How to Look at a Painting
By Françoise Barbe-Gall
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Online price: £17.99
Paperback, 312 pages
Published: 3rd March 2011 Category: Architecture, Art and Design |
Which of us, in the presence of a painting, has not felt that we lack the keys to decipher it? We feel an emotional response, but the work still seems to evade our understanding.
Francoise Barbe-Gall combines a nuanced understanding of the way viewers respond to paintings with a rich knowledge of their context and circumstances of their creation. The result is like a tour of an extraordinary museum in the company of a gentle yet authoritative guide. A fascinating range of works are grouped in six thought-provoking chapters that examine our different responses to the ways in which paintings define reality.
The author takes as her point of departure the impressions that we all feel when confronted by a canvas and takes us on a voyage of discovery fired by her own passionate enthusiasm for the subject. What is the painting’s relationship with the real world? Has the artist idealized nature, or distorted it? Did they want to shock the viewer, or provide consolation? With a clear approach and straightforward yet subtle analysis, the meaning of each work slowly becomes clear.
From Raphael’s penetrating character study of Castiglione, through Hopper’s cinematic take on the wee small hours of the morning, Barbe-Gall begins by covering a number of ostensibly realistic works, made from the stuff of everyday life. Going in quite the other direction, she then looks at the way paintings can express moments of heightened reality, from the perfection of Boticelli’s Primavera to the arresting glance of Vermeer’s Girl with the Pearl Earring. She discusses paintings that distort the visible world (Parmigianino’s Madonna with an improbably long neck, Dali’s melting clocks) and those that sow confusion to make us pay closer attention to the real world (Cezanne’s depiction of a forest glade, a mysterious fifteenth century altarpiece). Questions of history, style, iconography and composition are dealt in context of the paintings she discusses.
Lavishly illustrated and featuring thirty-six fascinating works from Raphael to Rothko, Breughel to Bacon, this is also a magnificent art book.
Chapter 1
Observing a simple reality
Discovering the essence of a character
Raphael, Balthazar Castiglione
12
Confronting the truth of emotions
Caravaggio, The Death of the Virgin
20
Guessing what remains unsaid
Bartolomeo Bettera, Still Life with Two Lutes, a Virginal and Books on a Table Covered by a Carpet
28
Feeling a sense of déjà vu
John Constable, Helmingham Dell
34
Believing ourselves at the cinema
Edward Hopper, Nighthawks
40
Recognizing the substance of the world
Antoni Tàpies, Seven Chairs
48
Chapter 2 > page 54
Contemplating a sublimated world
Assisting at a significant event
Rogier van der Weyden, The Descent from the Cross
58
Flirting with the idea of perfection
Sando Botticelli, Primavera
66
Feeling time stand still
Jan Vermeer, The Head of a Young Girl, or Girl with a Pearl Earring
74
Accepting that we cannot see everything
Diego Velazquez, The Rokeby Venus
82
Noticing the grace of the present
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, The Moulin de la Galette
90
Witnessing the birth of light
Pierre Soulages, Painting
98
Chapter 3 > page 104
Analysing distortions to the visible world
Imagining the point of eternity
Giotto di Bondone, Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata
108
Discerning the troubles of history
Il Parmigianino, The Madonna with the Long Neck
116
Sensing a metamorphosis
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, Mademoiselle Rivière
124
Glimpsing primitive nature
Henri Rousseau ('Le Douanier'), Child with Doll
132
Adapting to circumstances
Pablo Picasso, The Aubade
138
Abandoning the evidence
Salvador Dali, Persistence of Memory
144
Chapter 4 > page 152
Taking account of what appears confusing
Making allowances for mystery
Anonymous Provençal artist, The Boulbon Altarpiece
156
Taking time to be wrong
Pieter Bruegel, The Bearing of the Cross
164
Appreciating a way of thinking
Jean-Antoine Watteau, Embarkation for Cythera
172
Measuring the difficulty of seeing
Paul Cézanne, In the Park at Château Noir
180
Welcoming a new freedom
Vassily Kandinsky, With the Black Arch
188
Feeling our way to reality
Georges Braque, Woman with a Guitar
194
Chapter 5 > page 202
Getting over the shock of our first impression
Considering the function of a painting
Mathias Grünewald, The Crucifixion
206
Seizing the grandeur of a ritual
Rembrandt, The Flayed Ox
214
Passing through the mirror
Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes, Les Vieilles or Time
220
Understanding the logic of a vision
Paul Gauguin, Vision of the Sermon (Jacob Wrestling with the Angel)
230
Seeing life unravel
Edvard Munch, The Scream
238
Gaining access to the opposite side of things
Francis Bacon, Study of George Dyer in a Mirror
246
Chapter 6 > page 254
Abandoning ourselves to the gentleness of a painting
Abandoning our fear of shadows
Leonardo da Vinci, The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne
258
Seeing history in the making
Nicolas Poussin, Rinaldo and Armida
266
Forgetting the weight of the world
Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, Saint Thomas of Villanueva Distributing Alms
274
Enjoying a lasting peace
Jean-Baptiste Siméon Chardin, Three Apples, Two Chestnuts, Bowl and Silver Goble, or The Silver Goblet
282
Welcoming the ephemeral
Claude Monet, Water Lilies
290
Learning to wait
Mark Rothko, The Ochre
298
I love this accessible French bestseller, which helps us look afresh at 36 works from Raphael to Rothko, Brueghel to bacon. The quality of the illustrations is of high quality too. - Bookseller
Barbe-Gall's ability to make works accessible … is plain to see. - Artists & Illustrators
Takes the reader on a voyage of discovery… The author asks questions about the artists intentions and technique, and ultimately encourages us to appreciate the power and relevance of our own perception. - Good Book Guide
In a painting in which everything has become rounded and mangled, the
rectangle of the mirror stands out. By resisting the general sense of wear and
degradation, its very shape implies the adoption of a particular stance, which
it clearly signals by reproducing a reflection that bears no relation to external
reality. Having been spirited away, Dyer’s face is reflected here in what
seems to be a magnifying glass. But this man who expands in all directions
has no chance of seeing himself from the side, even from the corner of his
eye. And in any case he no longer has an eye. The intense blue of the
background confirms the disharmony between what we can see of the model
and what he can see of himself. The mirror does not lie. It is more like
another painting than a mirror, producing an alternative image, not a
reflection. The dream of a portrait. Or the battered portrait of a dream.
It is almost like one of those profiles that one sees on medallions painted
against a pure blue sky: the serene and emblematic image of humanity as
conceived at the time of the Renaissance. The resemblance isn’t close:
something disastrous seems to have happened in the meantime. Not much,
really, but a disaster none the less.
A halo of light forms a circle on the ground. The regularity of the shape exposes
it all as something staged, the careful calibration of a projector. Beyond the
area that it circumscribes the space remains ill defined, its limits vague. It
has something of an arena about it, or a circus ring, a place appropriate to a
story that keeps on going round and round until all its participants are
exhausted. The darkness isolates it from the rest of the world. In his
dizziness, can this man really ignore the fact that it is the earth itself that is
turning beneath his feet? It is a fairly derisory world from this point of view.
Here is a man reduced to shreds on this planet of ours. And the sky retains its
icy composure.
Publication Details:
Binding: Paperback, 312 pages
ISBN: 9780711232129
Format: 216mm x 168mm
90 colour illustrations
BIC Code: ABA, AC
BISAC Code: ART015000, ART025000
Imprint: Frances Lincoln
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