La Dormeuse - My Take
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The Mistress of Art Deco
Art Deco was a movement that started in the roaring twenties and continued to the thirties. It was the machine age, and the age of chromed cars, talking movies and long cigarette holders... it was also a time of reaction to the spartan culture brought about by the first world war. And the second world war was responsible for its demise.
Art Deco was about shiny surfaces, geometric shapes and elaboration. Aero-dynamism and slickness, style and ostentation.
Tamara Lempicka painted in a post-post-impressionist style. Cubism first appeared as an offshoot of impressionism in the works of artists like Cézanne, and later became a full-fledged movement. There's cubism and cubism, and the soft variety is that which is not greatly abstract, but uses geometric shapes and stylised lighting to make a decorative and graphic statement.
Tamara was a soft cubist, who also led a delightfully scandalous art-deco life. But I am talking about the colour in her art here, not in her life.
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Tamara de Lempicka: The Artist, The Woman, The Legend
Price: $24.00
List Price: $39.95 |
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Lempicka (Basic Art Series)
Price: $23.39
List Price: $9.99 |
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Tamara de Lempicka
Price: $29.99
List Price: $39.95 |
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Tamara De Lempicka: A Life of Deco and Decadence
Price: $18.60
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de Lempicka (Basic Art)
Price: $20.00
List Price: $9.99 |
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Tamara De Lempicka (Pegasus)
Price: $5.10
List Price: $14.95 |
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Tamara De Lempicka 2009 Wall Calendar
Price: $24.96
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Every artist draws a self-portrait
La Dormeuse means the sleeper, I think. I have a theory that every artist does a self-portrait everytime. Compare the painting with the photograph of the painter and see if you can spot the six differences. Whether she used a model or not, I guess she painted her own portrait. The eyes, the lips, the nose, the hair...or is it that fashion and make-up of the times made every lady look the same way? I don't know, I could be wrong. Or right.
At an 1994 New York auction, they were amazed when Lempicka's painting Adam and Eve was unveiled. The painting seemed to glow and shimmer, due to the artist's brilliant use of colour and light. She had had great tutors: Vermeer and other great masters had taught her through their paintings in the Louvre, where she had spent hours studying them.The painting fetched nearly two million dollars. After that, her paintings became popular again, and Hollywood helped further the popularity. Her originals hang in the homes of stars like Madonna and Jack Nicholson.
Why the shine and gloss? I think that was the twenties look. If you take a look at The Musician, on our right, you will notice that the lady looks like she is made of chrome. She can be stuck on the hood of a '20s car, no questions asked. The paintings are like sculpture in chrome. Most things, like the drapery, look like metal foil. It's the effect of using sharp contrast and shading that simulates reflective material.
I have nothing much to say about the composition, as the lines are obvious, not hidden. This artist uses dynamic diagonals for her subjects and sets them against secure verticals in the background. Funnily, in The Musician, the musician looks like an angel in a niche, reminding me of early Christian icons.
in the News
- Art Deco FairMy Battersea2 days ago
The fair presents arts and crafts, pottery, bronzes, art nouveau, furniture, glass, jewellery, prints, lighting and more, all designed in a modernist style.
- ART: A drive through garage designs of past and presentThe Washington Times33 hours ago
"House of Cars" at the National Building Museum proves that the parking garage can be an urban asset, even a beautiful structure to behold. This fascinating exhibition traces the history of the prosaic building type, from horse stables used for auto storage to a pool-topped car shed at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo. The concept for the show was brought to the museum by ...
- STAIR Auctioneers & Appraisers Fine Art and Antiques December 5, 2009 at 10am 20th Century, Asian and JewelryAntiques and the Arts3 days ago
Art Deco nickel-plated six-light chandelier, 30 x 30 in.
- A modern view of Florida architectureMiami Herald2 days ago
If you think that Florida architecture is a mishmash of Mediterranean, Art Deco and Bungalow-style architecture with a splash of Caribbean color, then Four Florida Moderns by Saxon Henry will show you in colorful detail just how wrong you are.
- Uptown Art Mingles With Architectural GemsNew York Times4 days ago
Art viewing uptown involves rich parallel narratives concerning architecture and design, public life and private lifestyle, as well as the city’s history.
- Dots for Love and Peace 2009Scoop.co.nz19 hours ago
Yayoi Kusama site specific public artwork animates City Gallery Wellington facade Dots for Love and Peace (2009), one of only three temporary public art projects worldwide designed by iconic Japanese artist, Yayoi Kusama, is currently installed on the exterior architecture of City Gallery Wellington, New Zealand.
- CHERRY TREE AUCTIONS ADVANCE NOTICE FINE TOYS & COLLECTIBLES AUCTION! SATURDAY, December 5th at 5 pmAntiques and the Arts3 days ago
Very fine 39"Type TRW443 Art Deco stop light by Crouse-Hinds Co.
- Capital lodgingsThe Age3 days ago
Richard Jinman finds a hotel with art-deco glamour and a most civilised daily ritual.
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Comments
I love the art deco period. What a lady! Thanks for bringing her to our attention
Thank you, Iðunn and Gypsy. :)
Iðunn, there will always be poetry out of any thing, for a poet, especially for a thinker like you. I shall look forward to those.
Oh the old Freud will surely have something to say, I love him so much! :DI draw cartoons and almost all the time I draw them with big noses and big smiles: everything is an autobiography and a self-portrait, right! Works of art are always children of the artists, and babies carry genes. :)
No need to thank me, O requester of feminist delights, it was truthfully my pleasure. Your gratitude overtook mine in an affectionate race: thank you!
Yes, Gypsy, I love the movement too. I was in advertising once, and the style of the period is a perennial favourite of art directors.
"I draw cartoons and almost all the time I draw them with big noses and big smiles: everything is an autobiography and a self-portrait, right!"
hahaha! too funny... but what's even funnier, it just brings back the thought of you with a big helium-filled balloon head floating up as your art version and me on the string in my art version - a stick figure with stick-i-out hair which is about all I can manage.
I am going to write that one too, some day. :p
Please do write. Stick figure with stick-out hair (btw is it still magenta?) you are welcome to string along. :)))
string along indeed. I couldn't think of anything more fun. You always make me giggle. the hair is currently black. if you go back and check the "almost cut my hair" thread, I snuck two slide shows in the other day. one is current with black hair like, three weeks ago and one is from a couple of days ago, fading back to brown. nice play on fading to black, yes? I'm always polar opposite. such an eccentric.
I keep going back and looking at 'the musician'. you know, after you pointed it out, yes, there is a definite saint or angel quality to the expression. I could see that expression superimposed as you suggested. fantastic.
What will the world be without eccentrics? :) I too do crazy things with my hair, but not as much as you do.
Yes, isnt there a saintlike expression? And composed like those medieval icons, too.
I drew for you. Well, I scribbled on a blurry desktop image. Anyway, now you can see it how I imagine it. :D Floating with friends, indeed.
I have been there. :))
And it matched what I imagined that you imagined too. Yes, your hub made me more buoyant now. People of the world, float!
hehe. I made you an especially big head to leave room for more bouyancy. :)
I labelled my 'art' to the side as "un-art"... truth in advertising. it's about as un-arty as one can get. I had trouble finding the print from my destop (that IS my desktop) and had to make do with an enlarged print or it would have been... well... still un-arty. haha!
But I thought it was impossible to do unart! :)
Ah, maybe in the sense of natural as opposed to arty.
shall you do picasso's 'the rest' for me sometime? you know, I actually recently acquired my beloved "dingoes at the park" (basquiat) and rabi khan's lovely "safe in her arms". gorgeous work. the dingoes preside over my dining table which frankly is a little scary and the rabi khan print lovingly warms my living room.
With pleasure, Madam. That will be my next one. Let me start my research rightaway. :)
oh, thanks! you are such a doll~
There are two, shall I do both?
Let me also look at your Basquiat and Rabi Khan, and share your pleasure.
the basquiat is on this hub: http://hubpages.com/hub/Jean-Michel-Basquiat
which I believe you browsed once with very courteous unimpression hehe.
I still love that thing. I loved it enough to buy it, finally. "The Rest" is my next shop for, but it's going to be a while. The price is :O even for the print.
The version I like is here:
http://www.art.com/products/p12158279-sa-i1544712/
and my (first) rabi khan piece is the one from my hub here:
http://hubpages.com/hub/poem-for-jonathan
sorry on the links, if you want you can deny comment after you look, it won't offend.
I have no problems with links. :)
Thanks.
Your version is the one that's usually referred to as the rest, or Le Repos. So will do that then.
again, thank you so much. darn, now I want to see which the other one is. O.O
k, will show that one also. :)
thanks, I looked at a few places and could not find, unless it's 'the dreamer' one.
No, not that one. Here:
Your comment about the musician looking like an angel in a niche is a very interesting one (well -- the whole hub is interesting, thanks!) -- I was wondering about how it was posed, as the darker background around her head is a sort of "anti-halo", isn't it? Fascinating.
Thank you Teresa for the compliment. :)
You are right: negative halos make the face shine brighter by contrast.
thanks, I like the common one best... I suppose most do and that's why it's common, but I will say the other version lends to a much airier feeling, the increased colour, especially yellow. it's a totally different mood. one is peaceful, I think the leser known one is joyful.
There, you gave us a minitake! :) I will be jobless if poets analyse art. But happy way to go. :P
lol, you cannot be replaced. who else can I fly with? I read with interest Ms. McGurk's take on the halo effect. She's the one you should be scared of :O hehe
ROFL! and ty :)
Teresa, you listening? :)
This was a great Hub Kenny. I look forward to more of your Hubs.
Thank you very much, Mina. :)















Iðunn says:
6 months ago
" post-post-impressionist" lol :p nice. ok, so first, I had no idea she was so big, but the cubism I noticed and I'm fond of. I also like cezanne and I watched a doco about the rise of post-impressionism. some rare general background for me on this one.
I could see entire philosophical essays coming out of your ideas... first that every piece is autobiographical or a self-portrait somehow, in artist creation. I heard a theory once that freud said everyone in your dream is yourself, so it's not unfamiliar territory. second, the theory that society constructs force people through subtle pressure to 'be the same person'. intriguing.
perhaps there will be some poetry out of this some day. I have a bit I never work on about... well I won't say what it is because someone else will write it first. let's just say maybe I'll get a move on about it. haha. :p
thank you so much for taking the time to analyze this piece for me.