Artists & Illustrators — June 2017

(Nandana) #1
42 Artists & Illustrators

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or many, the word ‘art’ evokes images of artists
starving in garrets and dying for their work, leaving
behind a legacy of great masterpieces no-one had
recognised. The truth, of course, is rarely like that.
Art is full of industrious people who are affected and
influenced by their times, surroundings and personal
experiences, as well as the materials available to them and
the art required at the time. Since ancient times, artists
have produced two- and three-dimensional art in paint,
plaster, bronze, marble, mosaic and more, and as they try
new things, they affect and influence the art that follows.
Sometimes art changes as a positive response, and
sometimes it reacts against art that has gone before.
When I began writing my book, The Short Story of Art, I
wanted to create an introduction to Western art that would
be unique and accessible. Often, people are interested in
art, yet feel uncomfortable because they don’t know (or
think don’t they know) enough. The easiest way to
approach the vast subject is to encounter it in bite-size
pieces, and then learn how these connect. I have chosen
four snapshots, not because they were the most
ground-breaking art of all time, but because each initiated
developments in the story of art. The 13th-century mosaic
Christ Pantokrator included some tonal contrast, which
harked back to ancient Roman mosaics, suggesting it
wasn’t simply a flat image on a wall. Giotto went even
further, trying to portray depth, distance and emotion. Mary
Cassatt used the inventions of portable paint tubes and
photography, and the newer influence of Japanese prints to
capture a boating scene from an unusual viewpoint, while
Degas outrageously added clothing and hair to his statue.
Interestingly, however, one of the earliest works in the
book is bulls painted on a cave wall thousands of years
ago, while one of the most recent is a shark preserved in
formaldehyde: large images of animals about 20,000 years
apart. It makes you wonder, has art changed much at all?
The Short Story of Art by Susie Hodge is out now, published by
Laurence King, £12.99. http://www.laurenceking.com

ART HISTORIAN SUSIE HODGE EXPLORES FOUR
WORKS THAT REWROTE THE TECHNIQUES RULEBOOK

ABOVE Mary
Cassatt, Boating
Party, 1893-94,
oil on canvas,
90x117.3cm
RIGHT Christ
Pantokrator,
c.1261, mosaic,
Hagia Sophia,
Istanbul, Turkey

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Christ Pantokrator, c.1261, mosaic,
Hagia Sophia, Istanbul, Turkey
In the Hagia Sophia, the greatest church in
Constantinople (now Istanbul) – the capital of the
Byzantine Empire – Christ Pantokrator faces forwards,
holding the Gospels in his left hand, while his right is
raised in blessing. The Greek word ‘Pantokrator’
means ‘almighty’ or ‘ruler of all’. While not lifelike in
contemporary terms, recognisable features have
been portrayed to convey love and compassion.
Christ’s long, sensitive fingers and clothing are
depicted with attention to detail and a developing
sense of three-dimensions. In most Byzantine art,
these elements had become formulaic, but this work
shows more individuality.

NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART, WASHINGTON, D.C. CHESTER DALE COLLECTION 1963.10.94

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