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Learn About the Art & Lives: Life of an Artist | ARTLECTURE

Learn About the Art & Lives: Life of an Artist

-Toulouse-Lautrec, Gustav Klimt, Frances Bacon, Edvard Munch & Many More-

/Artlecture/
by Art History School
Tag : #history, #lives, #artist
Learn About the Art & Lives: Life of an Artist
-Toulouse-Lautrec, Gustav Klimt, Frances Bacon, Edvard Munch & Many More-
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HIGHLIGHT


Art History School: Learn About the Art & Lives of Toulouse-Lautrec, Gustav Klimt, Frances Bacon, Edvard Munch & Many More

We hope to look at the artists' lives and the world of works through videos and look into the present life. Next is...

Three more of Paul Priestly’s Art History School profiles that we’ve enjoyed on Frances Bacon, Edvard Munch and Gustav Klimt. You can subscribe to his channel here.


#1 Gustav Klimt

He was prodigiously talented even from a young age, as was his brother Ernst, who he would set up an artist's company with. Gustav Klimt was the first president of the Viennese Secession, but his life was not without controversy, the University paintings being a good example. Klimt is best known for his portraits which are painted in a very decorative style often using gold leaf combining geometric decoration with realistic depictions of hands and faces. His most famous painting probably being The Kiss, completed in 1908. His relationship with the fashion designer Emilie Flöge is covered as his Beethoven Frieze. His controversial paintings, Philosophy, Medicine, and Jurisprudence which he completed for Vienna University are also discussed. Klimt died in Vienna in 1918 just 55 years old.



#2 Edvard Munch

The famous artist Edvard Munch was born in Loten in Norway, but lost his mother and sister at a young age. Edvard Munch is perhaps most famous for his paintings, The Scream, Death in the Sick Room, but his series of paintings, The Frieze of Life contains many remarkable paintings such as the Dance of Life. Munch suffered from bouts of mental illness and alcoholism, both issues are often reflected in his work. He also did a series of paintings for Oslo University, in Norway and for the Freia Chocolate Factory also in Oslo. The latter years of his life were spent in his estate at Ekely, Norway painting many self portraits which explored the effects of old age. Edvard Munch died in 1944 at the age of 80.


#3 Francis Bacon

Francis Bacon was born in 1909 in Dublin to English parents. Edward, his father was a race-horse trainer and a veteran of the Boer War. His mother was Christina Firth, a steel heiress, who lived and loved the life of a socialite. His childhood was blighted by severe asthma from which he suffered all his life. Bacon was a shy child, who enjoyed dressing up, this, and his effeminate manner, infuriated his father. Bacon had little formal education. Family relations became abusive and brutal in his teenage years as Bacon came to terms with his emerging homosexuality. In 1926 Bacon’s father, repelled by his homosexuality, threw him out of the family home and Bacon aged just 17 arrived in London with a weekly allowance of £3 from his mother. In 1927 he moved to Berlin then to Paris where he was impressed by Picasso’s 1927 exhibition. As a consequence, he attended the free art academies in Paris and began to learn to draw and paint. Bacon’s 1933 Crucifixion painting was his first painting to attract public attention. Francis Bacon was exempted from military service in the 2nd World War because of his asthma. In 1944 he fully commit himself to painting and created Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion, which he considered as the start of his career. By 1946 Bacon was a central figure in the artistic milieu of post-war Soho, and spent much of his time eating, drinking and gambling with Lucian Freud and friends. His first solo exhibition was in 1949 at the Hanover Gallery. The show entitled ‘Heads’, introduced two important motifs: the scream and Diego Velazquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X. In 1953, the Hanover Gallery held an exhibition of his paintings that included Two Figures, a depiction of two men embracing in bed. The image created a huge scandal, as homosexuality was not decriminalised until 1967 in the UK. Bacon’s 1957 exhibition was inspired by Van Gogh’s ‘The Painter on the Road to Tarascon. These paintings incorporated a more vibrant palette and bolder brushstrokes than previous work. Bacon had his first major retrospective at the Tate Gallery, London in 1962. In 1963-4, Bacon’s international reputation was confirmed with his retrospective at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. During the Sixties despite his heightened success, he refused the Carnegie Institute Award in 1967 and donated his Rubens Prize towards the restoration of Florence following the flood of 1966. In October 1971 Francis Bacon was given the rare honour for living artist of a retrospective at the Grand Palais in Paris. The exhibition was a spectacular success, but two days before it opened his long-time lover George Dyer committed suicide. By the mid 1970s, Bacon’s reputation, as the greatest British painter since J.M.W. Turner was confirmed. His second Tate Gallery retrospective took place in 1985. In April 1992, Bacon was hospitalised in Madrid with pneumonia exacerbated by asthma. He died on 28 April and was cremated in Spain. In 2013 his painting "Three Studies of Lucian Freud" became the most expensive work sold at auction - $142.4 million at Christie's in New York.



#4 Toulouse Lautrec
Toulouse Lautrec’s family background was the opposite of the poor, working class life he would lead in Paris as an artist. Yet Lautrec became one of the most influential post-impressionist artists of the late 19th century. Famous for his humanistic portrayals of sex workers that reveal an uncommon sensitivity, perhaps he was motivated by a sense of identification with the socially marginalized, due to his own physical issues. And also, for his highly individualized poster portrayals of Montmartre entertainers, cabaret dancers and singers such as Jane Avril and Yvette Guilbert. His famous paintings have a great sense of immediacy, but they were carefully prepared. Lautrec always carried a small sketchbook wherever he went. The thousands of rapid drawings and jotting that survive tell us he drew frequently, and how he developed his great paintings from quick visual impressions. He created just 30 posters, all lithographs, all of which are now regarded as iconic images. For the first time in history, he elevated the medium of advertising to high art, instinctively grasping the concept of celebrity and by interweaving commercial and fine art prefigured many of the ideas of Andy Warhol.Although Toulouse Lautrec produced many wonderfully inventive artworks, his short life was also the story of a battle with disability, ridicule, disease and alcoholism.


#5 Hilma af Klint
Hilma af Klint was born on 26 October 1862, at the Karlberg Palace in Solna, Sweden, the naval academy where her father was based. She was the fourth of five children born to Mathilda and Victor af Klint who were both staunch Protestants. Most of her childhood was spent in the Karlberg Palace, but during the summers, the family would move to Adelso, an island in Lake Malaren, near Stockholm. It was here that Hilma's fascination with nature and organic life began.In 1880 she attended the Technical School, now known as Konstfack, and studied classical portraiture under the supervision of the artist Kerstin Cardon. Around this time, she became a committed vegetarian, usually wore black and began to develop an interest in the spiritual and the occult. At the age of 20 in 1882, Hilma enrolled at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm. She was one of the first women to do so and spent the next five years studying drawing, portraiture and landscape painting. She graduated with honours and as a result, was awarded a studio in the Academy’s “Atelier Building”, in Stockholm's artist quarter. In 1896 she joined the Edelweiss Society but left soon after with four other like-minded women artists and founded the “Friday Group”, also known as “The Five”. They met for spiritual meetings, meditation and séances. The medium, Sigrid Hedman, one of the five, led exercises in automatic writing. This was decades before the Surrealists would use automatic drawing to generate their ideas. In 1904 Hilma af Klint’s work profoundly changed after an otherworldly experience. During a séance, she claimed to have heard a voice telling her to make paintings 'on an astral plane'. So, in November 1906 at age 44, Hilma af Klint began creating, ‘The Paintings for the Temple,’ which comprised several series of paintings on various themes. The first, preparatory group was called Primordial Chaos and consisted of twenty-six small pictures. They break free entirely from representation, combining geometric shapes such as spirals with dynamic brushstrokes, letters of the alphabet and symbols. It was a conscious decision on her part to keep these works secret, only showing them to a small, very select group of friends.Hilma af Klint shared an interest in the spiritual with the other pioneers of abstract art including Wassily Kandinsky, Kazimir Malevich, and Piet Mondrian. And like Hilma af Klint many were drawn to Theosophy, which opened a route towards a new world of spiritual reality, rather than merely depicting visual impressions of the world around them. Had she not kept her abstract work secret she would surely have held the accolade of producing the world’s first abstract paintings. Instead, Kandinsky’s paintings of 1911 would, until recently, come to be recognised as the first abstract works of art. On her death Hilma af Klint left more than 1,200 works of art, which had only been seen by a handful of people, and some 125 notebooks. In her notebooks she stipulated her work should not be publicly displayed until at least 20 years after her death.Hilma af Klint did not have any contact with the modern movements of her time, yet she is now generally considered to be the pioneer of abstract art - her first abstract painting created in 1906, pre-dates Kandinsky’s by five years. In 2013 the Modern Museum in Stockholm hosted the first exhibition dedicated solely to her work and it was from here that her work began to receive the acclaim it deserved.

all images/words ⓒ the artist(s) and organization(s)

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