Tuesday, July 19, 2005 
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I'm taking a beginner's drawing class at North Seattle Community College. Today, we started on perspective. We began by watching a 45-minute video by David Hockney, where he contrasts three paintings: a Canaletto painting of Venice, and two Chinese scrolls painted 70 years apart.

The Canaletto is a classic two-point linear perspective painting. Both of the Chinese scrolls show trips by the emperor along the Grand Canal. The first one, by Wang Hui, is 27 inches high and 72 feet wide! It uses multiple perspective to show scenes, in a manner that is strange to my Western eyes. Hockney demonstrates how effective it is. For example, he shows a corner where two streets meet at right angles. On the "up" street, the viewer is on the left, looking right, at the left side of the houses; on the street coming from the left, we see the right side of the houses. I've made it sound like a mess but it works. The scroll is a marvel of teeming humanity in tiny detail. Most of the figures are scarcely larger than Hockney's fingernail.

He contrasts it unfavorably with a scroll painted of a similar trip by the emperor's grandson, after Western missionaries had imported their notions of perspective. The second scroll is flat and lifeless, though the perspective is more "correct" to our eyes.

Worth seeing if you can find a copy.

posted on Wednesday, July 20, 2005 5:47:56 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, October 18, 2005 10:52:37 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)
History painting, as formulated in 1667 by Andre Felibien, a historiographer, architect and theoretician of French classicism, was in the hierarchy of genres considered to be the grande genre. History paintings included paintings with religious, mythological, historical, literary, or allegorical subjects--they embodied some interpretation of life or conveyed a moral or intellectual message. The gods and goddesses from the ancient mythologies represented different aspects of the human psyche, figures from religions represented different ideas, and history, like the other sources, represented a dialectic or play of ideas. For a long time, especially during the French Revolution, history painting often focused on depiction of the heroic male nude; though this waned into the 19th century. In the mid-nineteenth-century there arose a style known as historicism, which marked a formal imitation of historical styles and/or artists.
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