Monday, September 28, 2009

Mail

 
sent 9.29.09
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Byzantine Thrones



Byzantine thrones.  The one on the left is in the garden of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice, where I was an intern this summer. somewhere along the line, Peggy bought it when the 
museum was still her private home.  (Who doesn't wish they could just go out and buy a Byzantine throne?)

...on the left is another throne on the island of Torcello in the Venetian lagoon.  It has come to be known as the throne of Attila, because the earliest settlers of the island came to that area to escape the warring movements of aggressive tribes, including the Huns.  It was most likely used as a symbol of authority in the island's early system of communal government. 

These memories from the summer connect to an amazing image I came across in readings for a medieval art history seminar, "Kings, Caliphs, and Emperors:  Images of Authority in the Era of the Crusades."  The Byzantine emperor's throne was flanked by a pair of golden lion statues.  Surrounding the throne and lions were gilded trees full of gold birds.  The birds and lions were automatons.  When a visitor entered the throne room, the lions would roar, and the birds would sing.  On top of all that, the throne would rise up into the air.  All somehow created before the 11th century.

A Big Collage to Get the Year Started

 
57 x 42"




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Details




 

 

 

 
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Print & Collage

 
collage and monotype
40 x 30"
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Collaborations

 

 

The first time I saw paintings like these in person was at the Alte Pinakothek in Munich in late September, 2005.
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Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Currently Reading

For the class "Roll Over Beethoven:  Music and German Literature from             Romanticism to the Present"

Not so recent prints

 

 

 

Comparisons.
Styles of Commemoration.
February(ish) 2009
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Monday, September 21, 2009

Recent Print

 
Incorporating found collaged imagery with monotype printing.
45 x 30"
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Current Image I Find Fascinating

 
A marble relief by the Venetian Renaissance sculptor Tulio Lombardo.  It is a part of the collection of the Kunsthistorischesmuseum in Vienna, but it can now be seen in an exhibition at the National Gallery in Washington, "An Antiquity of Imagination:  Tullio Lombardo and Venetian High Renaissance Sculpture."  Wish I could go.....
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About Me

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I love old things, and I need interesting stuff to look at.