dutch-dog

    Dutch Dog manipulated by Moira McLaughlin, 2013

    It, too, is high resolution, available for framing, wallpaper, t-shirts, etc. 
    But, to me, what's really neat are the other images my new "painting" recalled…

    Romare-bearden-falling-star

    Falling Star by Romare Bearden, 1979

    Vivian-maier-dog-and-couple-kitchen

    Dog with Couple by Vivian Maier, 1926- 2009

    Dog-in-the-night-chuck-rigg

    Dog in the Night by Chuck Rigg

    Darbys-spot-600

    Darby's Spot by Moira McLaughlin, 2011

    I've decided Holland is the Oprah of countries, "YOU get a Rembrandt!  And YOU get a Rembrandt! And YOU get a Rembrandt!"

    Put another way, Rijksstudio is a Dutch treat.

    Hat tip to reader Moniek Huizinga letting me know.  Go make something.

  • Joan Miró: Dog Artist + Anti-Artist

    Joan_miro_dutch_interior_I

    Dutch Interior (I), 1928

    It takes a lot for me to consider getting on a plane and flying to NYC into the jaws on winter.  But reading Holland Cotter's review in the NYT of Joan Miró: Painting and Anti-Painting 1927-1937 at MoMA got me thinking it might be worth it.

    The enticement began with this passage:

    "The exhibition illustrates, step by step, exactly how Miró stalked and attacked painting — zapped its conventions, messed up its history, spoiled its market value — through 12 distinct groups of experimental works produced over a decade. If, in the end, painting survived, that’s neither here nor there. The story’s the thing. Crisp, clear and chronological, the show reads like a combination of espionage yarn and psychological thriller set out in a dozen page-turning chapters."

    Joan_miro_dog_close_up

    Close up of Dog from Dutch Interior (I)

    Then, there are the dogs, the strange, exotic beings from his Imaginary Dutch Portraits series. Although, I am not 100% sure the flying white and blue creature in Dutch Interior (III), is a dog.  I interpret it as one, and I think Miró would be fine with my subjective take.

    Joan_miro_dutch_interior

    Dutch Interior (III), 1928

    Finally, Cotter sums up Miró's journey through these decades and the exhibition itself:

    "He must have been exhausted. I was when I reached the last gallery, but exhilarated too because I felt I’d been through something: not the blockbuster slog but the experience of one artist’s creative process and the experience of an exhibition as a form of thinking. Like reading a book, the process makes you part of the trip, not just a witness to it.

    In this case the trip is fairly demanding but one I suspect that audiences with even a casual interest in how art is conceived and made will enjoy. From beginning to end, the particular audience I had in mind was a special one, art students.

    For them the show could serve as a manual of anti-authoritarian moves. Unpopular Mechanics of Painting, you might call it. But it could also be a guide to living a creative life. This is particularly true for students who are under pressure to choose a single medium (painting, say) and stay with it; to firm up a signature style and stay with it; to get to the market early and stay there.

    To these requirements, the Miró show says: no, no, no. Change mediums, like habits, as often as possible. Make your signature look a no-look or every-look, and keep changing that. Get to the market early if you want, but then go home and stay there awhile and work. Then stay longer. Destroy the artist you think the world thinks you’re supposed to be, and you’ll start to find the artist you are."

    Well, I was ready to book a ticket east. Then, I stopped by MoMA's website and discovered their comprehensive online exhibition of the show. Awesome! In my cozy, sun-filled office, I took Miró's journey myself. Of course, nothing can compare to seeing these works in person, some are 7 feet tall, but for a hot-house flower like me.   This was pretty great.

    Joan Miró: Painting and Anti-Painting 1927-1937 runs until January 12, 2009.  For more info visit MoMA.org.

    (But I am still not forgiving Holland Cotter for calling Picasso's Le Rêve kitsch.)

    Related Links:
    17th Century Dutch Dog Paintings

  • M.C. Escher the Dog Artist

    Escher_dogs

    Seems famous Dutch graphic artist M.C. Escher (1898-1972), known for his intricate impossible contsructions,  started out with more simple shapes like this dog tessellation (a geometric design of identical interlocking shapes) from 1938.

    See more cool dog tessellations on Rita's Dog Blog, a lovely blog written by a dog with great taste in art.