Aarambh

Aarambh a non commercial page of Art,Poetry,Cinema,Literature,Ideas
compiled by Vinod Bhardwaj as a bilin

26/06/2024

"And now I don’t know how to sign my name,” Paula Modersohn-Becker lamented in a 1906 letter to her friend, the poet Rainer Maria Rilke. “I am not Modersohn and I am not Paula Becker anymore, I am Me, and hope to become that more and more."

Though she would die just a year later, at 31 (from complications following the birth of her first child), Modersohn-Becker left behind a varied oeuvre comprising more than 700 paintings and over 1,000 drawings.

The Neue Galerie New York is presently hosting the German Expressionist’s first US museum retrospective. “Paula Modersohn-Becker: Ich bin Ich / I am Me” offers American audiences a chance to acquaint themselves with the artist’s distinctly feminine approach. The exhibition will travel to the Art Institute of Chicago in the fall.

Image: Paula Modersohn-Becker, "Kneeling Mother with Child at Her Breast," 1906, oil and tempera on canvas; Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin.

25/06/2024
18/06/2024

The Picasso Museum in Paris this week launched an online portal that provides access to tens of thousands of little-seen photos, artworks and other memorabilia from the iconic artist's archives.

18/06/2024
14/06/2024
10/06/2024

Francis Bacon(1909-1992)
Study for portrait of Lucian Freud
1964
Oil on canvas
CR no. 64-06
©️The Estate of Francis Bacon/ DACS London 2022
All rights reserved.

To Read 📖 (*) “Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud were close friends from 1944 until about 1985. Both frequented the same Soho drinking spots, where they met mutual friends such as Frank Auerbach, Stephen Spender and Henrietta Moraes, the latter of whom was painted by both artists.

According to Daniel Farson, they were virtually ‘inseparable’ during the 1950s and ‘60s and Lady Caroline Blackwood remembered having dinner with Bacon ‘nearly every day’ for the duration of her marriage to Freud, from 1953 to 1959.

Perhaps it was a constant, underlying rivalry in art, then, that ultimately undermined their friendship to the point of their falling out in the 1980s.
As painters, Bacon and Freud were equally committed to the human figure, whose essence of flesh and bone they both sought to grasp. However, they employed very different methods to reach their goal. While Bacon developed his paintings from photographic material, Freud only painted from life.

Despite their disparate approaches, their close bond echoes distinctively in each other’s work. While Freud’s early painting is determined by a hyper-realistic, linear style, in the late 1950s, he began using thicker impasto which was more freely applied with coarser brushes as timed passed. In late paintings, such as Benefits Supervisor Sleeping (1995), the paint application reached almost abstract qualities. It has been speculated that Bacon’s example may have played a role in this development.

Freud executed several drawings of Bacon, and Bacon painted many portraits of Freud, often using portrait photographs by John Deakin as a pictorial springboard. This is the case in the recently-sold Study for Portrait of Lucian Freud (1964), which was probably (freely) based on photographs John Deakin took for Bacon of the sitter on his bed. Martin Harrison described these portraits as “angst-ridden”, writing that:

‘In this painting the head is not only distorted but further ‘damaged’ by the red and emerald green marks around the mouth. The clenched fists on the banquette add to the uneasy atmosphere.’ Excerpt: Martin Harrison, Francis Bacon: Catalogue Raisonné (London: The Estate of Francis Bacon Publishing, 2016 p. 786).

Freud died in London in 2011, aged 88. Shortly before his own death in 1992, Bacon described the end of their relationship as ‘rather sad’. Regardless of ending, the artists inspired and compelled each other, their legacy living on in their oeuvres.

(*)Source: Francis Bacon (artist) https://www.francis-bacon.com/

08/06/2024

Fine poets on death

“There is death in life, and it astonishes me that we pretend to ignore this: death, whose unforgiving presence we experience with each change we survive because we must learn to die slowly. We must learn to die: That is all of life.”

Rainer Maria Rilke, The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation

02/06/2024
27/05/2024

JUSTIN LANGER: After a life of living what I would now define as extreme luxury, I was humbled like never before seeing how other human beings live their day-to-day lives.

25/05/2024
25/05/2024

Art by Botticelli ~ The faces of Simonetta

14/05/2024

//...Henri Cartier-Bresson...//
(French, 1908–2004)
Untitled (The Dance), 1965.
Museum of Modern Art, New York

29/04/2024

"In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends."

📆 | 70 years of Akira Kurosawa's epic masterpiece 'Seven Samurai' (1954).

I want to be alone
23/04/2024

I want to be alone

Beautiful Greta Garbo. From the bio: From the early days of her career, Garbo avoided the social functions in Hollywood, preferring to spend her time alone or with friends. She never signed autographs, answered no fan mail, gave few interviews, and refused to give permission to arrange publicity contracts with the studio. She never appeared at the Oscar ceremonies even when she was nominated for the Best Actress award. Her aversion to publicity and the press was undeniably genuine, and exasperating to the studio at first. But MGM eventually capitalized on it for it bolstered the image of the silent and reclusive woman of mystery.
She is closely associated with a line from Grand Hotel, one which the American Film Institute in 2005 voted the 30th most memorable movie quote of all time, "I want to be alone, I just want to be alone", a theme echoed in several other roles. For example, in Love (1927) a title card reads, "I like to be alone"; in The Single Standard (1929) her character says, "I am walking alone because I want to be alone"; in the same film, she sails to the South Seas with her lover on a boat called the All Alone; in Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise) (1931) she says to a suitor, "This time I rise... and fall... alone"; in Inspiration (1931) she tells a fickle lover, "I just want to be alone for a little while"; in Mata Hari (1931) she says to her new amour, "I never look ahead. By next spring I shall probably be... quite alone"; and in Ninotchka (1939) the motif is lampooned when emissaries from Russia ask her, "Do you want to be alone, comrade"? "No", she says bluntly. By the early 1930s, the catchphrase had become indelibly linked to Garbo's public and private personae.

30/08/2023
17/08/2023
10/07/2023
17/06/2023

French painter Françoise Gilot, who created artworks for more than 60 years but was better known for her rocky relationship with the much older Spanish artist Pablo Picasso, has passed away at the age…

11/06/2023

Accompanying the fair, they are teeming with treasures, from the early 1900s to today

03/06/2023

“How To Have Sex” takes place in a party resort; an environment devoted to binge-drinking and carnality. The film raises important questions about such places https://econ.trib.al/cD9KUW1

Credit: Courtesy of MUBI

14/04/2023

11 April, 1903

Born in Senzaki-mura, now part of Nagato, Yamaguchi Prefecture, on this day in 1903, Japanese poet and songwriter Kanako Misuzu (金子 みすゞ;11 April, 1903 – 10 March, 1930), who has been compared to Christina Rossetti with her poems having been translated into eleven languages.

Senzaki was a fishing village, relying particularly on catches of Japanese sardine, so scenes of fishing and the sea often make appearances in her poems.

Tragically, after losing custody of her only child in a messy divorce with her philandering husband from whom she also contracted venereal disease, Kaneko committed su***de in 1930, shortly before her 27th birthday.

10/04/2023
02/04/2023

A retrospective on half a century of Vivan Sundaram’s work is held together by the metaphor of the interrupted journey, in which the artist is the traveller whose unscheduled halts explode the certitudes of history’s dominant narratives.

13/03/2023

French writer Annie Ernaux is the winner of the 2022 Nobel Prize for Literature. She was born in Normandy where her parents ran a grocery cafe in the... Read more

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