mouthporn.net
#lautrec – @matthewsgallery on Tumblr
Avatar

Matthews Gallery

@matthewsgallery / matthewsgallery.tumblr.com

Santa Fe, New Mexico art gallery. We exhibit distinctive European and American masters, Santa Fe and Taos artists, American modernism and contemporary art by established artists.
Avatar
reblogged

Suzanne Valadon: September/23/1865 -  April/7/1938

Marie-Clémentine “Suzanne” Valadon was born in Bessines-sur-Gartempe, France, to an unmarried laundress, which ultimately lead to a childhood spent in poverty. Valadon began working at the age of 11. She held many jobs throughout her earlier years, including a fruit seller in markets, working at a factory for funerary wreaths, working in millinery shops, and at the age of 18 as she worked as a trapeze performer. After one year of performing in a circus, Valadon suffered a fall, which lead her from performing to modeling. 

Living and working in Montmartre, Valadon modeled for many of the famous avant-guard artists at the time, including, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Théophile Steinlen, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. As Valadon’s reputation as a model grew in the Impressionists artist circle, she picked up techniques after sitting for artists. She became a pupil of both Toulouse-Lautrec and Degas and both were incredibly impressed with her artwork. Valadon and Degas became close friends until his death in 1917, and was one of the first people to buy her artwork. 

Valadon’s style was very unique from her contemporaries. She favored bold colors and harsh outlines. Her subjects were often nude women, a very unusual subject for women artists at the time. Her paintings were very intimate and unidealized. The gaze that is present in her works never leans toward an unwanted male gaze, the sexuality that is present is very much self possessed of the models. Her works have very conscious compositions that let the viewer see only what is presented, there is no playful and coyness to her works that was often found in nude paintings at the time. 

Valadon rose to fame in the 1920s, and created art throughout her life. She has had four major retrospectives during her lifetime. She created nearly 500 paintings, over 250 drawings, and 31 etchings not including artwork that has been destroyed or lost over the years. 

More incredible women artists here.

Avatar
reblogged

After an accident in the circus where she worked as a teenager, Suzanne Valadon had to look for another job. A friend advised her to start working as an artist’s model. She had to face her mother’s fierce opposition for this, but the stubborn Suzanne persevered and it didn’t take long before she was asked to sit for some of the great painters of her time: Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, Edgar Degas, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Toulouse-Lautrec… Here are a few examples of their work with her. Gradually, Valadon also became a self-taught painter, who received praise for her work from Degas, Renoir and others. Her son, Maurice Utrillo, also became a painter. Valadon died in Paris, on 7 April 1938, aged 72.

Edgar Degas, Le tub (The Tub), 1886. Pastel, 60 x 83 cm. Musée d’Orsay, Paris Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Les parapluies (The Umbrellas), c.1881-86. Oil on canvas, 180,3 x 114,9 cm. The National Gallery, London Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, Gueule de bois / La buveuse (The hangover), c.1887-89. Oil on canvas, 47 x 55,3 cm. Fogg Museum, Cambridge MA, USA

Fascinating story of a famous muse. 

Avatar
reblogged
Avatar
momo-de-avis

Left: Edgar Degas, In a Café (L’Absinthe), 1875–1876, Oil on canvas, 36¼ x 27 inches; Musée d’Orsay, Paris. Right:Pablo Picasso, Portrait of Sebastià Junyer i Vidal, 1903, Oil on canvas, 49-3/4 x 37 inches; Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

This is an interesting pairing. When placed in this context, the yellows in Lautrec's work look brighter and the blues in Picasso's work look darker. 

Avatar
reblogged
Avatar
moma

"In the posters for which he became internationally famous by the mid-1890s, Toulouse-Lautrec captured the heady spirit of Montmartre’s night life, as much in form as in subject matter. With line, shape and flat areas of color, he created a restless vitality."

The New York Times on The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec.

[Photograph by Emon Hassan for The New York Times.]

Art watching. Sweet shot from MoMA's Lautrec exhibition. 

Avatar

Bearded men and minotaurs! Our online art auction ends today, so make your final bids on this work by Pablo Picasso and many more. Link to the auction at www.thematthewsgallery.com. #art #auction #artauction #auctions #auctionhouse #artist #artists #lautrec #gauguin #miro #renoir #lhermitte #instaart #followart #supportart #artgallery #gallery #gallerylife #fineart #contemporaryart #artforsale #artgram (at Matthews Gallery)

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
mouthporn.net