Josep Brunet ,pinturas i dibuixos

Josep Brunet ,pinturas i dibuixos

Son obras realizadas tanto sobre tela como sobre papel ,mayoritariamente con colores al óleo y acr?

27/11/2023

🌔🖤

27/11/2023

😜😜

27/11/2023

❤️❤️‍🩹

27/11/2023

Espectacular atardecer en la Ciudad Alta de Bérgamo. Italia 🧡🇮🇹

27/11/2023
27/11/2023

Cierto...

27/11/2023

"La vida está hecha de días que no significan nada y de momentos que significan todo".

Cristina Peri Rossi

(Fotografía: Sara y Julio en París)

27/11/2023

Joes Pond In Vermont, USA!!!

27/11/2023

Amedeo Modigliani, Pablo Picasso and André Salmon taken by Jean Cocteau, 1916, Montparnasse, Paris.

27/11/2023

Feliz día

27/11/2023

✨️✨️✨️

27/11/2023

John Singer Sargent
The Olive Grove
c.1908

Obras en Alta Calidad 27/11/2023
27/11/2023

"Landscape: The Parc Monceau”, 1876 Mia Feigelson Gallery


By Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926)
oil on canvas; 59.7 x 82.6 cm (3 1/2 x 32 1/2 in.)
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Bequest of Loula D. Lasker, New York City, 1961
https://bit.ly/2b809gz
https://www.facebook.com/metmuseum

”Situated on the boulevard de Courcelles in Paris and surrounded by fashionable town houses, the Parc Monceau was planned in the late eighteenth century in the form of an English garden.

Monet painted three views of the park in the spring of 1876. This one, shown at the 1877 Impressionist exhibition, focuses on the swaths of green grass and blooming trees. The building visible at left in this painting also appears in two works from 1878, including one in the Museum’s collection." — Find out more https://bit.ly/2b809gz

27/11/2023

In Memoriam Camille Pissarro Camille Pissarro - Mia Feigelson Gallery
"The Harvest, Pontoise (La récolte, Pontoise)", 1881
By Camille Pissarro (Danish-French, 1830-1903)
oil on canvas; 46 x 55.2 cm (18 1/8 x 21 3/4 in.)
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Robert Lehman Collection, 1975 https://bit.ly/1QCBcc4
https://www.facebook.com/metmuseum

Overview:
"At the centre of this painting are three figures gathering potatoes; they are united in the composition as they occupy a green, grassy knoll and toil under the shade of a tree. A fourth figure can be seen on the left, his actions unrecognizable from such a distance. All are laboring on a hill that slopes down to the right and occupies the majority of the canvas.

The theme of potato gathering recurs in Pissarro’s oeuvre in a number of mediums—pencil, gouache, oil, and prints—over a period of thirty years. In the Lehman painting, Pissarro’s treatment of the subject is carefully structured while remaining expressive in tone and in brushwork.

The artist is both borrowing a traditional subject matter from the great Barbizon painter Camille Corot, while anticipating the more staccato, broken brushwork of later artists such as Georges Seurat." — Find out more https://bit.ly/1QCBcc4

27/11/2023

"Antibes, vue du plateau Notre Dame", 1888 Mia Feigelson Gallery
By Claude Monet (French, 1840-1926)

oil on canvas; 65.1 x 92.1 cm (25 5/8 x 36 3/8 in.)
Private Collection

Overveiw:
"Monet’s dazzling view of the south coast of France, Antibes, vue du plateau Notre-Dame, is one of his most vibrant and brilliantly hued compositions of the 1880s. The azure sky is marked by a few scudding clouds and the landscape below is concocted from a rich palette of pink, turquoise and purple. Monet left Paris for the Côte d'Azur on 12th January 1888, arriving several days later. On the recommendation of Guy de Maupassant he planned to stay at the Chateau de la Pinède, a hotel popular with artists.

As was often the case, Monet did not find the company of his fellow guests very congenial and in this instance he found the group of artists who gathered around about the Barbizon painter Henri Harpignies particularly irritating. Monet contented himself by first exploring the area around Antibes, Agay and Trayas to the west, then moving towards Monte Carlo in the east, before finally settling on five or six motifs on which to concentrate, including this view of the brightly shining town of Antibes as seen across the bay.

Transfixed by the brilliance of the light, and occasionally overwhelmed by the challenge of representing it on canvas, Monet had a particularly productive campaign in Antibes, returning to Paris in May with close to forty canvases. Discussing the works Monet painted on the Côte d'Azur, Virginia Spate quotes Baudelaire’s L’invitation au voyage – ‘There is nothing else but grace and measure, richness, quietness, and pleasure’, stating:

‘This is indeed the mood of these paintings, for, in the more constant Mediterranean weather, Monet could afford to concentrate for longer than he could on northern coasts on identifying the pigments with which to create the impression of intensely still coloured light’.

Paul Hayes Tucker has speculated that by travelling throughout France in the 1880s Monet was attempting to decentralise Impressionism which for the most part had been based in Paris. ‘When queried in 1880 about his defection [from the Impressionists], he asserted,

'I am still an Impressionist and will always remain one'.

Unlike some of his former colleagues such as Pissarro, who experimented with the pointillist techniques of the Post-Impressionists, Monet staunchly maintained that belief. Indeed, he put it into practice in an unprecedented way, travelling extensively during the decade to paint some of the most spectacular and varied sites in all of France, from the black, ocean-pounded coast of Belle-Isle on the Atlantic, south of Brittany to the verdant shores of Antibes on the Mediterranean.

The places he chose had dramatically different geological formations, weather conditions, lighting effects, and temperature ranges. They also possessed strikingly different moods, mythologies, associations and appeals. These challenging conditions led Monet to write frequently to his friends and family about his difficulties throughout the decade.

'It is so difficult, so delicate, so tender [in Antibes]', he told Berthe Morisot in 1888, 'particularly for someone like me who is inclined toward tougher subject'.

The remarkable affinity the painter made between his Impressionist ideals and the brilliant light of the South is testament to Monet’s masterful technique. As Joachim Pissarro observed:

‘The status of Monet's painting in Antibes changed as fast as the weather. One day he would work admirably, 'thanks to the eternal and resplendent sun', and the next a terrible wind would make work impossible.

Nevertheless, Monet worked relentlessly. On 1st February, Monet reported that he had 'worked all day without a break: it is definitely so beautiful, but so difficult as well!'

The present work is closely related to the version in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, also entitled Antibes, vue du plateau Notre-Dame. In both canvases the town of Antibes is seen from the slopes of the Garoupe, somewhat further east than the four views of the town seen from the gardens of La Salis.

Discussing the present work, Joachim Pissarro writes: ‘The mountains here are given a prominent position. In Antibes seen from Plateau Notre-Dame [the present work] especially, they dominate every element of the scenery and seem to dictate the chromatic harmonies and contrasts.

The purples, blues and pinks of the stone, heightened and offset by each other, echo throughout the canvas: they are reiterated in the deep azurine blue surface of the sea; in a few mauve clouds; in the surface of the ground; and in the quivering blue leaves of the shaded tree. The Boston painting, by comparison, is chromatically much more suffused and discreet’

Daniel Wildenstein described the settings of these pictures as showing 'the walled town of Antibes with the Bastion of St André, seen from the beach at Ponteil looking northwards. The view is dominated by the belltower of the cathedral and by the tower of the Château Grimaldi. In the foreground is the tip of the Islet, and in the background the Alps which straddle the border between France and Italy’

After several weeks of working in this region, Monet expressed confidence in his work in a letter to Alice Hoschedé written in early February: ‘What I will bring back from here will be pure, gentle sweetness: some white, some pink, and some blue, and all this surrounded by the fairylike air'.

For the artist whose entire career was dedicated to exploring the quality of light and its effect on water, the rich, saturated colours of the Mediterranean provided an ideal environment in which to paint, and resulted in a remarkable series of works unique within Monet’s œuvre.

The achievements Monet had made with these works were immediately appreciated by his admirers when they were first exhibited shortly after Monet's return to Paris.

Not averse to creating rivalry between the dealers who were interested in the development of his career, Monet released ten Antibes paintings to Theo van Gogh who helped Boussod & Valadon to exhibit them in June and July 1888, rather than consigning them to his more regular dealer Charles Durand-Ruel. Writing about the show, Gustave Geffroy noted the startling colouration the works possessed.

‘Changing colours of the sea, green, blue, grey, almost white – vastness of the rainbow-coloured mountains – with colours, clouded, snow-covered – pale silver foliage of the olive trees, black greenery of the pines, blinding red of the earth – silhouette of the dewy golden town, permeated by light’.

The present picture became part of a number of distinguished collections, including that of Thomas Lincoln Manson, a friend of John Singer Sargent, and the Ferry family in America, before being acquired by the late owner in 1996." - Find out more at https://bit.ly/2oLiU30 | Source: Sotheby's, London

22/11/2023

Joaquín Sorolla (Spanish, 27 February 1863 – 10 August 1923)
Valencian Fishermen

22/11/2023

Pablo Picasso
Portrait of Jaime Sabartes (The bock)
1901
oil on canvas, 82x66 cm

22/11/2023

New York, United States

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