Archive forMarch, 2009

Toby Boothman at Klaudia Marr Gallery

Klaudia Marr Gallery is currently holding an exhibit called EVENLY SCATTERED that presents the works by 8 artists from the US and abroad, that don’t necessarily fit the confines of conventional realism, but portray different levels of representational art. Several Figurative Artists are exhibiting in this show, including Toby Boothman, who’s iconic nudes are striking for their clarity and technique. We had a chance to ask Boothman some questions about his work:

Toby Boothmans figurative work on view at the Klaudia Marr Gallery

Toby Boothman's figurative work on view at the Klaudia Marr Gallery

TGN: You’ve obviously been influenced by the great European masters. Can you tell us about your technique for painting the figure?

Boothman: I have been heavily influenced by various artists. In particular the Flemish Renaissance master Jan Van Eyck, as well as Caravaggio, Vermeer and Ingres. In 1992 I studied under the master Patrick Betaudier in a place called Monflanquin in France. It was here, at the Atelier Neo Medici, that I learned a modern version of the Renaissance technique know as the Technique Mixed.

Over the years I have practiced this technique and evolved it to suit my needs.

I paint on both canvas and panel depending on the subject matter and size. I begin with a detailed under-drawing using a carbon pencil. Once this is finished I fix the drawing and cover it with a tinted wash known as the imprematura.

I then begin to paint using gradations of raw umber through to white. I work over the whole canvas many times until I am satisfied that the under-painting has been fully modelled and is ready for the colour. The under-painting is rendered in lighter tones than the colour glazes to come, so that the glazes of colour which follow enhance the dimensions of the form.

For the colour, I apply between 30 and 40 glazes of transparent colour, gradually enriching the painting and developing a depth of colour that is intense and three dimensional – never solid or bloc. In effect the light passes through the colour glazes to revel and enhance the modelled under-painting beneath.

TGN: Do you paint from the live nude model or do you utilize any technologies for creating your paintings?

Boothman: I work mainly from photographs, which I develop on the computer, using layering effects to lighten and darken the original image at various points.

 Many of my paintings use chiaroscuro; where lit figures emerge from darkness. But I have recently introduced gold leaf into the background of some of my paintings. This gives a very different effect, and adds to the visual illusion that the figure is standing apart from the background. It enhances the feeling of 3D, which is already a strong aspect to my work. I believe that the use of gold leaf ties in with the historical references in my work too. I’m also using the latest computer software to enhance the images that I work from. I have always felt that my work represents a meeting point between tradition and modernity.

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On exhibit at Pulse 2009: Birth of Venus by Jeff Wiener

In spite of the economy, the “Shows” must go on. Or so it seems to me, as this year’s cluster of art fairs wraps up for the weekend. I made the rounds of the fairs, and was impressed at the number of people coming to the shows. While there wasn’t too much figurative work on exhibit this year, I did discover several wonderful artists at both Pulse and Pool art fairs this weekend, and at the ArtExpo held at the Javitz Center last weekend. I will introduce them to The Great Nude’s subscribers over the coming weeks.

While I didn’t see a lot of sales happening, I saw lots of people enjoying art, especially at the Pulse 2009 fair, where a handful of my own art works were on exhibit. It was also the first time showing my newest painting, a modern reinterpretation of Botticelli’s masterpiece The Birth of Venus. It became a wonderful segue to talk about TheGreatNude.tv to those drawn to the nude figure, in my effort to expand the Figurative Arts to a new generation of art lovers.

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Jeffrey Wiener discusses The Birth of Venus for Art Lovers at the Pulse Art Fair, 2009

TheGreatNude.tv's director Jeffrey Wiener discusses The Birth of Venus with visitors to the Pulse Art Fair, 2009

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Andrew Wyeth: Painter of Great Nudes

The art world mourned the passing of one of America’s greatest painters last month. Andrew Wyeth was a controversial icon; art lovers saw him as either a leader of American Realism or as an anachronism that Modernism must reject. I consider him one of the great contributors to the nude figure in Western Art, as he certainly produced several of the 20th Century’s Great Nudes.

Andrew Wyeth was the son of the successful American artist and illustrator N.C. Wyeth. Talented and well-trained under the shadow of his famous father, Andrew was also well-versed in art history, all of which gave him the means to build a successful career as a painter early in life. By the time he had found his own artistic direction as a young man, Modernism and Abstraction were in full bloom. Wyeth chose a more traditional route as a painter of stark, almost abstract landscapes.

Andrew Wyeths Christinas World

Andrew Wyeth's Christina's World

While initially being concerned with the recording of the American landscape, Wyeth’s most famous painting by far is Christina’s World – one of American art’s most iconic images. The subject of the painting was Christina Olson, a severely handicapped neighbor whom had posed for several other Wyeth paintings. She was a proud, reclusive woman who, rather than using a wheelchair, would drag herself across the barren hillsides surrounding the Wyeth’s home in rural Pennsylvania. Her death in 1968 affected the artist deeply and seems to mark a turning point for Andrew Wyeth’s artistic career.

Andrew Wyeths Siri, Seabed

Andrew Wyeth's "Siri, Seabed"

Turning from his landscapes to the figure, Wyeth chose to focus on the youth and natural beauty of young girl named Siri who lived near the Wyeth’s second home in rural Maine. With her parents’ permission, Wyeth began painting Siri semi-nude as she was going through puberty, and eventually began painting her completely nude at the age of fourteen.

Andrew Wyeths Siri, Virgin

Andrew Wyeth's "Siri, Virgin"

While it was certainly a provocative choice of subject matter in a conservative, less permissive era, Wyeth’s insistence on recording youth and beauty was in line with traditions in art history. Wyeth said that painting Siri symbolized a rebirth of something fresh out of death. The paintings of Siri are somber in that context, barren, like the landscapes haunted by his memories of Christina perhaps.

Andrew Wyeths Helga Pictures: Flotation Device

Andrew Wyeth's "Flotation Device"

In 1971, Wyeth, who was regularly producing and selling figurative works featuring several local models, began painting a series of works of one particular model that he kept hidden from everyone around him for 15 years. The works, 240 in all, included pencil drawings, quick studies and washes, and 9 beautifully finished master works in egg tempera of a blonde woman through several stages of her life. Wyeth offered the entire collection of works to a wealthy art investor 15 years later, which then became a Block-buckster Art event when it toured the major museums as The Helga Pictures.

Andrew Wyeths Overflow

Andrew Wyeth's "Overflow"

Helga, a neighbor of German ancestry and married mother of four, posed for Wyeth in some of his starker landscapes featuring the Pennsylvania countryside around his home. With her nude torso he creates a bright flash of humanity inside of his austere, brown fields. Helga, often lying nude in bed, is seen smiling serenely. Sometimes she’s seated, staring off into space, lost in thought.

Andrew Wyeths On her back

Andrew Wyeth's "Black Velvet"

One of the first great nudes produced in this series is entitled ‘Black Velvet’ (1972), with it’s obvious nod to Manet’s Olympia. Helga, pale and blissfully lying on her back with her hands folded on her belly, is a vulnerable angel of natural beauty. Her neckband – a scumble of black paint – her only cover. Helga’s face is turned away, her skin a luminous white, the entire canvas quiet and serene. Wyeth talked about his love of Rembrandts’ use of light and how his people turn toward it, caught in a frozen moment – of time holding it’s breath.

As a disciplined realist, Wyeth scrutinized the figure in much the same way as everything else, unflinchingly. In his best works you can almost feel every hair, pore and freckle, rendered in a dry-brush technique he called weaving. Essentially “weaving layers of drybrush over and within the broad washes of watercolor. An early influence on this technical methodology was Albrecht Durer’s painting called “The Young Hare, an astonishing work of craftsmanship, which when viewed alongside his work reveals the context of it’s impact on Wyeth. It’s worth noting that for all the eyebrow-raising his Siri paintings caused, Siri herself described modeling for Wyeth as quite unimpressive, telling the inquisitive art press that, “He looked at me as if he were studying a tree.”

Andrew Wyeths On Her Knees

Andrew Wyeth's "On Her Knees"

In all of his works, Wyeth remains a realist. Helga’s youth and beauty are honestly portrayed. And we can observe both time and children take their toll on this woman’s body. But Wyeth paints what he sees, and portrays her inner strength and her sexual energy throughout the entire series. Nonetheless, in the span of the works we see time passing, and the very real press of mortality weighs heavy in some of the works.

In a work called “Lovers” (1981), Wyeth has Helga turning away from an intense light coming through the window. She is alone except for an old leaf falling toward her. If the season were Fall, this would make sense, one look out the window however reveals a late summer landscape. Wyeth was not usually given to using visual metaphor, yet this piece in particular seems to call out for a not so subconscious narrative. Perhaps it was drawing close to the end of their relationship, or maybe he wanted to communicate something that he knew was unobtainable. Regardless, there is once again an underlying melancholy appearing in Wyeth’s work.

Andew Wyeths Lovers

Andew Wyeth's "Lovers"

Much can be said of the Helga Pictures in terms of their impact on the culture that Wyeth lived in. The works were honest, intimate, and even scandalous to the art world and it’s press. Wyeth’s decision to hide the works from his wife/business partner and his gallery for so many years only added fuel to the fire. But Wyeth’s decision to hide the works, and in effect keep them together, created one of the largest, most complex Life Studies of a single model in art history. While Wyeth was already famous for his contributions to American Realism, with the Helga Pictures, Wyeth was making a very large contribution to the body of Figurative Art.

Official Andrew Wyeth Website

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