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The power of words
often pales in comparison to that of a picture; a man can express his
innermost feelings with but a few fluid motions of his hand across a
canvas, recreating the blurry image that haunts his mind. To those who
create art, it is a medium of most wonderful expression, allowing its
patrons to dabble in a lucrative craft that yields unique results that
still have a universal meaning. The presence of art in the lives of
man is ubiquitous - art can be seen everywhere, whether it be the spiral
design of a staircase or the splashes of brilliant color on a canvas.
To the unobservant man, art is nothing more than colors mixing together
in unbridled histrionics; where, if no shape or form exists, the art
is rendered incapable of having any tangible meaning. Art, much like
the vivid notes of a song composed to stir emotions deep within the
soul, is a fountain of hope and inspiration for those who allow it to
have real significance. A piece of artwork can never be truly understood
if analyzed on a superficial level. To those who choose to look deep
within the canvas and see the heart of its creator, the meaning of art
as a medium for human expression is revolutionary.
Our trip to the Solomon R. Guggenheim museum gave each student a moment
to bask in the work of some of the greatest artists of the twentieth-century.
Prominent men and women, such as the famed Zaha Hadid, had their pieces
on display for commentary and analysis. The contemporary feel of the
museum coupled by its distinctive interior layout fit the mood of the
day. Art would be the focus; its hidden meaning the objective of our
trip.
This painting immediately caught my attention. It seemed simple enough
- color arranged in semi-rigid rectangular shapes accented by dark and
light borders. A basic painting made with oils on canvas, its large
size (81.5 inches by 66 inches) made it noticeable from afar. Closer
inspection showed that it had never been named. Mark Rothko, its creator,
had never chosen a suitable name for it, leading collectors to title
it by the colors that are displayed in the work. The top of the painting
is a deep red, abruptly cut off by a black line and leading to an orange
and then lighter yellow. Its border, painted onto the work itself, is
a mix of white and red streaks. It seems as though there is a singular
base color beneath the three main colors. A peach skin-tone color, it
compliments the painting and causes the dominant colors to blend together
while still retaining their distinctive aspects. This was the zenith
of Rothko's work; he began to explore the expressive potential of stacked
rectangular fields of luminous colors. Rothko depended on abstract means
to express universal human emotions, striving to create an awe-inspiring
intensity in such an innately secular world.
Untitled can be analyzed in a multitude of manners - the metaphorical
importance of colors, their shape and juxtaposition within the piece,
and the borders and colors that surround them. This is a canvas in which
bright colors are prominent and can be understood as paragons of the
human spirit. The red on the top of the painting reveals the passion
that we, as humans, always feel, where it can overpower and supersede
all other kinds of emotion. The black line quickly cuts through the
red, ending that line of passion and creating softer colors. The yellow
and orange are a fusion of this passion with a need for serenity, representing
the tranquility of the human mind after it has struggled with a bout
of poignant passion. Rothko has also been noted for dabbling in religious
themes throughout his pieces. Certain critics believe that this picture
is actually an abstract depiction of the Virgin Mary, mother of the
prophet Jesus Christ, at the end of his crucifixion. The concepts of
frontality and iconic imagery are present within this work, accented
by dimensions that mirror popular altarpieces. Rothko's dependency on
diaphanous, pure color has awarded him the titles of sensualist and
colorist. It was his purpose to stage, within his paintings, grandeur
contradictions: the power of life and death, the passing of time, and
the power of the spirit.
Untitled is far more than a geometric placement of colors on
a canvas to aesthetically please its viewers. It is a subtle symbol
of passion and lust, the dissipation of that lust under calming circumstances,
and the great juxtaposition of human emotions within the mind. In its
simplicity one can find truths that often remain aloof in the more complex
and colored pieces found within the Guggenheim. It is symbolic in every
way, and the true meaning of this work can be debated for decades, making
it an intriguing piece of art.
Place Vintimille, a piece worked on from 1908 until 1910 by artist
Edouard Vulliard, is quite different in terms of design in that it is
actually two pieces. Further, it appears as though one piece is almost
missing; the sequence cannot be completed and the pictures cannot be
moved together because they are uneven. The panel on the right appears
far more drab and lifeless in nature, as if some enigmatic force had
enervated the once lively scene depicted in the left panel. The two
panels appear to be mirrors of one another, as if the left panel had
been reflected onto the right but at a later time during the day. Vuillard
and his mother, living in a fifth-story apartment, were able to capture
the very essence of the park: its tourists bustling from point to point,
the changing of the seasons, and the effervescence of the playful clouds
of the sky. The panels themselves are two different sizes, with the
left slightly larger than the other but both approximately 79 inches
by 27 inches. Distemper on cardboard that was mounted on canvas, the
size of the pictures allows for a greater view into the detail of the
piece.
The missing third link of the canvases shows that Vuillard wishes to
leave interpretation to his viewer. Each detail within one picture can
be found within another. The clouds on the left panel are facing the
opposite way of those on the right panel, with changes in color evident.
There also seems to be a focus on time - Vuillard wishes to capture
the exact moment in which he began his project. The lower corner of
the left panel shows a horse and only a small portion of a carriage
pulled by it. The time of day in which the picture is painted can be
seen; the right panel shows children bustling through the square heading
to the street while the left has a great focus on family, with adults
flanked on all sides by young children. It is very possible that Vuillard,
being a man who felt akin with those who loved family (as he was still
living with his mother despite commissions made from his work), supports
constant theme of togetherness and compliments the aspiring family unit.
The era in which the canvases were created was but a few years before
the outbreak of the World War I, in which many areas were starting to
develop and industrialize and rapid rates. These canvases are a brief
snippet into a world ever-changing.
Place Vintimille is a collection of canvases that accurately
illustrate the changes under which a singular location may go over the
course of time. However, beneath this exterior, these pictures help
us realize that, even when we walk away from a place and it changes
in our eyes, it will always retain the intrinsic values that give it
character and sustenance. These canvases are as much about change as
they are about the importance of a static environment and its significance
for those who constantly interact within it.
Zaha Hadid, an Afghani woman, is widely known as one of today's most
innovative architects, consistently testing the boundaries and parameters
of architecture, urbanism, and design. She was the first woman in history
to receive the Pritzker Architecture Prize, one of the most prestigious
awards offered to designers and constructors. Her thirty-year retrospective
endorsed by the Guggenheim presents a wide range of mediums through
which she sculpted her vision: paintings, sketches, architectural drawings,
urban plans, models, relief models, animations, furniture, and design
objects. The exhibition was organized chronologically and filled the
museum rotunda and the adjacent Annex Level 7 gallery. The themes of
her work link projects together over different periods. The concepts
of fields, folds, ribbons, and clusters have become an important basis
in current discussions of contemporary architecture practice due to
Hadid's constant use of them.
Hadid had originally believed that her work should follow the principles
of Russian Constructivism, basing her sketches on simple geometries
and lines and planes frozen in time and space. Despite successes, however,
she felt that this type of method would begin to constrict her ability
to develop new ideas, forcing her to turn to paints and research representations
of three dimensions through multiple perspectives. Since that moment,
she has moved from abstraction and fragmentation to fluidity and seamless
complexity. Hadid depends heavily on distortion and her manipulation
of spatial reasoning. It is through these abstract concepts that she
is able to design such an extensive amount of work.
Trafalgar Square, a painting based on a location in London, analyzes
the effects of urbanism and constant public movement. The painting encompasses
multiple dimensions, having planes in sharp juxtaposition to one another
as buildings pierce her multi-colored sky. Hadid employs multiple colors
on her landscape to show buildings that already exist, buildings that
she believes should be created, and the most effective mediums through
which the public can pass to best remove daily congestion and shuffle.
Hadid created the sketch as to analyze the square over a twenty-four
hour period to determine how to best move the public. Her fluid designs
and architecture are evident within this picture. She creates new buildings
not to give the scene a sense of beauty but rather to make it as efficient
as possible; her ideal city is one in which movement occurs like a river
flowing gently through a stream. Made with acrylics on a canvas, it
is over 90 inches long and over 50 inches wide.
Trafalgar Square is an important piece in Hadid's collection because
it is one of the many testaments to the efficiency of her architecture.
Though many young teenagers will believe her simply to be a woman mad
and bent on using every color known to humanity in paintings that are
nothing more than interlocking lines, the watchful eye sees the effect
that Hadid will have on modern architecture. Her belief in fluid movement
and tortuous angles has earned her a place in books about the twentieth-century's
greatest architects and designers.
The trip to the Guggenheim Museum awarded me a rare chance to see some
of today's most contemporary artwork, drawing inspiration from current
events and societal beliefs and morals. There is a great deal that can
be learned through art; it is a form of human expression that can say
things that words always fail to. Looking at a piece of art for its
value can be a laborious task. However, before one simply discredits
the work as meaningless and childish scribble, one should look deep
within the lines and figures found within the piece and realize that
art, no matter how simple, will always have meaning.

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