Category Archives: Classical

The Most Famous Supper in History

The Last Supper, c. 1495
Wall painting, Leonardo da Vinci

Leonardo da Vinci captured the moment in which Jesus makes the staggering announcement that he will be betrayed by one of His disciples. This is the last supper they will share.

He is indeed betrayed by Judas Iscariot that same night.
He is crucified by Pontius Pilate.
He rises from the dead three days later.

And the world is changed forever.

Artists have expressed their own versions of The Last Supper for over 500 years.
Their interpretations are profound, enlightened, mysterious, and humorous.

The Sacrament of the Last Supper, 1955
Oil on canvas, Salvador Dalí

The Last Supper, 1940
Oil on canvas, Frida Kahlo

Jesus Is My Homeboy: Last Supper, 2003
Photograph, David LaChapelle

The Last Supper, 2005
Legos, The Brick Testament

iLastSupper

You won’t believe the tumultuous life of The Last Supper!
Click here if unable to view the video.

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Posted in Ancient, Artists, Classical, Contemporary, Film, Impressionist, Photography, Renaissance | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a Comment | 7 Comments

BEHOLD, America!

American art is evolving!
American art is pushing all the boundaries!

It is almost inconceivable how much the work of American artists has changed in the past 250 years. This mind-boggling evolution is brilliantly presented by three renowned San Diego museums…The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, The San Diego Museum of Art and the Timken Museum of Art. These classy museums have pooled their art treasures for a knockout show.

BEHOLD, America!

America’s art is presented with the three themes of Figures, Frontiers and Forms; dating from before the revolution in 1771 to the latest contemporary pieces.

See for yourself the evolution!

Figures

Mrs. Thomas Gage, 1771
John Singleton Copley

The Hobo, 1999
John Currin

Frontiers

Yellowstone Park, 1909
Thomas Moran

Homestead with Jade Sky, 2011
Deanna Thompson

Forms

The Magnolia Blossom, 1888
Martin Johnson Heade

The White Flower, 1932
Georgia O'Keeffe

Yes! American art has definitely evolved.

Watch this video for a fascinating glimpse of BEHOLD, America!
Click here if unable to view the video.


Video credit: VideoliciouslybyRuth

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Posted in Abstract Expressionist, Artists, Classical, Contemporary, Film, Museums | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment | 11 Comments

Christ is Born!

And the angel said: “this will be a sign for you: you will find a baby wrapped in cloths, and lying in a manger.”

Christ, Christmas, birth, painting, Jesus, Fresco, virgin, Mary, nativity

Nativity, Birth of Jesus, 1306
Giotto de Bondone (1266-1337)

Baby (Nativity of Tahitian Christ), 1896
Paul Gauguin (1948-1903)

Nativity with Burning Bush, 1991
Albert Herbert (1925-2008)

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Violence is on the Decline!

"The Third of May," 1814
de Goya

"War Terrors," 2008
Kirby Kendrick

Violence is on the Decline!

“Believe it or not, the world of the past was much more violent than our world today. Violence has been in decline for thousands of years and today we may be living in the most PEACEFUL era in the existence of our species.” Dr. Steven Pinker, cognitive neuroscientist and Professor of Psychology, Harvard College, and twice nominee for the Pulitzer Prize, scientifically demonstrates through data sets and graphs that this is a fact.

One of the most treasured paintings in the Prado Museum in Madrid, Spain is the artist de Goya’s terribly beautiful painting, “The Third of May.” The canvas shows the cruelty of Napoleon’s armies during the occupation of Spain in 1808. Each figure in the painting presents a different emotion when facing death.

We are haunted daily by appalling images of violence and genocide in the media. Is violence really declining in our world?

Listen to Dr. Pinker prove his point. Click here if unable to view the video.

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3 HOT, new museums you must see!

The Barnes at Philadelphia
Philadelphia, PA

The art thieves of the world are poised for action!

The Barnes Foundation’s $25 BILLION art collection is moving! The works of art; 181 Renoirs, 69 Cezannes, and 59 Matisses, along with works of Monet, Degas, Seuret, Titian and Picasso with many, many other artifacts are being transported from Dr. Albert C. Barnes’ private mansion/museum, located in a quiet suburban town outside Philadelphia, to the heart of Philadelphia’s downtown museum complex. The convoys of trucks will be rollin’ down Philadelphia’s expressways and via short cuts through sketchy neighborhoods. The FBI has been called in and cloak and dagger tactics are being taken with police escorts and double-bluffs with some convoy trucks heavily guarded carrying only one painting, others loaded to the brim with anti-hijack security systems. Not since World War II, when governments moved their collections from the museums to prevent their destruction, have we seen the magnitude of a move like this.

Dr. Barnes, 1872-1951, born to a working class family, grew up in Philadelphia, made his fortune in the pharmaceutical industry, and became passionate about bringing art to the underprivileged. He began his collections of Impressionist artists long before they were recognized as masterpieces. Now these masterpieces will be displayed just as Dr. Barnes desired, in their own brand new museum, The Barnes at Philadelphia.

Watch this video of the intriguing mystery surrounding the move of the Barnes Collection.
Click here if unable to view the video.

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Crystal Bridges Museum
Bentonville, AK

The dream of Alice Walton, heir to the Wal-Mart fortune, has come true!  The Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art opened in 2011 in the small Arkansas town of Bentonville.  The architect for the buildings was the brilliant Israeli-born Bostonian, Moshe Safdie. The land is wooded and intimate (the setting of Ms. Walton’s father, Sam Walton’s, first five-and-dime store in 1951.) 

And the collection…Wow! Works by American giants, from Benjamin West and Georgia O’Keefe, to Jim Dine and Joan Mitchell, are brought to a region that has until now had little opportunity to view the glories of America’s artistic heritage. 

The Crystal Bridges Museum will very possibly be a place of pilgrimage for art lovers from around the world.

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Clyfford Still Museum
Denver, CO

A graceful, small museum, reserved for experiencing just ONE great artist’s work has just opened in downtown Denver!  Clyfford Still, 1904-1980, was a notoriously cantankerous and private artist who kept almost every piece of art he ever made; paintings on canvas (825), works on paper (1,575) and sculptures (3).  He still is renowned for lighting the fuse for the movement of Abstract Expressionism…a movement of hugely scaled style with no recognizable subject matter. Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Willem de Kooning, and Barnett Newman followed his lead a few years later. 

Still’s will stipulated that his estate be bequeathed to an American city that would build a museum exclusively for these works of art.  None of the works could be sold, or given, or exchanged for funds.  And Denver did it!! The private community raised $47 million with NO taxes levied!  The result is an exquisite and light-filled space for this marvelous artist.

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Posted in Abstract Expressionist, Artists, Classical, Film, Impressionist, Installation, Museums, Sculpture | Leave a Comment | 12 Comments