Posted on 06/09/2012 3:46:55 PM PDT by Doogle
With their spectacular use of focus and reflected light, these incredible artworks look like carefully composed still-life photographs.
But in fact they are all painstakingly rendered on canvas with acrylic paints by Canadian artist Jason de Graaf.
The hyperrealistic paintings, which almost appear as if they are computer generated, are like freeze frames of a world more magical than our own - inspiring the term Magic Realism as a description.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
These days, if you did them the other way around, you’d be swimming in NEA grants.
I am familiar with one particular work cited by Mr. Hockney (I have seen the actual work--not just pictures--at the Memphis Brooks Museum). Aesthetically, I don't like it as much as a like many of William Bouguereau's works. While it certainly includes a level of extraneous detail not typically found in classical realism, and the perspective would not be inconsistent with a camera obscura, by my understanding Hockney goes further:
I never got the impression, while reading Hockney's book, that he was denigrating the classical artists at all. He presented the idea that projection was a tool that they used. He then presented his evidence.
Ultimately, a work of art is successful for a wide variety of reasons - the mere presence of extraneous detail isn't helpful. You could project to your heart's content, but if you aren't a good artist (concept, composition, color, execution, etc), you will end up with crap.
There was a lot of dreck produced, as well as some good stuff. Further, since the paintings wouldn't have generally had to last more than a month, I wouldn't be surprised if, in many cases, the paints and materials were less archival than would be used in paintings that were designed to be of lasting value. Further, while I haven't examined paintings that were painted for the purpose of reproduction, I have seen some pen-and-ink original cartoons. Many of them included parts that were cut and pasted over other parts. I suspect few art buyers, even today, would be interested in buying an obscure cut-and-paste work by an obscure artist. Although some of the better works and artists from the middle of the last century have become well-known, I don't think such a thing would have happened without some major and unforeseen changes in imaging technologies. If a magazine was going to print 100,000 copies, I don't think anyone would have expected that the cover artwork would ever be seen by anyone who didn't happen to view one of those 100,000 copies. It was only the fact that technologies have allowed images to become immortal that has given their original representations lasting value.
Incidentally, I suspect that the idea of paintings as being a transitory work product goes back centuries, to the theater. Some productions, from what I understand, featured some rather wonderfully painted scenery, but since the scenery produced for a production existed for no other purpose than to be used in that production, the scenery would generally be junked once the production was complete. I'm sure a lot of the scenery that's been produced, even for quality productions, was relative dreck, and some of it may have been good, but even most of that would have been junked with the rest.
And those are, obviously, very rare.
Incredible stuff, but I’ve always thought acrylics had no “soul”. Oils, pastels, etc. have a certain warmth to them. Just MHO
Well said, and very true. Some of the most beautiful music I've ever heard, was created by musicians who had no formal training at all. Examples abound in the annals of popular music.
..if I draw a straight line and it’s anything other than black or red, I’m ecstatic. So when something is very unusual I marvel.
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BFL = Bump For Later. Kind of like a bookmark.
yeah, I figured it out right after I posted ???
Thanks for the ping.
It was just what I needed today.
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