a blog about images by Richard Greatrex

PAUSE A WHILE

THE EYES HAVE IT

Botticelli, Portrait of a Young Man National Gallery London

3 Comments

  1. Jeremy Vevers

    Abstract art should imply an active process involving abstraction from something, somewhere or maybe somehow. Picasso said towards the end of his life that all his art came from people he knew, relationships, sex. Some artists have become purists and somewhat puritanical in their approach. “There must be no reference to or identification of the real world.” The word abstraction then no longer makes any sense.
    20th Century art where this phenomenon became manifest relies on the interface between chaos and order. Our natural human tendency is to tidy up, make sense, derive a pattern and sort. But that interface has been used in art for hundreds of years. Any analysis of arts like Giotto to Claude Lorraine will find abstract structures holding the picture together or dividing the two dimensional space. Advertisers, designers all use these mechanisms to capture the human interest and hold it. And if that process is subliminal then so much the more powerful.

    With the “ismatic era” of the 20th Century when such movements as Constructivism mainly based on a political ideal the move away from anything remotely realistic was achieved by artists such as Malevich with the Black Square or Ives Klein with Blue. But as already stated these will induce an emotional response. When Sigmund Freud unlocked the possibility that allowed us to admit our deepest emotions then so called abstract art was let loose. But wander into a 40 thousand year old cave decorated in abstracted designs of Bison, horse, hand prints and you will find the power of art showing the “essence” of a human response to their world. Nothing has changed.

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  2. Michael j Turner

    On my one film with Helen Miriam we had a talk about where is performance most evident. She said in the eyes. My response was if you are not in a close up it is in the voice or sound.

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  3. Simon Wild

    Another good one Richard That Portrait of a Young Man has always been my favourite painting. Such a direct un-put-on look directly back at the viewer. Across the centuries.

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