Sunday, February 8, 2009

fashion & art 2: vincent van gogh continued

ok. having posted the previous painting wheat field under thunderclouds i cannot leave out its famous sibling:

vincent van gogh, wheat field with crows, 1890

vincent van gogh, wheat field with crows (1890)

van gogh's works were not the fashion during his lifetime. he could not sell his paintings (i believe he sold just one painting during his life), but other artists recognized his genius. after his death, his paintings quickly gained reputation. vincent to me is probably the antinomy of fashion and contemporary fashion-like art.

theorem: (ralf kwaaknijd, 2008)

the fashionality in contemp art is largely due to the relativistic opportunism of postmodernism.

proof: we leave the proof as an exercise to the reader.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

fashion & art 1: vincent van gogh

frequently i find myself being old-fashioned. i suppose it has to do with my distaste of fashion. distaste of fashion? yes, you read correctly.

it's not that i dislike nice clothes, or that i dislike contemporary creativity. i dislike the enormous marketing component, the money machine which drives our fashions. not only in clothing, but also very prominently in contemporary art.

with the communication speed of the modern world, new newer newest cannot go fast enough. to maintain the illusion of `important buzz', the marketeers in fashion (and art and any other field) have to convince us time and again that `new' equals `better'.

please don't misunderstand me with regard to (post)(post)modern art. personally i feel that a much larger art world has been opened up to us in the past century, for which i'm grateful. but on considering which art works from this period i find exceptionally moving, inspiring...it seems to me that these works breathe the same qualities as the exceptionally moving art works from earlier times.

there is something timeless about these works. they and `fashion' are definitely not in the same existence plane.

vincent van gogh, wheat field under thunderclouds, 1890

vincent van gogh, wheat field under thunderclouds (1890)

Monday, February 2, 2009

entombment series inspired by rembrandt 10, 11 (end)

frank waaldijk, entombment 10 (inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 10 (own work, 2006, 70 x 50 cm, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)


frank waaldijk, entombment 11 (inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 11 (own work, 2006, 70 x 50 cm, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

above are the last two drawings in the series, no further comment on them. i hope to have brought readers some insight in how works develop over time, and how old masters inspire. now it's time for other subjects.

entombment series inspired by rembrandt 8, 9

frank waaldijk, entombment 8 (inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 8 (own work, 2006, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

continuing from the previous post. from here on i feel the theme has reached the level that i'm looking for. detail below:

frank waaldijk, detail of entombment 8 (inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 8 (detail, own work, 2006, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

the next drawing really comes from the subconscious levels, i honestly have no idea how this type of drawing comes into existence, it just happens.

frank waaldijk, entombment 9 (inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 9 (own work, 2006, 50 x 35 cm, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

and a detail:

frank waaldijk, detail of entombment 8(inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 9 (detail, own work, 2006, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

Saturday, January 24, 2009

entombment series inspired by rembrandt 5, 6, 7

frank waaldijk, entombment 5(inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 5 (own work, 2006, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

continuing from the previous post. it is probably more prudent from the marketing perspective to not show less-than-perfect studies, but so what. i thought it might be interesting to show a bit how themes develop, and in all my themes there are a fair percentage of works that don't `work' enough on the levels in which i'm interested.

from this point on the format in the series is no longer only a4 (21 x 30 cm).

frank waaldijk, entombment 6(inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 6 (own work, 2006, 45 x 35 cm, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

frank waaldijk, entombment 7(inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 7 (own work, 2006, 40 x 50 cm, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

entombment 2, 3 & 4

frank waaldijk, entombment 2(inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 2 (own work, 2006, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

the second drawing. somehow things are more charged, i feel. but it's hard to analyze for me. the third and fourth drawing:

frank waaldijk, entombment 3(inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 3 (own work, 2006, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

frank waaldijk, entombment 4(inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 4 (own work, 2006, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

to be honest, i considered and still consider these drawings as first steps. i seldom work consecutively on a theme fixed beforehand. somehow i had to get `into it'. for this i needed some spatiality, some light/dark, but also some real emotionality, the feeling of saying final goodbye. not an easy undertaking.

entombment series 1

frank waaldijk, entombment 1(inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

entombment 1 (own work, 2006, inspired by a rembrandt drawing)

this is the first drawing i started with. no further comment.