Archive forArt history

The Figure as “Pin-Up” – Alberto Vargas

Best known for work that nearly defined the “Pin-up”, Alberto Vargas is recognized for depicting and perfecting the image of female sexuality in the first half of the 20th century. Having worked with Esquire and more famously Playboy magazines, some would be quick to write Vargas off as a soft pornographer, and he’s never expressed any shame in that. However, from the perspective of TheGreatNude, Vargas was an artist dedicated to the figure, and produced a body of work that embodied the meaning of female sexuality and in effect became standards of feminine desire for a generation of American men.

In the early 1920′s, Vargas solidified his career as a successful artist working with the Ziegfeld Follies, and later working as a regular illustrator for Esquire magazine, where he created the infamous “Varga Girl”, a stylistic. While restricted in his ability to paint fully nude figures for these publications, Vargas was able to convey a comparable essence, stylistically depicting his women as playful, coy, and full of energy, further solidifying and advancing the concept of the Pin-Up as an icon of sexual freedom.

In the 1950’s Playboy was the master of men’s literature, delivering well researched articles simultaneously with artistic and sexual content. For decades, Vargas’ art works had a premier spot following the magazine’s premier feature: The Centerfold. It was this venue that gave Vargas the freedom to paint his strongest nudes at the peak of his career, and he produced many of his most iconographic works during this time.

Click here to subscribe to TheGreatNude.tv and to see more of Vargas’ “Legacy Nudes”.

Vargas iconic image of Diana, shown below with Esquires clothed and edited rendition

Vargas' iconic image of Diana, shown below with Esquire's clothed and edited rendition

Legacy Nude Four, Exuberance

Legacy Nude 4, Exuberance

Legacy Nude 5, Red Fire

Legacy Nude 5, Red Fire

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“On Paper” at the Jenkins Johnson Gallery

The Jenkins Johnson Gallery has always featured wonderfully talented figurative arts and the gallery’s themed shows are always popular openings. Their upcoming show titled On Paper is no exception, and we are thrilled to see so much attention given to art works created by hand the old fashioned way. Many of the nicest pieces in this show are simply drawings – ink washes or graphite on paper featuring the human hand at it’s best.

Several works from the talented hand of Juliette Aristedes are worthy of attention, her atmospheric sketches feeling quite like old master works. These are very expressive drawings, the model nearly comes alive out of the looseness. Michael Bergt’s dreamy compositions are very interesting, evocative of Persian/Eastern erotica from the 19th century. His lounging, longing, twisting figures are set against black backgrounds that modernize these familiar scenarios.

In a quieter vein, Kim Frohsin’s sketches are loose, free, open-hearted expressions of the female form in various states of activity. And Philip Levine’s seated nudes are simple, linear compositions that present a contemplative, quieter view of the figure. In contrast, Kimberly Trowbridge’s slashing style evokes the energy of psychic motion to the figure. Finally, Wade Reynolds presents several figures “as landscapes”, in his signature technique, which has become a standard of quality for many fans of the academic approach to the figure.

The Jenkins Johnson Gallery is located at 521 W. 26th St, New York, NY
To see more of these images online, visit Jenkins Johnson Gallery online.

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Juliette Aristides, Back, 2007, charcoal on paper 26 x 16.5

Juliette Aristides, Back, 2007, charcoal on paper 26" x 16.5"

Kimberly Trowbridge, Two Figures, 2006, graphite charcoal and collage on paper, 16 x 18

Kimberly Trowbridge, Two Figures, 2006, graphite charcoal and collage on paper, 16'' x 18''

Kim Froshin, M.Y. with Jug, 1994, graphite on paper, 15.75 x 11.25

Kim Froshin, M.Y. with Jug, 1994, graphite on paper, 15.75'' x 11.25''

Wade Reynolds, Figure as Landscape #1, (preliminary), 2003, prismacolor pencil on tone board, 19 x 24

Wade Reynolds, Figure as Landscape #1, (preliminary), 2003, prismacolor pencil on tone board, 19'' x 24''

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Gallery Henoch: Sharon Sprung

Gallery Henoch, known for the diversity in its representational artists, is currently featuring Sharon Sprung, a prominent figurative artist in New York. Her work stands beside numerous other approaches to the figure, but commands the attention of the room with her pensive nudes. This Chelsea gallery always has wonderful painters of the figure in their stable, so make sure to visit this gallery regularly.

Gallery Henoch
555 W. 25th St. New York, NY

See our previous Post on Sharon Sprung from 2008.

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The Sari, Oil/Panel, 38 x 48

The Sari, Oil/Panel, 38'' x 48''

CC, Oil/Panel, 40 x 48

CC, Oil/Panel, 40'' x 48''

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The Figure in Advertising: Time Out NY’s Discus Thrower

[This is the first Post in our new series on TheGreatNude.tv exploring the use of the Nude Figure in Advertising. Check back for more posts in several days.]

The cover of Time Out New York‘s recent Museum Issue featured a modern take on the famous statue, Discobolus of Myron. Also known as The Discus Thrower, the original work has been lost but numerous recreations have been made since the original’s creation in 450 B.C. The earliest known copy now sits in the Natural Museum of Rome. Discobolus revivals have altered in medium (the original was done in bronze), size, and in some cases with variations on musculature and facial features. In all of its incarnations, The Discus Thrower is still one of the most recognizable art works in Western History.

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Discobolus of Myron. Also known as The Discus Thrower

Discobolus of Myron. Also known as The Discus Thrower

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NAKED! at the Paul Kasmin Gallery

This being the closing week of the summer show NAKED!; the figurative arts show TheGreatNude.tv wanted to take the opportunity to make sure this show was not missed. The Paul Kasmin Gallery, located in Chelsea, is showing a series of figurative works spanning a time period of over four hundred years. Although finding a commonality between the classic and ultra-modern works might seem unlikely, the gallery accomplishes it with a range of fun, serious and inspirational works.

The gallery is located at 239 10th Avenue New York, NY. Hurry to see this show though; it closes September 19th.

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Anne-Louis Girodet-Trioson Le Sommeil d'Endymion, oil on canvas 14 7/8'' x 18 1/4''

David Lachapelle, Nature's Naked Loveliness, digital color c-print 97'' x 72''

Duncan Hannah, Crazy Horse Revue Dancer, oil on canvas 18'' x 14''

Mel Ramos, Rita Ritz, oil on linen 39 1/4'' x 28 3/4''

Theodoor van Thulden, Time Revealing Truth, oil on canvas 58 3/4'' x 42 1/2''

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Figurative Arts at the New Paltz Arts and Crafts Festival

Labor Day Weekend
Jeffrey Wiener

It was late in the afternoon on the last day of the Labor Day Weekend, I was perusing the artisan’s booths at the New Paltz Arts and Crafts Fair with my family. It was a nice pause to a hectic weekend, and a reflective moment after such an arduous summer. We have all been working harder. The sun was setting behind the mountains, the fair was winding down, and many of the artists seemed eager to break down their tents and head home.

I was looking for figurative artists, as usual. Sometimes you can find them behind the crafts that they sell. I have an empathy for the talented artists who also have an entrepreneurial spirit in their hearts. Many of them can be found working the arts and crafts festivals throughout the summer, regardless of the economy, all the while producing marvelous bodies of figurative works.

It’s important to look outside the big cities for our inspirations. Here’s a sampling of the Figurative Arts I found up in the Catskill Mountains this weekend. I’ll bring you more of the works of these artists later this month on TheGreatNude.tv, so SUBSCRIBE to receive a notice about it.

Jacob

Peter Robinson-Smith creates remarkable, 3-dimensional sculptures from metal wire.

Jacob

Diane Kline's quick charcoal sketches are fluid and energetic.

Jacob

Helen Hosking's small statues are jewel-like and peaceful.

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Alice Neel: An Artist for the Woodstock Generation

Alice Neel: Self-Portrait, 1980

Alice Neel: Self-Portrait, 1980

This being the 40th anniversary of the “Summer of Love”, and of the concert known as Woodstock, The Great Nude felt the need to highlight the nudes of Alice Neel, one of the most independent figurative artists of the twentieth century, and an artist who’s work at this time (1960′s) reflected some of the social changes rippling through our culture.

By the end of the 1960′s Neel’s work as an artist was well known and her acceptance by the critics assured. Her career was reaching it’s crescendo, with museums and galleries lining up to exhibit her paintings. But it’s important to consider that Alice Neel started out as a woman in a man’s world under emotionally difficult if not tragic circumstances. And being a female artist who felt compelled to explore the boundaries of gender and politics, she shocked many of her peers and broke taboos with her direct and honest depictions of the nude. Her early life (and her career as an artist) was filled with many obstacles and difficulties.

We saw some of her work here in New York this summer in an exhibit at the Zwirner & Wirth Gallery. The paintings Neel produced around the 1930’s were dark and moody, a reflection of her experiences. Neel’s work at this time clashed against the social mores of this period, even by New York standards. Her paintings were often drawn from her personal experiences, where Neel’s nervous breakdown, suicidal tendencies, and subsequent internment in a mental asylum were the context from which her work as an artist began.

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Well Baby Clinic. 1928

Well Baby Clinic. 1928

Ethel Ashton. 1930

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Jacob Collins – Showing at John Pence Gallery, SF

New York based Jacob Collins is now showing at the John Pence Gallery in San Francisco. Collins, a popular realist, is known for large bodies of work in several traditionalist genres. But Collins creates beautiful figurative works that seem timeless while feeling fresh and honest. A prominent member of the Figurative Arts community in New York, Collins is involved with many projects, having founded the Grand Central Academy of Art and the Water Street Atelier, where he holds classes with an intimate selection of students.

Collins nudes are strikingly realistic, intimate portraits that show the figures in intimate settings. Often in dramatic poses are naturally lit, his work always seems to glorify the human form as dignified conduits of human grace. His technique is not over-elaborate, his focus on emotion conveyed through body language and the pensive nature of his subjects. By being true to the human form and focusing on the precise details of each composure, Collins is able to create strikingly beautiful works, complex only through the communication accomplished through their simplicity.

Candace 2006

Collins not only works in nude painting but landscapes as well, conveying the same tranquil beauty and elegance as his human forms. To see an additional article with more information on Collin’s Water Street Atelier and home life from The New York Times, click here.

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Male Nude 2006

Reclining Nude 2006

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Kathleen Gilje – 48 Portraits: Sargent’s Women, Restored

Kathleen Gilje has been toying with Western Art’s use of the figure for most of her career. Gilje’s recent body of work, which we saw here in New York at Francis M. Naumann Fine Art, is one of the most cohesive statements of her career.

Entitled “48 Portraits: Sargent’s Women, Restored”, this large collection of paintings created by Gilje features 48 women who were themselves the subjects of the American impressionist painter John Singer Sargent. Sargent had been commissioned to paint these women during his illustrious career as a portrait painter for the wealthy industrialists and upper class of 19th century America. Gilje has stripped the women bare – literally – in an effort to pull these women out of historical anonymity. What’s more, she has painted these portraits in the style of Sargent and matched the master’s evolving personal style over the course of his career – itself quite a feat.

Kathleen Giljes 48 Portraits - Sargents Women, Restored

Kathleen Gilje's 48 Portraits - Sargent's Women, Restored

Gilje has been mining Western Art for new meaning for much of her career, capturing the subtle qualities of Old Masters through her own skilled brushwork, and then turning these dusty classics into modern statements about sexual politics and modern zeitgeist. In the case of 48 Portraits: Sargent’s Women Restored, she’s turned classic portraiture on its side, delivering the same critical analysis of our culture that those viewing the original works – in their respective time periods – would have done. Looking back at some of Gilje’s work, many of the classics that she’s taken on seem not to have been altered in context from the original, and those pieces still stand in admirable proximity to them. But when the context of those pieces has been changed, there is always a reason.

Kathleen Gilje: Portrait of Thomas Hammer, Restored

Kathleen Gilje: Portrait of Thomas Hammer, Restored

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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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