figure drawing

115 items found

795305447028670464

donotdestroy:

“Art for the most part, is about concentration, solitude and determination. It’s really not about other people’s needs and assumptions. I’m not interested in the notion that art serves something. Art is useless, not useful.”

— Richard Serra

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The Artist’s Job

“Art has been valued and given importance through the artist, regarded as the one who creates something wondrous and beautiful. At a certain point, artists within that way of thinking often distance themselves more and more from the community and society. In Thai education, this system of teaching and learning art is still being used.”

“When art is no longer the center of the universe, then artists are not either. This has been a question asked of artists since the time of Walter Benjamin. He spoke about this long ago, and it has been written about for a long time.

“In the modernist view, the artist was seen as something close to a superhuman — exalted as someone with supreme specialness, with an intuition that could not be explained. When the artist was elevated above us, above the university guard or the noodle vendor next door, the artist became like a kind of demi-god, regarded as more special than anyone else.

“In fact, in contemporary thought, the artist is like a motorcycle taxi driver — it’s just another profession. We work within a framework of knowledge that is not some kind of miracle. And art itself depends on other bodies of knowledge.”

Jiradej Meemalai
Co-founder of ‘Baan Noorg Collaborative Arts & Culture’

“ศิลปะถูกตีค่าและให้ความสําคัญ กับตัวศิลปินว่าเป็นผู้เนรมิต สิ่งสวยงามวิเศษ จนถึงจุดหนึ่งศิลปินที่อยู่ในกลุ่มแนวคิดแบบนั้น ตัวเขาเองก็มักจะ ถอยห่างออกจากชุมชนและสังคมมากขึ้นเรื่อยๆ ซึ่งในระบบการศึกษาไทยเองยังคงการเรียนการสอนศิลปะโดยใช้ระบบนี้อยู่”

“เมื่อศิลปะไม่เป็นศูนย์กลางจักรวาล ศิลปินก็จะไม่เป็นด้วย ซึ่งศิลปินเคยถูกตั้งคำถามนี้มาตั้งแต่สมัย Benjamin Walter เขาพูดเรื่องนี้มานานแล้ว หนังสือก็เขียนมานานแล้ว

“เดิมทีในแนวคิดแบบสมัยใหม่ ศิลปินค่อนข้างที่จะเป็นอภิมนุษย์ เพราะว่าถูกยกย่องให้มีความพิเศษสูงสุด มีญาณทัศน์ (intuition) ซึ่งเป็นอะไรที่อธิบายไม่ได้ แล้วพอศิลปินคนนั้นถูกยกย่องให้มีความพิเศษเหนือเรา เหนือยามที่เฝ้าตึกมหาวิทยาลัย หรือเหนือคนขายก๋วยเตี๋ยวข้างบ้าน ศิลปินก็จะกลายเป็นเหมือนสมมุติเทพ ถูกมองว่าพิเศษกว่าใคร

“จริงๆ แล้วในแนวคิดร่วมสมัย ศิลปินก็เหมือนกับคนขับวินมอไซค์ มันเป็นอาชีพหนึ่ง และเราก็ทำงานโดยกรอบความรู้ที่ไม่ใช่เรื่องวิเศษอะไร แล้วศิลปะเองมันก็ต้องอาศัยชุดความรู้อื่น”

จิระเดช มีมาลัย
หนึ่งในผู้ก่อตั้ง
‘Baan Noorg Collaborative Arts & Culture’

795033428705886209

donotdestroy:

“Why do people think artists are special? It’s just another job.”

— Andy Warhol

795032496864657408

donotdestroy:

“The job of the artist is to make the world visible.”

David Park (1911-1960)
Boy in Striped Shirt
signed and dated ‘Park 59’ (upper left); titled ‘BOY IN STRIPED SHIRT’ (on the overlap)
oil on canvas
50 x 36 in. (127 x 91.4 cm.)
Painted in 1959.
Price realised
USD 1,323,750

794189196570083328

“Christie’s is closing its digital art department and has parted ways with Nicole Sales Giles, the auction house’s vice president of digital, Now Media reported Monday.”

793255309240156160

donotdestroy:

John Baldessari (1931-2020)
I Will Not Make Any More Boring Art
1971
lithograph, on ivory Arches
22 ½ x 30 1⁄8 in.
Estimate
USD 30,000 – USD 50,000

793150380741640193

donotdestroy:

Bischoff, who in 1976 told Paul Karlstrom: “I’m still supporting myself by teaching,” had only two one man shows before his first New York show at Staempfli Gallery in 1960, including a 1955 show at the Paul Kantor Gallery in Los Angeles from which nothing sold. In contrast, leading artists in New York benefitted from a booming art market. For example, Willem de Kooning’s 1959 New York show sold out on the first day, bringing in about $150,000 (about $1.2 million dollars today, when adjusted for inflation).

Of course, de Kooning was a sensation, but many other New York artists sold well while California artists struggled. In this situation, decently paying teaching jobs were a rare and precious commodity. When it was rumored in 1955 that David Park had been offered $10,000 per year to teach at UC Berkeley, artist Nathan Oliveira – who at the time was earning $2.50 per hour teaching art 18 hours per week – thought that Park had been given “the opportunity of a lifetime.” As it turns out, Park’s actual starting annual salary was $5,300.00.

Elmer Bischoff
Seated Figure in Garden
1958
Oil on canvas
47 ¾ × 56 3/4in.
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

792034782685118464

“I wanted to make something visual, physical, visceral to reflect the butchery they are inflicting on our planet: a visual scream that gives voice to the calamitous cost of the climate crisis, often on the most marginalised communities across the globe. BUTCHERED is also a tribute to the heroic work done in opposition to this destruction, and to the tireless activists who choose to disrupt, disagree and disobey.” — Anish Kapoor

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donotdestroy:

John Baldessari (1931-2020)
I Will Not Make Any More Boring Art
1971
lithograph, on ivory Arches
22 ½ x 30 1⁄8 in.
Estimate
USD 30,000 – USD 50,000

791787066061127680

donotdestroy:

“Why do people think artists are special? It’s just another job.”— Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol (1928-1987)
Colored Mona Lisa
1963
silkscreen inks and graphite on canvas
125 7/8 x 82 1/8 in.
Price realised 
USD 56,165,000

791709554254774272

“Why do people think artists are special? It’s just another job.”

— Andy Warhol

791063340307955712

donotdestroy:

Irving Penn
The Poor Lovers
1979
Platinum-palladium print
18 ½ x 11 3/8 in.
Price realised
EUR 25,000

789235665486430208

“I write about my own work because I want to speak for myself. I might not be the only authority, nor the best authority, but I want to participate in the writing of my own history. Why should artists be validated by outside authorities. I don’t like being paternalised and colonised by every Tom, Dick or Harry that comes along (male or female).” 

Marlene Dumas
Miss January
1997
oil on canvas
110 ¼ x 39 3⁄8 in.
Price realised
USD 13,635,000

789023567509635072

donotdestroy:

“Abstract means literally to draw from or separate. In this sense every artist is abstract for he must create his own work from his visual impressions. A realistic or non-objective approach makes no difference. The result is what counts.” — Richard Diebenkorn

Richard Diebenkorn (1922-1993)
Ocean Park No.121
1980
oil on canvas
78¼ x 78 3/8 in.
Price realised
USD 7,698,500