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Contextual Analysis – Pieter Claesz

Pieter Claesz lived through the 1600’s when still-life paintings began to take off, during this time he was soon titled a ‘Dutch Golden Age Painter of Still-Life’. He was born in 1597 in Belgium. His art work was painted with subdued, virtually monochrome colours, with a subtle handling of light and texture allowing the symbolic meanings and expressions within the outcome to clearly be showcased. It is common to see motifs such as skulls for allegorical purposes. His work avoided a crowded composition and stuck to simplicity in order for the prime symbolism to be shown. It is said the Claesz artistic aim was to render the materials and catch the reflected light as accurately as possible, which was considered his speciality with still life pieces. He was the first artist to portray everyday objects, such as a rummer, a tin plate and a herring, in such a way to showcase the beauty of the objects.

Still Life with a Skull and a Writing Quill,1628 – Pieter Claesz

The image above is ‘Still Life with a Skull and a Writing Quill’ painted in 1628 by Pieter Claesz. The artist used a median of wood and painted the image using oil paint. The sizing of the painting is 24.1 cm by 35.9 cm and can be found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. The painting falls into the subcategory of Vanitas

Visually, the art piece creates a sense of business through the proximity of all the objects, which contrasts the small amount of objects there actually is. The first item my eyes are drawn to is the skull, which presents the formal elements of texture and scape. In addition, it informs viewers that the work falls into the still life subcategory of vanitas. The skull itself symbolises the death and mortality, which is also emphasised by the pocket watch, located in the foreground of the skull, which is symbolic for a lack of time, creating the overall ideology that life is short. The skull is leaning on a book which has a quill placed next to it, (contextually, and expensive item during the time period the work was painted in, creating a stronger meaning towards the symbolism it holds.), which is a common feature in a vanitas painting, which is used to warn viewers of the futility of worldly pursuit. Moreover, in the background there is an old school candle holder, with the glass covering laying beside it. You can faintly see an amber in the holder, suggesting the candle has just been blown out, which symbolises a passage of time and reinforce the sense of death.

After deciphering the symbolic representation of each item within the frame, it clearly demonstrates the intended conceptual representation in the work. The painting is suggesting, that time is short and that we do not have long left till we die, bringing in the concept of death (which many feared the thought of death in 1628). Contextually, the concept of death is major due to the two outbreaks of the bubonic plague during this time. Suggesting the idea of death and lack of time, emphasises the ideology that people thought the plague would kill everyone off and that when people gain the illness they do not have long before it kills them off.

The main formal elements presented within this painting are texture, space and shape, which are all presented through the positing of the different objects. Overall, the painting has a morbid tone which is emphasises by the monochrome colours. Claesz, focused on accurately representing the light, which I think he was successful in doing within the still life painting. This is due to an accurate reflection on the glass and the artificial light source being shone and above, and has a clear radius. This lighting also mainly illuminates the skull, making it the main focal point of the painting, which clearly emphasises the conceptual representation within the piece.

Analysis

Cookmaid with Still Life of Vegetables and Fruit c.1620-5 Sir Nathaniel Bacon

Sir Nathaniel Bacon did not paint professionally but he was a skilled amateur artist. The cook maid surrounded with lavish produce, usually associated with Dutch and Flemish art, is unusual in England for the period. The painting is quite unusual for British art of this period since it shows a lavish still life. Still life paintings became established in Britain in the late seventeenth century.

Every item depicted in the image is known to have been growing in England. Although every item represented in the painting was grown in England, not all would have been in season. According to a letter, Bacon was growing melons at his estate in East Anglia, and was known to have a keen interest in horticulture. The painting reveals the artist’s interest in gardening which was becoming increasingly fashionable during this time period.

His wealth let him paint for his own pleasure. We know that Nathaniel Bacon travelled in the Southern Netherlands during this period and that paintings of cook maids were prevalent in the southern Netherlands in the late 16 Century and early 17th Century. He may have travelled there, trained there and become accustomed to this compositional style while he was there.

The subject most likely would have had erotic connotations. The large amount of ripe melons surrounding the cookmaid echo her cleavage.

https://www.tate.org.uk/context-comment/audio/curator-tim-batchelor-discusses-cookmaid-still-life-vegetables-and-fruit

History of Still Life

Still life images is a work of art that where the subject of the image is either natural (food, flowers, animals, plants, etc) or man-made (glasses, books, jewelry, etc). Still life allows artists to have a lost of freedom and to experiment and rearrange objects of the image.

Many of the first and original idea of still life paintings are found in the ancient Egyptian tombs and monuments. These paintings give an insight to the life and events happening during these times. But also images drawn in the tombs of those who had died, had objects drawn so they could take them to the afterlife and have. The drawings weren’t a piece of artwork for the Egyptians they had a functioning purpose in their beliefs. The images on the walls are known as relief’s which is a drawing/painting carved into the walls, normally in the colors; blue, black, red, green and gold.

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Egyptian painting

Along with the Egyptians, cavemen also use to draw onto the walls and ceilings of their caves, they did this up to 40,000 years ago. Their paintings include simple shapes, such as large wild animals (horses, deer, bison) as these animals were hunted down by the cavemen as a source of nutrition. However, the drawings of humans were rare and and weren’t as detailed as the drawings of the animals. The images include pigments of red, yellow and charcoal or even by using rocks to indent the walls. It is said that some of the drawings were made by blowing pigment onto the wall through a homemade pipe of some sorts into the center and then being decorated by lines and dashes.

Image result for cave paintings
Cave painting

As we moved on through history, images began to develop, as equipment was invented. Still images started to become of flowers, flowers and fruit, breakfast pieces and more. This all came through from the Dutch Republic as they began to rise and create a national identity, they started to trade with the Indians and South Americans and the popularity of paintings grew, this opened up a whole new market. As this trade flung open, it began to introduce Dutch Artists of the 17th century, this is where still images portrayed inanimate objects.

Image result for dutch breakfast still images

Ambrosius Bosschaert was a Dutch still life painter, born in 1573. He specialised in painting flowers, along with his three other sons. The flowers he painted were symmetrical, with accuracy in the smallest parts of the paintings, sometimes containing symbolic and religious meaning. Bosschaert was one of the first to specialist in still life. A few of his images include.

His images are captivating, in the sense of the precision and the colours he uses are appealing to the human eye. The images showing bloomed flowers, they are at the best of their lives before they die. Bosschaert painted so many different images, but this image stood out to me;

This image holds so much colour and diversity that it catches the human eye, mainly due to the fact of the blue sky background with the multi coloured flowers. Some of the flowers in this image hold a religious value in the christian faith, such as the rose and lily’s in the image. A lily is said to represent the purity and divinity of Jesus, the flower is normally displayed during Easter as lily’s where said to of grew around where Jesus was crucified. It also represent the resurrection as a lily rise from a single bulb which represents Jesus rising from the tomb. Along with the rose representing purity and they are reminders of Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection. They are used to commemorate important events during Christ’s journey. This meaning that this image may have been painted during the easter time as a memory or to show respect, however in the bottom right corner there is a butterfly. Butterfly’s hold meanings, just like flowers but their meanings stand as the growth and change in life and on earth, that they have a journey of freedom, freedom for their past, they are breathtaking. With all this said the image can have a meaning of growing to your best, as the flowers are drawn at their highest point in their life, from a little bud to a bloomed, colourful flower, just like how the butterfly develops through its life of freedom. It is saying to grow to highest point in life and enjoy it.

Still Life

A Still Life painting is a piece that features an arrangement of inanimate objects as its subject. Usually, these items are on a table and often include organic objects such as fruit and flowers and household items.

Northern Renaissance artists popularised still life imagery with their flower paintings. These pieces typically showcase colourful flora when they are blooming. These paintings became important in the early 17th century, when Northern Renaissance artists became interested in creating realistic studies of everyday items.

The Dutch Golden Age artists created vanities paintings. These paintings are inspired by the genre memento mori which translates to “remember that you have to die” in Latin. These pieces often pair cut flowers with objects like human skulls, candles and hourglasses to comment on the short nature of life.

Still life were a great opportunity to display skill in painting textures and surfaces in great detail and with realistic light effects. Food of all kinds laid out on a table, silver cutlery, intricate patterns and subtle folds in table cloths and flowers all challenged painters. Mostly all still life had a moralistic message, usually concerned with the shortness of life; This is known as the vanitas theme.

Vanitas Paintings – A Metaphor for Transience

Symbolism was present in every form of Still Life but never more significant than in Vanitas work where everything spoke of the inevitability of death: Skull – reminder of the certainty of death; The watch or hourglass – the brevity of life. Flowers and butterflies can be interpreted in the same way, and a peeled lemon was, like life, attractive to look at but bitter to taste. Art Historians debate how much, and how seriously, the vanitas theme is implied in still life paintings without explicit imagery such as a skull.

Rachel Ruysch, Fruit and Insects

Still Life – Contextual Study

Still-Life became an independent, and popular, genre of paintings in the early 1600’s, in Dutch and Northern Europe. This new form of Dutch art started to become renowned for being highly concerned with Khar (close scrutiny of the natural world). The objects showcased within the frame are considered symbolic of religion and morality which reflects the culture the artist is in. The symbolism is shown through different objects such as burnt candles, human skulls, dying flowers, fruits and vegetables, broken chalices, jewellery, crowns, watches, mirrors, bottles, glasses, vases and many more; these objects usually symbolise death, human life, power, beauty and wealth. As mentioned previous, still-life is the composed portray of objects, this topic was considered broad and the objects were soon condensed into sub categories, due to the object and the symbolic representation that the object holds.

Flower Piece

Culturally, many towns, such as Amsterdam; Utrecht, specified in flower pieces, which were highly regarded and the artists where well paid, which illuminates the socio-economic status of the towns which specialised in this form of still-life art. The flowers within the painting were realistic, but the arrangement of the flowers were not, some artists would place all four season flowers within one bouquet. Around the 1620’s this form of still-life was soon showcasing butterflies and snails, which evolved the symbolism of the imagery to showcase freed after death. The flowers themselves symbolised the language of flowers and a contemporary view: for example the Madonna lily , which was white, showcased purity and the Virgin Mary, outlining the importance of religion during this time.

Fruit and Flowers

Fruit could often be seen within a floral composition. Items such as oysters and mussels showcased the vanities overtones of the brevity life, and could sometimes be seen as the artists erotic implications. In addition, the fruit also has religious aspects such as an apply symbolising temptation and a grape showing the blood of christ.

Breakfast

This form of still-life imagery first came about in Haarlem and Amsterdam were the orientation of the canvas turned to landscape in order to accommodate the background of a table, having the table top reach from one edge to the other. The food used was simplistic, cheese, fruit and nuts, and often presented as half eaten to show realism within the art work. In early forms of this category the composition looked at the table from a birds eye view, however the view point has now been lowered.

Mila Vasileva

Vanitas Painting

This category showcased the ideology that we only live for a short time, and nothing lasts forever, raising societies awareness of death did not disappear with the end of the Twelve Year Truce (In 1620 the Republic suffered two major outbreaks of the bubonic plague). A reoccurring motif within this form is a skull, which symbolises death and mortality clearly to viewers. A sense of time can also be shown through hour glasses and watches, to represent the ideology that time is short.

Pieter Claesz

Curtain

Within this form lies two types of curtain painting: wrapped theatrical, pulled to one side and sometimes knotted up, and a curtain suspend from a rod above the window. The curtains where usually painted blue and green. This became popular as it represent the time period were the Dutch use to hide the still-life paintings behind curtains. This motif was originally showcased by Rembrandt who painted the ‘Holy Family’ in 1646.

Rembrandt ‘Holy Family’ 1646.

Letter Racks, Quodilbets, Cupboards and Peepshows

This motif was first presented and initiated by artist Samuel Hoogdtraten, were he painted a few red ribbons pinned onto a board containing snap shots of socially informative letters, this was entitled ‘The Letter Rack’. A quodlibet is latin for “what you like”, which used a letter rack showcasing a personal items such as combs, pens and bills. This form often had links with curtains, hiding the items behind creating a double meaning towards the final outcome.

Samuel Hoogdtraten ‘The Letter Rack’

Trompe L’Oeil with Hunting Equipment

Anthonie and Johannes Leemans developed a new specific composition to still-life. Within the imagery presented they did not focus on the hunting or the success, but the trapping and killing of the animals. This form of Trompe L’Oeil also showed the would-be hunting equipment ready to use.

Johannes Leemans

Pronk

As the 16th century continued the socio-economic status of cities increased, which mean that better equipment and paint could be purchased in order to produce higher quality work. The pigment of the paint was also high quality, lapis lazuli, allowing paintings such as silver wear, jugs and other items as such to be painted.

In the early 17th century the popularity of still-life paintings began it’s decrease, meaning the death of so many of the above categories of still-life. What did survive was the Dutch psyche: decorative hunting still life and the flower paintings, which are still be created through different media’s to this day.

Mood Boards Showcasing Contextual Examples of Still Life.

Historical Contexts: Objects

Edouard Manet once called still life “the touchstone of painting.” Characterised by an interest in the insentient, this genre of art has been popular across movements, cultures, and periods, with major figures like Paul Cézanne and Pablo Picasso sharing the Impressionist artist‘s view.

STILL LIFE: nature morte; A still life pictorial is a painting/drawing/photograph is a piece that features an arrangement of inanimate objects as it’s subject. Traditionally these items would be set on a table and would often include organic items such as fruit and flowers, as well as household items such as glassware.

The term “still life” is derived from the Dutch word stilleven, which gained prominence during the 16th century. While it was during this time that the still life gained recognition as a genre, its roots date back to ancient times.

Ancient History

Still-life as an art form first originated from Ancient Egyptian highly codified mortuary rituals. Egyptians at the time believed that objects represented on the walls of a tumb or inside a sarcophagus would accompany the dead in the afterlife. Greek and Romans later realised similar types of paintings though they did not associate any religious symbolism to it anymore. However, unlike Egyptian frescoes which were not using any perspective or shading, Greek and Roman started to develop a somewhat sophisticated form of still-life ar, more realistic and detailed.

Socio Economic Background:

The creation of the Dutch Republic caused a rise in having great pride in national identity and it came with a delight in the new art that was uniquely Dutch. As the economy flourished, and the trade with the Indies and South America grew so did the fashion for collecting, the popularity of painting in general, and Still Life (Stilleven) in particular.

As a result of this trade with far-flung places and the introduction of exotica, Dutch artists of the 17th century became renowned for being greatly concerned with what Kahr refers to as a: ‘close scrutiny of the natural world.’ This, combined with their preoccupation with perspective and the study of light, provided the basic elements of Still Life painting. The term had come into general usage in mid-century, Still Life being the carefully composed portrayal of inanimate objects.

RENAISSANCE

Northern Renaissance artists popularized still life iconography with their flower paintings. These pieces typically showcase colorful flora “from different countries and even different continents in one vase and at one moment of blooming” (Metropolitan Museum of Art) and often do not feature other subject matter. These paintings rose to prominence in the early 17th century, when Northern Renaissance artists grew increasingly interested in creating realistic studies of everyday items.

DUTCH GOLDEN AGE

Dutch Golden Age artists took this interest in detailed floral art a step further with their vanitas paintings. Vanitas paintings are inspired by memento mori, a genre of painting whose Latin name translates to “remember that you have to die.” Like memento mori depictionsthese pieces often pair cut flowers with objects like human skulls, waning candles, and overturned hourglasses to comment on the fleeting nature of life. Unlike memento mori art, however, vanitas paintings “also include other symbols such as musical instruments, wine and books to remind us explicitly of the vanity of worldly pleasures and goods” 

https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/s/still-life

Image Analysis:

Jan Baptist Weenix painted a wide range of subjects: landscapes, still life, genre scenes, history paintings. During the early part of his career he painted Italianizing scenes in the style of his father, before achieving a reputation as a talented painter of game, both living and dead. Weenix went on to become one of Holland’s most celebrated painters of hunting still-life.

Hunting still-lives, clearly, differ from everyday kitchen and table scenes, contextually they highlight an important aspect of the lives of a highly privileged social class. Hunting trophies such as this were often painted for the townhouse or castles of wealthy parsons. In this way aristocratic parsons were able to advertise their passion for hunting. Designed to impress, depictions of the game, together with game bags and other accessories, in sophisticated, luxurious settings, were seen as potent symbolic expressions of aristocratic wealth, pride and landownership.

As with Weenix’s paintings of game, and other hunting still lifes of the time, an animal (in this painting a hare) is shown hanging by one of its back legs with its head down, as a trophy. The motif is directly related to the practice and customs of hunting with dogs. Here the hare is hung from the top of an arched window frame seeing out to a landscape. The animals head and legs are resting on a marble ledge and to the right lie two partridges on top of what could be a game bag. To the left of the hare what seems to be a type of hunting horn is seen to be sticking out. The colour scheme of dark warm tones, browns and reds, could be taken as a hint towards the idea of raw meat, associated with an essence of hunting, the window ledge itself is made from a slab of red and white-veined marble.

PHOTO-ASSIGNMENT 2: Home Sweet Home

ESTABLISHING SHOT:

A group portrait of two or more members of the family where you are constructing an image that tells a story. This image can be naturally observed or staged. The main focus is conveying a sense of narrative.

DETAIL SHOT:

Focus on detail of a person or a close up that conveys something about the individual character or identity e.g. age, race, gender, sexuality, fashion, hobby, lifestyle etc.

ALAIN LABOILE

La Familie

Alain Laboile is a father of six. Through his photographic work he celebrates and documents his family life. His work reflects their way of life, revolving around their childhood. Although his work is deeply personal, it is also accessible, addressing human nature and allowing the viewer to enter his life and reflect on their own childhood. His eye for beautiful compositions, along with his choice to shoot in black and white, gives his photographs a timeless feel and make them seem as though they could have been a part of anyone’s childhood. Laboile describes his family’s life as “atypical”. Lots of Western families these days find themselves living in urban settings, unlike the rural area his children explore in his photos.

MY RESPONSE

Still life

Still life (nature morte) is a pictorial form of art that depicts inanimate objects. Normally set on a table and depicting things like flowers, food or household items. Still life emerged to allow artists to express things that were taboo at the time like class, mortality and sexuality, they did this by adding subtle things like gold, expensive food and skulls. Below are some examples.

A good still life artist that I found is called Pieter Claesz, who was a Dutch golden age painter of still lifes in the early to mid 1600’s. He is renowned for his use of lighting and attention to detail. He also often used household items that were more upper class for his time. He also featured lots of expensive and exotic foods like lobster, crab and grapes. In some of his work he also featured a skull which he used to serve as a reminder of mortality which was a bigger thought in those ages as the lifespan was significantly lower.

This image is called Stillleben mit brennender Kerze (Still Life with Burning Candle) within it, it has the candle burning down which could be a reference to mortality as he often had in his work. The candle Snub also has a similar image I believe because it is open and placed close to the candle. There is also the open book with the glasses on which suggests that the person who was reading it has decided to stop reading. The glass goblet which features in many of his paintings is half full of water and it could be to provoke the optimistic/pessimistic thought of half full or half empty. The two books in the back could be referencing wealth as they look expensive and high-class.

PHOTO-ASSIGNMENT 1: Home Sweet Home

ENVIRONMENTAL PORTRAIT:

An environmental portrait is a portrait captured in the subject’s usual environment, such as in their home or workplace, and usually highlights the subject’s life and surroundings. By photographing a person in their natural surroundings, the photographer will be able to illuminate their character better and therefore portray their personality rather than their physical features. It is also thought that by photographing a person in their natural surroundings , the subject will be more at ease, as opposed to in a studio which portrays an artificial experience.

CANDID PORTRAIT:

A candid portrait is where the subject is unaware that a photo has been taken. The idea of a candid portrait is to capture people acting naturally. They should be unaware they are being photographed, as their behaviour often changes once they become aware of the camera.

ALEC SOTH

I Know How Furiously Your Heart Is Beating is a slim book including 35 photographs. The domestic interiors captured in his photographs illuminate the subjects who lives in them. When capturing portraits he looks for interesting people and interesting spaces: “They can be male or female, young or old, rich or poor. The main thing is to have an intimate encounter that is visually strong”.

The reporter Sean O’Hagan, who wrote an article about Alec Soth for the Guardian, watched him work up close as he photographed people who lived in “interesting spaces”. Apparently Soth uses a large glass plate camera on a tripod. The process is difficult and requires patience from the sitter, who has to remain still while Soth sets up the shot, disappearing for a long amount of time under a large blanket. He works in a Victorian way which is more suited for outdoor photography. Under the blanket Soth tries to get things in focus. It’s a camera built to photograph landscapes and Soth is using it in constricted interior spaces. It’s hard work for Alec Soth to take a photograph but nothing else comes close when it comes to capturing light and texture.

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2019/mar/09/alec-soth-photographer-i-know-your-heart-is-beating-furious-interview

MY RESPONSE

Home Sweet Home-Action Planning (Environmental Photography)

Whats Environmental Photography?

An environmental portrait is a portrait executed in the subject’s usual environment, such as in their home or workplace, and typically illuminates the subject’s life and surroundings. The term is most frequently used of a genre of photography.

By photographing a person in their natural surroundings, it is thought that you will be able to better illuminate their character, and therefore portray the essence of their personality, rather than merely a likeness of their physical features. It is also thought that by photographing a person in their natural surroundings, the subject will be more at ease, and so be more conducive to expressing themselves, as opposed to in a studio, which can be a rather intimidating and artificial experience

Image result for environmental portrait

The main use of environmental photography is to help explain a certain period in time or a certain person’s lifestyle. There are many famous photographs that were taken during the Great Depression, and these photos would definitely constitute as environmental photos. Whenever you are taking a photo that explains the environment of that period of time, you are taking an environmental photography.

Past Experience

This is my second time experimenting with environmental photography as i have done it n the past on my 2019 blog post in which were i explored Arnold Newman’s environment.

Plan

This time i’m exploring my current home environment using environmental photography, i which where i will photograph my guardians in their home doing whatever they normally do so i can capture them as naturally as possible, i wont ask them to pose for me or i might not even tell them that i’m photographing them. then i’m going to photograph my room mate doing whatever he normally would be doing.

Finishing up

After taking all the photographs i need i will make a contact sheet on light room cc to chose the best portraits that i will be using, and i will edit these best photos on light room as well until i’m happy with them, after that i will be posting them on my blog post.

Conclusion

In conclusion, the point of my whole project is to experiment with environmental photography and increase my experience in it meanwhile i will be demonstrating how the people at my current home live. On the other hand i will also be expanding my skills in editing.