Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts

Amsterdam, Part III: Impressions, Impressionists, and Scarlett O’Hara

In the main market area---scroll down for fascinating prose and more photos...



canal by night


just strollin' in the rain




During our week in Amsterdam, we spent most of our time in the bright halls and cafés of solidly built museums, gazing at classic and modern paintings, studying painters, and writing about color, form, vanishing points, and changing perceptions of art.  The topic was Vincent van Gogh, but the scope expanded like a married man’s waist.  Where did van Gogh get his inspirations, his techniques?  What was his background?  How did he live his life, and which painters influenced or were influenced by him?

Fueled by curiosity, discovery is a wonderful thing.  Leads to a certain depth of understanding and a warren of unknown trails.  The point is not whether you like a painter, or painting.  Personal likes and dislikes have to be cast aside like spent peanut shells.

Why did van Gogh paint the way he did?  Who were the Impressionists?  How did they vary from classical styles, color, and form?  Chances are, you’re asking yourself, who gives a damn, Scarlett?  Or, as Scarlett O’Hara herself famously said:  “I can't think about that right now. If I do, I'll go crazy. I'll think about that tomorrow.”

I don’t have time to wait for you to catch up. I’m pressing on.  Something huge happened in the art world in the period 1836-40.  Photography.  Most historical art had been descriptive, capturing a moment, an event, a portrait.  Now a camera could do all that and better.  Artists were liberated to move on from their journalism in paint, to something entirely different.  But, can a camera also be a device for impressions?  I decided to go on my own voyage of discovery and seek out beer, pretty women, and the colors and shapes of Amsterdam.

In the world of art up to 1860, classicism held the field.  But, around this time, or a little before, painters like Manet, Monet, Degas, Cezanne, Renoir, and Toulouse-Lautrec, and many others, threw aside the trappings of classic art and began to paint common subjects, but with an uncommon touch.  A decade later, under the influence (he met and painted with many of the impressionists) van Gogh injected even more expressive techniques.  Depictions of landscapes became swatches of color, only suggesting individual stalks of wheat.  Skies roiled with smears of blues and greens and yellows.  Van Gogh wanted to make the viewer feel what he saw;  wanted to make the viewer a participant by expanding the boundaries.  Expressionism.

Heard the joikes (that’s Jersey for jokes) already.  “Makes me feel like I want to throw up!  I’ve seen that painting before --- in kindergarten.  Looks like the breakfast I saw twice.”  Or, my favorite:  “I could do that!”  Or, as Scarlett proclaimed:  “I never heard of such bad taste.”

Those are all judgment calls, which means against all odds, you’ve managed to miss every single point.  WHY, WHAT, and WHO?

Ever seen a game of craps?  To the initiated, it’s a group of people, standing around a table, throwing small cubes and screaming at the tops of their lungs for no particular reason.  Game’s been round since Roman times, but casinos haven’t.  Rules have changed.  Understanding takes work.  Otherwise you’re just looking, not seeing, or understanding.

I picture a chain of events.  Curiosity leading to discovery, leading to study, leading to knowledge, leading to more curiosity.  Doesn’t have to be art.  Can be anything, from cake decorating to motorcycle maintenance. Of course, you could disregard all that and stick with  the cuddly warmth of your personal comfort zone.   Of course, if you're not engaged,  that means, as Scarlett said, “My life is over. Nothing will ever happen to me anymore.”  At least nothing new.

Here’s a short course on the Impressionists.  They brought real subjects and real emotions to paint and canvas.  No longer stuck on historic figures, Biblical scenes, or moral lessons, they unglued the use of color, form, painting en plein air, and impressions of subjects rather than faithful reproductions.  As a result, controversy swirled around them. Museums bared their work.  But the paintings were real.  They resonated, and in Scarlett’s words, “He looks as if... as if he knows what I look like without my shimmy.”  Ah, Scarlett, if you only knew.

During my week in Amsterdam, I combined camera and Impressionism (intentionally and capriciously)  to offer a few of my impressions of Amsterdam.  I found that Black and White often provides more drama and texture, while night scenes lend impressionistic colors. Rain helps to expand the palate.  Should you find these photos objectionable, insane, or in bad taste, “Frankly my dear….etc.”



Near the market area 
In the tangle of restaurant streets... 

Amsterdam is a melting pot


bike lane





Amsterdam Part I, An Introduction

One of the many, tranquil canals



Amsterdam.  What do you imagine?  The first thing I always hear is DRUGS.  Yep.  To end the drug conversation, I’ll just say that most drugs are legal and sold openly.  Smoke some weed in front of a cop if you want to flaunt your new-found freedom, or just smoke endlessly, bellow like a bull, pass out in a public park, and wake up with the morning dew.  All possible.  Saw bodies in the park first hand.  Get yourself a couple of tabs of ecstasy and vent some passion at a rave.  Didn’t see it, but heard it at all hours of the night.  The prime words are coffee shop.  Coffee shops sell the junk.  Cafés sell coffee.  But, a big change is in the works that will bar tourists from partaking.  Think that will work, with legal rivers of drugs flowing all over the city?  The move is an attempt to eliminate “drug tourism.”

How about legal prostitution?  Alive and well.  Stroll through De Wallen and see the not so pretty ladies, rouged and ready.  Hope you don’t have to pay by the pound.

By the way, did you know that the Dutch introduced coffee to Europe?  The English word coffee is derived from the Dutch word Koffle.

Big mistake to let yourself be drawn into the fiction that Amsterdam is a one-dimensional, pleasure city.  More layers than a jumbo onion.  Some other descriptions that far overshadow the drug image:  Museums.  Big ones.  Outstanding. Collections.  Art on the streets.  Art in architecture. Art in fashions. Fountains.  Sculpture. Bicycles.  So many you can’t begin to count.  Streetcars that sail almost silently through the streets.  The biggest array of restaurants I’ve seen in one place.  Smoothly flowing canals that embroider the length and breath of the city.

Amsterdam facts:  pop less than 1 million.  Capital city.  Oldest stock exchange in the world.  Trading center.  Amsterdam comes from a combination of words meaning dam on the river Amstel. Beer drinkers will recognize the name of the river.  In short, day and night, it’s a hustling, bustling center of world trade and commerce.

More on all of these in Amsterdam blogs to come.  Right now, please accept my humble intro to this wonderful Dutch city and realize a mere 18 photos do not scratch the surface.

Outdoor cafés and bicycles abound

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Fountain outside and art deco masterpiece, the American Hotel

Art is everywhere

Note the classic boats

Take a canal cruise


The flower market sells more bulbs than flowers

But there are some beautiful flowers as well

Among other things...

I love the colors of the city

A famous Dutch product...

Fashion footwear

The city sparkles at night

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