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Still-life wall painting, Pompeii, before 69 AD. |
In painting, they have always been a minor genre. They
have mostly been sublimated to history painting, portraiture, even the lowly
landscape. Someone eons ago decided to call such work still-lifes. From the very
start it's a contradiction of terms. A better phrase might have been life,
stilled. That is to say, a bit of life, animal, vegetable, or mineral, culled by
the artist from its natural environment, and "stilled" into a contrived
arrangement hopefully signifying something. As painting goes, they're a
relatively recent development, perhaps growing out of the props used to decorate
portraits or religious paintings. Both, going back centuries, sometimes have
exciting little nooks and crannies with modest, often exquisite little
still-life representations. Vermeer comes to mind...and Rembrandt.
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The Milkmaid (detail), ca. 1658, Jan Vermeer |
Not
coincidentally, both were Dutch. Of course, by the time painting came of age in
the low countries and northern Germany, the still-life had long been a staple in
the painter's art. In fact, the genre reached a sort of peak in the hard-edged
realism reflecting the highly materialistic world of Flemish art. Not until our
modern era do we again see it hold such sway. Strangely enough, it was Picasso,
Braque, and the Cubists who once more brought up the subject, using it as a
platform for their experiments in shattering illusions of planes and textures.
Artists as diverse as Marsden Hartley, and James McNeill Whistler have tried
their hand at it. Photographer's delight in them, perhaps because they offer the
opportunity to experiment almost endlessly with nuances of light and shadow,
edges, reflections, and textures, and afterwards, if you've chosen your model
carefully, you can eat it.
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Flowers and Vase, 1985, Donald Sulton |
Painters routinely deal with two primal
elements in their work--reality and Illusion. Like fire and water, in the art of
still-life painting, they are often at war with one another. American still-life
artists such as Charles Bird King, several of the Peales, William Harnett,
Frederick Peto, and others all, chose to explore the illusional end. An artist
by the name of Donald Sulton uses tar, oil, plaster,even linoleum over Masonite
to explore the reality of the genre. His 1985 Flowers and Vase (left) is a modern
example. In my own work, I've done both, even tried to broker a peace between
the warring factions by mixing the two elements, asking, "Where does illusion
end and reality begin?" We can paint extremely credible illusions of reality
with oils or fabricate sculptural illusions with all manner of mixed media, even
appropriating the "real thing," an actually apple for instance, in the ultimate
homage to reality. In dealing with these extremes, on the one end there is painted, two-dimensional illusion
masquerading as reality, while on the other extreme is three-dimensional reality
masquerading as art, which begs the question, is it, in fact, "art" once it reaches
such an extreme? Hurry and answer before the apple rots.
The titles below refer to "before" the diet and "after" with elements of the still-life fabricated, painted, and attached to the surface, even "breaking" the frame.
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Before, 2000, Jim Lane |
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After, 2000, Jim Lane |
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