Friday, November 5, 2010

various figure and self portrait paintings

VanGogh -self-portrait- dedicated to gaugin

Andrew Wyeth "helga"

Richard Diebenkorn "seated woman"

Eric Fischl "meninas encarando"

Mary Cassatt "the caress"

Thomas Eakins "Wrestlers", 1899

Velazquez "pareja"

Velazquez "innocent"


Wayne Thiebaud "the figure"

Rembrandt "self portrait"

Albrecht Dürer "self portrait"


Lisa Yuskavage "self portrait"

Alex Kanevsky












Bo Bartlett


"Bo Bartlett is an American realist with a modernist vision. His paintings are well within the tradition of American realism as defined by artists such as Thomas Eakins and Andrew Wyeth. Like these artists, Bartlett looks at America’s heart—its land and its people—and describes the beauty he finds in everyday life. His paintings celebrate the underlying epic nature of the commonplace and the personal significance of the extraordinary.
"Bartlett was educated at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where realist principles must be grasped before modernist ventures are encouraged. He pushes the boundaries of the realist tradition with his multilayered imagery. Life, death, passage, memory, and confrontation coexist easily in his world. Family and friends are the cast of characters that appear in his dreamlike narrative works. Although the scenes are set around his childhood home in Georgia, his island summer home in Maine, his home in Pennsylvania or the surroundings of his studio and residence in Washington state, they represent a deeper, mythical concept of the archetypal, universal home."
– Tom Butler, excerpt from the book Bo Bartlett, Heartland










Alice Neel

Influential painter Alice Neel (18900-1984) was known for her portraits of famous people, as well as those on the fringes of mainstream society. A self proclaimed 'collector of souls' she painted friends, family and neighbours in Spanish Harlem, showing their personalities with uncompromising honesty.
Personal problems and a nervous breakdown didn't stop her working. Her constant struggle between her art and mother hood made her a shrewd commentator on life as a women, and her portraits of pregnant women are particularly well observed. She became a figure head for the feminist movement and is now widely admired by a younger generation of painters.







Alice Neel: Painted Truths (linked article)








John Currin

His paintings are satirical and contain strange characterizations (or perhaps "caricaturizations" would be a better word?).  With pin-up girl faces and classical bodies, his women are studies in hybridization, and a comment on objectification through the ages.  I love how disarming his work is - completely lacking in pretense. 




"John Currin: The filth and the fury
His portraits of balloon-breasted women are notorious. Now John Currin is about to arrive in Britain with canvases of an even more sexually explicit nature. The artist talks to David Usborne about flesh tones, critical outrage – and why hardcore porn is part of the 'war against Islam' "  (found here)










Susan Moore

Susan Moore - Philadelphia Artist 
Susan was one of my painting professors at Tyler School of Art.  She studied under Wayne Thiebaud while in graduate school and was the first person to introduce me to his work on account of my use of paint.  She shows at Locks Gallery in Philadelphia and has mostly focused on figure as subject.



Many of the works are large and consist of oil paint and oil stick bars creating the surface texture apparent here.