Friday, April 4, 2008

The history of photorealism

I. photography and art

a) Camara obscura and Vermeer

b) the invention of the daguerreotype and “the end of painting”

there is an anecdote about a painter’s reaction to the advent of photography:

Paul Delaroche saw the first daguerreotype in 1839, he famously exclaimed, "From today, painting is dead!"

-the movement toward abstraction

As photography became more widespread and began to rival painting in giving people access to representational images, artists began in earnest to think of the act of painting as an expression of something more than pure translation. The culmination of this was in expressionism and finally abstract expressionism.

-dominance of abstract expressionism in US

American abstract expressionism of the 1950s played an important part in defining an American art independent from Europe.

(however, scholars often cite the Realist movement of the 1930s as the first important movement to break away from the European tradition)

II. realism

-reaction to abstraction; development of photorealism

The parent movement of photorealism is arguably the 1930s Realist movement and especially important are artists such as Hopper. These artists had no formal relationship to photography but their works often evoke the same atmosphere and dedication to extremely realistic images. Photorealism developed in the late 1960s and the term was first used in print by Louis Meisel, a New York art dealer. There are other terms such as superrealism used in the UK or hyper-realism.

Another movement that influenced photorealism is Pop Art. Think of the novel uses of photographic images in art such as the silk screening of photographs onto canvas done by artists like Warhol and Rauschenberg. http://www.nelson-atkins.org/art/CollectionDatabase_ImageView.cfm?id=13700&theme=m_c

Especially in Warhol’s work, images of extremely ordinary things are made iconic through the process of art making, just as photorealist works generally tend to do.

Definitions

a type of realist painting whose content is based on photographs or, better, a photographic way of seeing (4)

a leading seventies’ style of trompe-l’oeil illusionism that vies with phorography itself in duplicating and documenting the external world. (5)

-photorealism’s complex relationship to both photography (representation) and painting (expression and often abstraction)

a) can be seen as abstraction-in that the subject is often utterly devoid of meaning

b) photorealism seems, on the surface, to be about exact representation, but photorealists often make composition changes and the Bay-Area photorealists bring the whole frame into focus unlike a photograph.

c) this interview by the Modern Art Obsession blog highlights the vast range that photorealism might be thought to encompass.

Bechtle's life and work

Brief Biography:

1932 -born in San Francisco and raised across the Bay in Alameda

1954 -earned BFA from

the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland in graphic design and painting

1957 –began showing work

1958 –earned MFA

1964 –began to use black and white photographs in studio as aids to depict his surroundings as they really looked instead of his interpretation of how they looked

1964 –began to project color slides onto canvas

1999 –retired after 30 years from teaching

http://www.corcoran.org/exhibitions/previous_results.asp?Exhib_ID=161

http://artscenecal.com/Listings/LongBeach/CSULBFile/CSULongBeachExhibitions/RBechtleFile/RBechtleBio.html

His process:

Video http://www.kqed.org/arts/people/spark/profile.jsp?id=4813

5.25 (+before for bay area history)

8.30-9

“Bechtle is one of three Northern California artists, along with Ralph Goings and Richard McLean, who originated the West Coast photorealist style. Their work is distinguished from that of their New York counterparts by use of the bristle brush rather than airbrush, spontaneous outdoor scenes rather than the subject matter of studio still lifes and figures, and use of sharp focus for all depths of the image (unlike the images a camera would produce)” (3)

His subject matter:

I. Middle class icons as subjects:

Family genre sceens, streetscapes, car portraits. (2)

II. "‘My subject matter is my immediate world, objects that I know and care about,’ Bechtle says in the exhibition catalog. ‘They represent the essence of the American experience.’ His streetscapes are neutral, objective, often devoid of any human presence. Bleached by the strong California sun, the scenes reflect a sense of void and alienation.” (3)

“[Richard Estes paintings] denuded of people the painting feels icy, soulless and oppressive. It is like sitting alone in a massive, empty concert hall.” (4)

Thursday, April 3, 2008


Photorealist Works:

Chuck Close
Dorothea. 1995.
Oil on canvas, 102 x 84" (259 x 213.4 cm). The Museum of Modern Art











Chuck Close
Big
Self-Portrait, 1967-68. Acrylic on canvas. 107 1/2 x 83 1/2" (273 x 212 cm). Walker Art Center, Minneapolis





























Audrey Flack
Chanel, 1974, 84 x 60 in



Audrey Flack Invocation, 1982, 80 x 64 in


















Robert Bechtle








Alameda, Sterling Avenue (II)
1993
watercolor on paper
22
1/2 x 30 inches









"Sterling Avenue, Alameda II", 1991
Charcoal on paper, 10" x 14"
















’61 Pontiac
1968-69

Oil on canvas 59 ¾ x 84 ¼ in.
Collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art













Potrero Hill 1996 painting | oil on canvas 36 in. x
66 in. (91.44 cm x 167.64 cm) Collection SFMOMA











Broome Street Hoover

1986
Oil on canvas

48 x 69 in.


















"20th Street-Early Sunday Morning", 1997
Oil on linen, 36 x 66
















Agua Caliente Nova 1975
Oil on canvas 48 x 69 in.
Collection of the High Museum of Art, Atlanta


Monday, March 31, 2008

Bechtle continued and Bibliography

'56 Chrysler, 1965

Grand Torinto, 1974






yucca, 1973









Bibliography:

1) http://www.corcoran.org/exhibitions/previous_results.asp?Exhib_ID=161

2) Video http://www.kqed.org/arts/people/spark/profile.jsp?id=4813

3) http://www.museumca.org/exhibit/exhib_bechtle.html

4) http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0DEEDB173BF933A05752C0A9639C8B63&scp=7&sq=bechtle&st=nyt

5) Louis K. Meisel, Photorealism Since 1980. Harry N. Abrams Publishers, 1993.

Good resource- List of bechtle websites:

http://the-artists.org/ArtistView.cfm?id=83D36F6E%2DCD16%2D43FA%2DBCA23CC088B5A204

More interesting related sites:

http://modernartobsession.blogs.com/modern_art_obsession/2006/11/catching_up_wit.html

http://alecsoth.com/blog/2006/11/30/painting-photography/


Website for examples of work:
http://artscenecal.com/Listings/LongBeach/CSULBFile/CSULongBeachExhibitions/RBechtleFile/RBechtleBio.html


link to Whitney

http://www.whitney.org/www/2008biennial/www/?section=artists&page=artist_bechtle

link to SFMoMA
http://www.sfmoma.org/bechtle/index.html

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