Saturday, 28 November 2020

Marc Van Cauwenbergh / Giovanni Bellini



Giovanni Bellini

Ritratto d'Uomo

1490-1495

oil on panel

32,8 x 25,5 cm

Musée du Louvre, Paris

 

 

 

It’s been quite a while since my last visit to the Louvre Museum in Paris, but one visit stays with me; the first time I saw Bellini’s etherial Portrait of a Man. Although small in scale, the work leaves a strong, even monumental presence, in my mind.

 

The man’s eyes gaze off into space, away from the viewer, thus giving the portrait a sense of turning inward and a spiritual and mysterious aura.

 

The composition, while very literally a portrait, feels abstract. The dark silhouette that makes up the hair, hat and chest, are the stacking of groups of cut out flat organic shapes, enclosing the lighter colored and more detailed rendered face. There is also a wonderful interaction between the portrayed man in the foreground and the playful movement of clouds in the background. Despite this tight, almost claustrophobic composition, Bellini creates enormous depth and space through very minimal means.

 

This movement of larger flatter forms interacting with smaller ones and the use of minimal elements to suggest space and depth, are qualities I explore in my own painting.

 

Over 500 hundred years later, there are concepts and techniques that are still relevant today. While I don’t work with literal, figurative forms I feel that I have a spiritual connection to this work. The bridge between the 15th Century and today inspires me and my 21st Century paintings.

 

Marc Van Cauwenbergh, 2020





Marc Van Cauwenbergh (BE/US)

Floating

2020

oil on linen

51 x 38 cm

www.marcvancauwenbergh.net

rk


Monday, 16 November 2020

Maaike Kramer / Shusaku Arakawa

 


Shusaku Arakawa

The Enigmas of Correspond

1965                 

mixed media on paper

92,5 × 62,5 cm




Shusaku Arakawa

That In Which No. 2

1974–1975

acrylic, graphite, and marker on canvas

165,1 x 259,1 cm





Shusaku Arakawa

NO! Says the Volume

1978

acrylic, pencil on canvas

190,5 x 312,5 cm

 


 

Through associations and observations, Shusaku Arakawa creates paintings that present as schematic, mathematical examinations. He captures fiction in factual design. His work challenges our desire to accept what we see as ‘truth’ and pushes us to doubt. I try to bring out this tension between fact and fiction in my work as well.

Arakawa’s work presents as a puzzle in which answers lie. The desire to explore and solve that his work brings to the fore (and the impossibility to find the promised answers, which creates space for interpretation) is, to me, the essence of his work. 


'What I want to paint is the condition that precedes the moment in which the imagination goes to work and produces mental representations.' —Arakawa

 

Maaike Kramer, 2020




Maaike Kramer

Fold here

2020

photography and pencil on concrete

39,5 x 29 x 2,5 cm 






Maaike Kramer

Either/Neither (bewust)

2019

pencil, pastel and charcoal drawing on wood and concrete

244 x 61 x 5,5 cm






Maaike Kramer (NL)

Loop

2019

pencil, pastel and charcoal drawing and pigment in concrete

230 x 36 x 10 cm

www.maaikekramer.nl

rk