Difference between revisions of "User:B.Smulders"

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Revision as of 05:15, 7 October 2014

ABOUT Bor Smulders
Graphic Design
Portofolio

307845.jpg


Documents First meeting a stereoscopic viewer

Inspiration QUARTER 1
The Crowbox Kit
Streat ereasermerging the digital world with the analog
Real World Third Person Perspective VR / AR Experiment
SKMBT C36014091609400.jpg Scan from the book: Designs of the year 2014. Designed by James Bridle
Pilvi Takala Real snow white
Delay Canvas
Magyar
David Hockney
Lossless

Boijmans Object

Object

La réproduction interdite


La reproduction interdite Not to be Reproduced by René Magritte - 1937

The thing that interested the Belgian surrealist artist Magritte was the mystery that lay in everyday visible reality. He was not so much inspired by the invisible, the subconscious and dream images but rather by ordinary objects to which he gave a twist. The man Magritte portrays here is the eccentric wealthy Englishman Edward James. He was a friend of the artist and bought various works from him. In the 1930s Edward James was the benefactor of both Dalí and Magritte. Magritte based the portrait on a photograph he made of Edward James looking at the painting 'On the threshold of freedom'.

Title: La reproduction interdite
Painter: René Magritte, Lessen 1898 - Brussel 1967
Year: 1937
Type of object: painting
Dimensions: 81,5 x 65,5 x 2 cm
Material and technique: oil on canvas

Source: Boijmans


René Magritte

6601910877 53e9effc52 b.jpg


Rene Magritte by Duane Stephen Michals - 1965

Belgian Surrealist painter. Born at Lessines. Studied at the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Brussels 1916-18, and settled in Brussels. Made his living for a time by designing wallpaper and drawing fashion advertisements. Became very friendly with poets and writers such as Mesens, Goemans, Scutenaire and Nougé, who shared his interest in evoking mystery and were later the founders of the Belgian Surrealist group. Turned away from his early Cubist-Futurist experiments in 1925 under the influence of de Chirico; began to explore ways of creating a poetic, disturbing effect by depicting recognisable objects in alien settings, by startling juxtapositions or combinations of objects, by inversions of scale and so on. First one-man exhibition at the Galerie Le Centaure, Brussels, 1927. Afterwards lived from 1927-30 at Perreux-sur-Marne, a suburb of Paris, where he met Miró, Arp, Tanguy, Dali, Buñuel, Eluard and Breton. In 1930 returned to Brussels, where he spent the rest of his life. A cycle of murals, 'The Enchanted Domain', was painted from his designs in the Casino at Knokke in 1951-3, and eight sculptures were made under his supervision in 1967 from themes in his paintings. Died in Brussels.

Source: Tate Modern - http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/rene-magritte-1553

Magritte's work frequently displays a collection of ordinary objects in an unusual context, giving new meanings to familiar things. The use of objects as other than what they seem is typified in his painting, 'The Treachery of Images' (La trahison des images), which shows a pipe that looks as though it is a model for a tobacco store advertisement. Magritte painted below the pipe "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" ("This is not a pipe"), which seems a contradiction, but is actually true: the painting is not a pipe, it is an image of a pipe. It does not "satisfy emotionally"—when Magritte was once asked about this image, he replied that of course it was not a pipe, just try to fill it with tobacco. Magritte used the same approach in a painting of an apple: he painted the fruit and then used an internal caption or framing device to deny that the item was an apple. In these "Ceci n'est pas" works, Magritte points out that no matter how naturalistically we depict an object, we never do catch the item itself. Among Magritte's works are a number of surrealist versions of other famous paintings. Elsewhere, Magritte challenges the difficulty of artwork to convey meaning with a recurring motif of an easel, as in his The Human Condition series (1933, 1935) or The Promenades of Euclid (1955) (wherein the spires of a castle are "painted" upon the ordinary streets which the canvas overlooks). In a letter to André Breton, he wrote of The Human Condition that it was irrelevant if the scene behind the easel differed from what was depicted upon it, "but the main thing was to eliminate the difference between a view seen from outside and from inside a room." The windows in some of these pictures are framed with heavy drapes, suggesting a theatrical motif. Magritte's style of surrealism is more representational than the "automatic" style of artists such as Joan Miró. Magritte's use of ordinary objects in unfamiliar spaces is joined to his desire to create poetic imagery. He described the act of painting as "the art of putting colors side by side in such a way that their real aspect is effaced, so that familiar objects—the sky, people, trees, mountains, furniture, the stars, solid structures, graffiti—become united in a single poetically disciplined image. The poetry of this image dispenses with any symbolic significance, old or new." René Magritte described his paintings as "visible images which conceal nothing; they evoke mystery and, indeed, when one sees one of my pictures, one asks oneself this simple question, 'What does that mean?'. It does not mean anything, because mystery means nothing either, it is unknowable." Magritte's constant play with reality and illusion has been attributed to the early death of his mother. Psychoanalysts who have examined bereaved children have hypothesized that Magritte's back and forth play with reality and illusion reflects his "constant shifting back and forth from what he wishes—'mother is alive'—to what he knows—'mother is dead' Contemporary artists have been greatly influenced by René Magritte's stimulating examination of the fickleness of images. Some artists who have been influenced by Magritte's works include John Baldessari, Ed Ruscha, Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, Jan Verdoodt, Martin Kippenberger, Duane Michals and Storm Thorgerson. Some of the artists' works integrate direct references and others offer contemporary viewpoints on his abstract fixations. Magritte's use of simple graphic and everyday imagery has been compared to that of the Pop artists. His influence in the development of Pop art has been widely recognized,[21] although Magritte himself discounted the connection. He considered the Pop artists' representation of "the world as it is" as "their error", and contrasted their attention to the transitory with his concern for "the feeling for the real, insofar as it is permanent." The 2006–2007 LACMA exhibition "Magritte and Contemporary Art: The Treachery of Images" examined the relationship between Magritte and contemporary art.

Source: Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/René_Magritte


Surrealism

Surrealism originated in the late 1910s and early '20s as a literary movement that experimented with a new mode of expression called automatic writing, or automatism, which sought to release the unbridled imagination of the subconscious. Officially consecrated in Paris in 1924 with the publication of the Manifesto of Surrealism by the poet and critic André Breton (1896–1966), Surrealism became an international intellectual and political movement. Breton, a trained psychiatrist, along with French poets Louis Aragon (1897–1982), Paul Éluard (1895–1952), and Philippe Soupault (1897–1990), were influenced by the psychological theories and dream studies of Sigmund Freud (1856–1939) and the political ideas of Karl Marx (1818–1883). Using Freudian methods of free association, their poetry and prose drew upon the private world of the mind, traditionally restricted by reason and societal limitations, to produce surprising, unexpected imagery. The cerebral and irrational tenets of Surrealism find their ancestry in the clever and whimsical disregard for tradition fostered by Dadaism a decade earlier.

In 1927, the Belgian artist René Magritte (1898–1967) moved from Brussels to Paris and became a leading figure in the visual Surrealist movement. Influenced by de Chirico's paintings between 1910 and 1920, Magritte painted erotically explicit objects juxtaposed in dreamlike surroundings. His work defined a split between the visual automatism fostered by Masson and Miró (and originally with words by Breton) and a new form of illusionistic Surrealism practiced by the Spaniard Salvador Dalí (1904–1989), the Belgian Paul Delvaux (1897–1994), and the French-American Yves Tanguy (1900–1955). In The Eternally Obvious, Magritte's artistic display of a dismembered female nude is emotionally shocking. In The Satin Tuning Fork, Tanguy fills an illusionistic space with unidentifiable, yet sexually suggestive, objects rendered with great precision. The painting's mysterious lighting, long shadows, deep receding space, and sense of loneliness also recall the ominous settings of de Chirico.

In 1929, Dalí moved from Spain to Paris and made his first Surrealist paintings. He expanded on Magritte's dream imagery with his own erotically charged, hallucinatory visions. In The Accommodations of Desire of 1929, Dalí employs Freudian symbols, such as ants, to symbolize his overwhelming sexual desire. In 1930, Breton praised Dalí's representations of the unconscious in the Second Manifesto of Surrealism. They became the main collaborators on the review Minotaure (1933–39), a primarily Surrealist-oriented publication founded in Paris.

The organized Surrealist movement in Europe dissolved with the onset of World War II. Breton, Dalí, Ernst, Masson, and others, including the Chilean artist Matta (1911–2002), who first joined the Surrealists in 1937, left Europe for New York. The movement found renewal in the United States at Peggy Guggenheim's (1898–1979) gallery, Art of This Century, and the Julien Levy Gallery. In 1940, Breton organized the fourth International Surrealist Exhibition in Mexico City, which included the Mexicans Frida Kahlo (1907–1954) and Diego Rivera (1886–1957) (although neither artist officially joined the movement). Surrealism's surprising imagery, deep symbolism, refined painting techniques, and disdain for convention influenced later generations of artists, including Joseph Cornell (1903–1972) and Arshile Gorky (1904–1948), the latter whose work formed a continuum between Surrealism and Abstract Expressionism.

Source: the Metropolitan museum of art

Simulacrum

Baudrillards simulacrumtheorie gaat over de echtheid en werkelijkheid van beelden die wij denken te kennen. In deze theorie wordt gesteld dat de mens het contact met de echte wereld is verloren, doordat hij een beeld van de wereld creëert aan de hand van wat hij in de media ziet. Baudrillard zei dat er steeds minder waarheid is, omdat we al onze werkelijkheid baseren op iets wat we zelf (de mensheid) hebben bedacht (in film en media). Een voorbeeld van een 'simulacrum' is dat iedereen weet hoe een neerstortend vliegtuig eruit ziet. Maar wij weten dit doordat we dit op televisie hebben gezien. Het 'kennen' van dit beeld is dus niet gebaseerd op onze eigen waarheid, maar op de waarheid die gecreëerd is op tv. Zijn simulacrumtheorie plaatst de realiteit lijnrecht tegenover de door de beeldcultuur gecreëerde illusie van werkelijkheid (hyperrealiteit genoemd). Een simulacrum is een kopie zonder origineel, het is dus niet meer te linken aan iets origineels, iets echts.

[1][2][3]

Copies

All.png


The first 88 images of the painting on 'La reproduction interdite' in Google images search. which one is the original? None of the images I found had the same color contrast or size. I realy wonder if the are all copies of the same picture, or are they all a different photo of the painting? To me this is interesting because the 'real' one is in the storage of the Boijmans museum. So which one do I have to copy?








notable imitations

Atul Dodiya, 'Three Painters', 1996, oil & acrylic on canvas.jpg
Three Painters by Atul Dodiya 1996 Atul Dodiya made this painting of two painter looking at a painting. I believe he tries t create an extra dimension to a Réne's work. there are also other references to surrealistic artworks. undortunate there is very little information about the painter and the painting.


Atul-anju--story 660 121213054110.jpg
An extra extra layer to the painting. The painter of the painting and his wife Source: http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/atul-and-anju-dodiya-interview/1/330838.html


Isabelle-bonjean-carrita-2008.jpg
An add by Carita Paris
Highly inspired by La reproduction interdite. A lot of Réne Magritte's work is copied in commercial posters. By turning the face to the viewer to photo gives a different effect. Instead of anonymity and counter-dialogical it shows a confrontation to the viewer, dubble-dialogical. It shows what we want to see instead of showing us what we don't want to see.


Mimifoundation2010.jpg
An add by the Mimi Foundation
Similar to the add from Carita Paris, although this add shows more of an denial. an confrontation we prefer to ignore. The part that differs the most between the adds is that the woman doesn't look you the viewer straight into the eyes. It feels more closed of then the original painting.


Screen-shot-2013-04-09-at-11-37-37-pm.png
Rowenna Chanskey 2013
The most recent imitation of the painting I could find. The most interesting part about this one that it doesn't looks photoshopped. It's clearly a different but similar picture on the screen.


Perfect Copie

Mosaic progress.jpg

Trying to create a copy of the painting with... copies of the painting. With MacOsaiX


01klein.png02klein.png

Succesvol attempts. The first is without any rules, and thus simpler.
The second is made with the rule that none of the images can be next to each other twice and at least 30 of the 80 images must be used.
The interesting part is that it uses the most red, blue and green one for the black parts; like RGB.


Afbeelding• 2014-09-16 om 10.08.42.png

All copies merged into one. Layer over layer.


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Boijmans Object

Object
René Magritte
Surrealism
Copies
Perfect Copie
Transformation