Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Michelangelo's first painting




Currently on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC is what experts believe to be Michelangelo Buonarroti's first painting, The Torment of Saint Anthony. The painting was made between 1487 and 1488, which would make Michelangelo only 12 years old. Michelangelo used to visit the studio and workshop of Ghirlandaio to visit his lifelong friend, Francesco Granacci, an apprentice for the painter. The shop is most likely where Michelangelo acquired his first materials and became fascinated with art. This painting of his is completely astonishing, and to think that he was only a child when it was created simply knocks me off my feet. I'm sure the images don't even do it justice, so I am definitely heading over there to see it soon.

From the Met:
Like many boys then and now, Michelangelo loved monsters. He loved them so much, he made them the stars of his first painting, “The Torment of Saint Anthony,” which he copied from an engraving by Martin Schongauer (1448-14910) the way kids today copy scenes from comic books.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

First Family gets some new art


The Obamas have borrowed Ed Ruscha's "I Think I'll..." (1983) from the National Gallery


President Barack and First Lady Michelle Obama are shaking things up in D.C. in more ways than one. Besides being the first black Presidential family, the Obamas are changing out the artwork in the White House.

Currently, the White House is full of Hudson River School paintings, landscapes, and the like. The Obamas, supporters of the arts, are actively seeking out modern and contemporary work made by women, Latinos, Asian, and African-American artists. It is said that they have a "wish list" of about 40 artists that they would like to see in their home, and are contacting museums and galleries to borrow the work.

Read more about the Obama artwork shakeup:
Changing the Art on the White House Walls from The Wall Street Journal
• Listen to "Yes We Can Be More Artistically Inclusive" from WNYC's The Brian Lehrer Show

Thursday, June 11, 2009

First photographs


Although people were experimenting with primitive photography techniques, pin-hole cameras, camera obscuras, etc. for centuries, the first permanent photograph is said to have been created around 1825 by Nicéphore Niépce. Niépce referred to this type of images as heliographs (sun writings). Using a plate coated in bitumen, he exposed the plated with a camera obscura over an 8-hour period. After he washed the plate with lavender oil, the View from the Window at Le Gras appeared.


Currently, the original plate is on display at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, at the University of Texas at Austin.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

First Oil Paintings


Just last year scientists discovered what are being described as the world's first-ever oil paintings. Much like the Lascaux paintings, these were found on caves, however in Afghanistan. The findings prove that oils had been used in Asia hundreds of years earlier than in Europe.



From CNN:
Scientists found the murals in a network of caves where monks lived and prayed in the Afghan region of Bamiyan, according to a statement on the Web site of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, where the ancient paintings were analyzed.

Until 2001, two colossal 6th-century statues of Buddhas stood at the mouth of the caves. Then the Taliban, which then ruled Afghanistan, blew up the statues on the grounds that they were un-Islamic. The action drew international condemnation.

Inside the caves, scientists found murals painted in the 7th century. They show images of Buddha in vermilion robes sitting cross-legged amid palm leaves and mythical creatures.

In 12 of 50 caves, the murals were painted using drying oils -- perhaps from walnuts and poppy seeds -- the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility said.

Its findings on the age of the oil paintings were published this week in The Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry.

"This is the earliest clear example of oil paintings in the world," said Yoko Taniguchi, leader of the team of scientists.

keep reading about the first oil paintings...

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

our first space artist


This summer, 40 years after Neil Armstrong walked his first steps on the moon, "space artist" Alan Bean will exhibit a group of his paintings in a show entitled Alan Bean: Painting Apollo, First Artist on Another World at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.

Alan Bean was the fourth man to walk on the Moon in 1969 (with Apollo 12). After working with NASA for 18 years as an astronaut, Bean retired so that he could focus on his painting.

The Smithsonian, heralding Bean as the first "space artist", says, "Displaying both art and artifacts, this exhibition weaves the technology of one of humankind’s greatest achievements with an artist’s firsthand account of a new frontier."

Opening Thursday, July 16, 2009
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
The National Mall
Independence Ave at 6th Street, SW
Washington, DC 20560

Tiptoeing on the Ocean of Storms, 1982, acrylic on masonite



Kissing the Earth, 1994, acrylic on masonite