Painting

version

Well-known member
I've been fixated on Thomas Cole's Course of Empire series recently. Consummation's my current desktop background and I've a copy of one of Braudel's books with Destruction on the cover. They're just so rich. It's as though he managed to say everything in five paintings.

1920px-Cole_Thomas_The_Course_of_Empire_The_Savage_State_1836.jpg
1920px-Cole_Thomas_The_Course_of_Empire_The_Arcadian_or_Pastoral_State_1836.jpg
1280px-Cole_Thomas_The_Consummation_The_Course_of_the_Empire_1836.jpg
1920px-Cole_Thomas_The_Course_of_Empire_Destruction_1836.jpg
1920px-Cole_Thomas_The_Course_of_Empire_Desolation_1836.jpg
 

Corpsey

bandz ahoy
I do need to go. I'm also intrigued by visiting Normandy, the forest of Fontainebleau etc.

My image as a red faced beefsteak beans on toast Francophobe could be taking serious damage here
 

yyaldrin

in je ogen waait de wind
"Ah, it seems to me more and more that people are the root of everything, and although it remains for ever a melancholy feeling not to find oneself in real life, in the sense that it would be better to work in flesh itself than colour or plaster, in the sense that it would be better to make children than to make paintings or to do business, at the same time you feel you’re living when you consider that you have friends among those who themselves aren’t in real life either."
 

yyaldrin

in je ogen waait de wind
"And we sometimes lack the desire to throw ourselves head first into art again and to build ourselves up for that. We know we’re cab-horses and that it’ll be the same cab we’re going to be harnessed to again. And so we don’t feel like doing it and we’d prefer to live in a meadow with a sun, a river, the company of other horses who are also free, and the act of generation. And perhaps in the final account your heart condition comes partly from there; it wouldn’t greatly surprise me. We no longer rebel against things, we’re not resigned either — we’re ill and it’s not going to get any better — and we can’t do anything specific about it. I don’t know who called this condition being struck by death and immortality. The cab we drag along must be of use to people we don’t know. But you see, if we believe in the new art, in the artists of the future, our presentiment doesn’t deceive us. When good père Corot said a few days before he died: last night I saw in my dreams landscapes with entirely pink skies, well, didn’t they come, those pink skies, and yellow and green into the bargain, in Impressionist landscapes? All this is to say there are things one senses in the future and that really come about.

And we, who, I’m inclined to believe, are by no means so close to dying, nevertheless feel the thing is bigger than us and longer-lasting than our lives.

We don’t feel we’re dying, but we feel the reality of the fact that we’re not much, and that to be a link in the chain of artists we pay a steep price in health, youth, freedom, which we don’t enjoy at all, any more than the cab-horse that pulls a carriage full of people who, unlike him, are going out to enjoy the springtime. Well then — what I wish you as well as myself is to succeed in recovering our health, because we’ll need it. That Hope of Puvis de Chavannes is such a reality. There’s an art in the future and it will surely be so beautiful and so young that, really, if at present we leave it our own youth, we can only gain in tranquillity. Perhaps it’s too silly to write all this, but it’s what I felt; it seemed that like me, you suffered to see your youth going up in — smoke — but if it comes back and appears in what we do, there’s nothing lost, and the power to work is a second youth. So be serious about getting better, because we’ll need our health. I shake your hand firmly, and Koning’s too."
 

yyaldrin

in je ogen waait de wind
"I’ve just read a book — not beautiful and not well written, by the way — on the Marquesas Islands, but very heart-rending in its description of the extermination of an entire tribe of natives — cannibals in the sense that let’s say an individual was eaten once a month, and what of that?

The whites, very Christian, etc., to put an end to this barbarity? really not very savage...., could think of nothing better than to exterminate both the tribe of cannibal natives and the tribe with which the former was at war (in order to obtain the requisite edible prisoners of war on both sides). Then the two islands were annexed, and did they become dismal!!! Those tattooed races, those negroes, those Indians, everything, everything, everything disappears or is corrupted. And the frightful white man, with his bottle of alcohol, his wallet and his pox, when will we have seen enough of him! The frightful white man, with his hypocrisy, his greed and his sterility! And those savages were so gentle and so loving."
 

Corpsey

bandz ahoy
One of the great letter writers, alongside Flaubert, Kafka and I've run out of names but I'm sure there are others... Craner?

Not sure if other painters have written letters on a comparable level. Cezanne, maybe?
 
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