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#aestheticism — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #aestheticism, aggregated by home.social.

  1. "Nocturne: Blue and Silver - Chelsea," James Abbott McNeill Whistler, 1871.

    Whistler (1834-1903) was a highly influential and famous painter, although it would infuriate him to know he was most famous for that over-familiar painting of his mother....because it's regarded as a portrait of motherhood, while he intended it only to be a study of shapes and colors. Really.

    That's something about Whistler's art that many modern folks struggle with. He was a big proponent of the Aesthetic movement, preaching "art for art's sake". Many scenes like this weren't intended to be landscapes or capturing a moment in time...they were explorations of color and form. They were meant to be beautiful, and not teach a lesson or have a message.

    He was known as a Tonaist, an art movement that branched off from Impressionism, and was more about capturing form and color.

    From the Tate Modern, London.

    #Art #JamesAbbottMcNeillWhistler #Tonalism #Aestheticism #Nocturne

  2. "Nocturne: Blue and Silver - Chelsea," James Abbott McNeill Whistler, 1871.

    Whistler (1834-1903) was a highly influential and famous painter, although it would infuriate him to know he was most famous for that over-familiar painting of his mother....because it's regarded as a portrait of motherhood, while he intended it only to be a study of shapes and colors. Really.

    That's something about Whistler's art that many modern folks struggle with. He was a big proponent of the Aesthetic movement, preaching "art for art's sake". Many scenes like this weren't intended to be landscapes or capturing a moment in time...they were explorations of color and form. They were meant to be beautiful, and not teach a lesson or have a message.

    He was known as a Tonaist, an art movement that branched off from Impressionism, and was more about capturing form and color.

    From the Tate Modern, London.

    #Art #JamesAbbottMcNeillWhistler #Tonalism #Aestheticism #Nocturne

  3. "Nocturne: Blue and Silver - Chelsea," James Abbott McNeill Whistler, 1871.

    Whistler (1834-1903) was a highly influential and famous painter, although it would infuriate him to know he was most famous for that over-familiar painting of his mother....because it's regarded as a portrait of motherhood, while he intended it only to be a study of shapes and colors. Really.

    That's something about Whistler's art that many modern folks struggle with. He was a big proponent of the Aesthetic movement, preaching "art for art's sake". Many scenes like this weren't intended to be landscapes or capturing a moment in time...they were explorations of color and form. They were meant to be beautiful, and not teach a lesson or have a message.

    He was known as a Tonaist, an art movement that branched off from Impressionism, and was more about capturing form and color.

    From the Tate Modern, London.

    #Art #JamesAbbottMcNeillWhistler #Tonalism #Aestheticism #Nocturne

  4. "Nocturne: Blue and Silver - Chelsea," James Abbott McNeill Whistler, 1871.

    Whistler (1834-1903) was a highly influential and famous painter, although it would infuriate him to know he was most famous for that over-familiar painting of his mother....because it's regarded as a portrait of motherhood, while he intended it only to be a study of shapes and colors. Really.

    That's something about Whistler's art that many modern folks struggle with. He was a big proponent of the Aesthetic movement, preaching "art for art's sake". Many scenes like this weren't intended to be landscapes or capturing a moment in time...they were explorations of color and form. They were meant to be beautiful, and not teach a lesson or have a message.

    He was known as a Tonaist, an art movement that branched off from Impressionism, and was more about capturing form and color.

    From the Tate Modern, London.

    #Art #JamesAbbottMcNeillWhistler #Tonalism #Aestheticism #Nocturne

  5. "Nocturne: Blue and Silver - Chelsea," James Abbott McNeill Whistler, 1871.

    Whistler (1834-1903) was a highly influential and famous painter, although it would infuriate him to know he was most famous for that over-familiar painting of his mother....because it's regarded as a portrait of motherhood, while he intended it only to be a study of shapes and colors. Really.

    That's something about Whistler's art that many modern folks struggle with. He was a big proponent of the Aesthetic movement, preaching "art for art's sake". Many scenes like this weren't intended to be landscapes or capturing a moment in time...they were explorations of color and form. They were meant to be beautiful, and not teach a lesson or have a message.

    He was known as a Tonaist, an art movement that branched off from Impressionism, and was more about capturing form and color.

    From the Tate Modern, London.

    #Art #JamesAbbottMcNeillWhistler #Tonalism #Aestheticism #Nocturne

  6. „Certainly only children seem all right, nowadays, in that place of bygone pomp and splendour, among the ooze-bearded river gods and the mossy winged heraldic dragons. They can turn it all into plain, simple fairyland ; and it ispurified, redeemed, by being played with.“ Klingt ein bissle wie #Benjamin, ist aber von #VernonLee . (The Enchanted Woods, 1905] #placewriting #literature #nonfiction #aestheticism

  7. "The Gold Scab; Eruption in Frilthy Lucre (The Creditor)," James Abbott McNeill Whistler, 1879.

    This painting has an interesting story. Whistler's relationship with his wealthy patron Frederick Leyland ended when Leyland was furious with Whistler's work on the now-famous "Peacock Room;" it seems Whistler was only supposed to finish work started by someone else, but instead totally redid the room. The two parted ways acrimoniously.

    Not long after that blow-up, Whistler unadvisedly sued art critic John Ruskin for defamation, over a bad review of one of his paintings; while Whistler won the suit, he was awarded only a farthing in damages. The suit was so expensive that he had to declare bankruptcy....and Leyland was his chief creditor.

    So we have Leyland as a peacock, sitting on his house. Whistler pokes fun as his frilled shirts ("Frilthy", get it?) and his piano playing; if you look close you can see a butterfly, Whistler's signature, about to sting Leyland. The color scheme is that of the Peacock Room.

    Reminds me of illustrator Sidney Sime...

    From the De Young Gallery, San Francisco.

    #Art #Aestheticism #JamesAbbottMcNeillWhistler #Caricature #RevengeArt

  8. The Mirror of Venus (1877) by English painter Edward Burne-Jones. A member of the pre-Raphaelite movement formed in England in 1848, Sir Edward Burne-Jones became one of the leading figures in a new trend, Aestheticism, that emerged in the 1860s. This composition can be seen as an exaltation of ideal beauty, aligning the atmosphere of the painting with a perspective shared by late Victorian art.

    stellar-art.pixels.com/feature

    #art #ArtHistory #Aestheticism #Victorian

  9. Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde - He had a way with words.
    (16 October 1854 – 30 November 1900)
    #OscarWilde #Irish #Poet #spokesman for #aestheticism #Playwright #Writer #Writing #NailedIt #God

  10. "the Wilde trials were still very much in the air, with “decadence” and “aestheticism” effectively operating as bywords for homosexuality. Some of the members may not have been too keen to flaunt their association." — One tends to forget that not performing heteronormativity was a crime back then (& is agan in some US states and is still in a lot of other countries.)

     The quote is from LOTE by Shola von Reinhold
    #queer #lgbtqia #literature #aestheticism #decadence #bookstodon