Tuesday, February 12, 2019
Constable: Weymouth Bay: Difficulty with Landscapes :: essays papers
constable Weymouth Bay Difficulty with LandscapesJohn Constable was born into a wealthy family in the English countryside. It was originally hazard that he would take over his fathers buisness because his older companion was mentally handicapped. However as his interest in film grew his pose realized that this was a course he was choosing and he was good nice to pursue. Ironically when Constable turned to landscapes, his mother worried almost his funds and urged him to turn to portraiture. In his lifetime Constable rarely sold some(prenominal) paintings despite being inducted into the Royal Academy of Art.Constable has talent, yes, absolutely. I could never capture his landscapes and Weymouth Bay is a gorgeous recreation of what Constable saw. It is not an idealized version it is exactly as he saw it. This is where my paradox with landscapes begins. I cannot find myself excited by them. It has taken me weeks of procrastination round how to write this paper.Weymouth Bay was painted by Constable during his honeymoon in 1816. The scene is Dorset. There is another version of this painting in the Louvre. I think that the painting is easy on the eye. It would have been simpler to write about a Turner because his feed in my feeling contains pieces of originality that Constable fails to achieve. His work is straight forward, an almost perfect recreation of exactly what Constable saw. Experts study that the view in Weymouth Bay is from an angle towards the west west of Redcliff Point. It is a barren picture, the land is empty, cold. If landscape instills feeling of environment, Constable achieves that. When the painting was exhibited at the British Institution in 1819 the New Monthly Magazine wrote that the painting was, a clear, well-colored picture.To this description, yay. I do not aspire to be a critic of art and even now as I suit this paper, I find myself increasingly nervous to the hail of criticism Im opening myself up to. However, as I wandered through the halls of the issue Gallery the urge to challenge myself and write about something that caught my eye because of the simple mindedness of it not because it was thought provoking was too much. Simple is not a bad thing. However if all art was simple it would in my opinion cease to be germane(predicate). But would Constable be a relevant painter today?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment