An amazingly correct approach to painting and thinking about art. Thank you, I will definitely keep your suggestions in mind for my own painting experiments!
Danke für die Idee! Mein Vater war in der Umgebung des Staffelsees, wo Gäste waren: Alexej Jawlensky und Marianne Werefkin, Franz Marc und August Macke, Paul Klee und Heinrich Campendonck - das ist die Wiege des „Blaue Reiter“, hier entstand eine neue Sichtweise auf die Malerei. Genau dort fand die Neufassung der Malerei meines Vaters, des Künstlers Anatoli Gostev, statt (der Großteil seines Schaffens nach der Emigration fand in Deutschland statt): vom Kopieren der Natur hin zum Erspüren des Inhalts, zur Abstraktion und zur Übertragung des Extrakts von Empfindungen. Dort, an der Wiege des "Blaue Reiter", entstand auch das Gemälde „Treffen See“ auf gostevs.com - eines der von diesem großartigen Ort inspirierten Werke.
After I heard the title, I saw the other dog. Not you. Somehow, I lost the connection between the two, & the search. Dogs search, nose to ground. The slightest trace of what thier searching for I'd some way put in. Or there's no search for each other, no connection is in the painting. Just one dog, but its not clear to me which. Thats just how I see it.. someone else, im sure will see different.. black moon lit silhouette of a sleeping dog in distance? Love the story.
Thank you so much for your comment. It’s valuable to me that you reflect on painting and that it moves you. Paradoxically, the more explicit meaning the artist tries to put into a painting, the more banal and ordinary it becomes. Take, for example, Surikov’s painting "The Morning of the Streltsy Execution," with its claim to a sense of super-tragedy, and "A Pair of Shoes", 1886 by Vincent Van Gogh. Van Gogh expressed tragedy a hundred times more powerfully with just a pair of boots. No, my dog isn’t searching for anything. She has already found everything - her home, her owner, and the horizon of the Boku-Kotorsky Bay. She is just waiting for me, and nothing more.
Thank you really enjoyed this artists point of view.
Thank You for Your Attention! 💫
An amazingly correct approach to painting and thinking about art. Thank you, I will definitely keep your suggestions in mind for my own painting experiments!
Thank You!
Die Blaue Reiter?
Danke für die Idee! Mein Vater war in der Umgebung des Staffelsees, wo Gäste waren: Alexej Jawlensky und Marianne Werefkin, Franz Marc und August Macke, Paul Klee und Heinrich Campendonck - das ist die Wiege des „Blaue Reiter“, hier entstand eine neue Sichtweise auf die Malerei. Genau dort fand die Neufassung der Malerei meines Vaters, des Künstlers Anatoli Gostev, statt (der Großteil seines Schaffens nach der Emigration fand in Deutschland statt): vom Kopieren der Natur hin zum Erspüren des Inhalts, zur Abstraktion und zur Übertragung des Extrakts von Empfindungen. Dort, an der Wiege des "Blaue Reiter", entstand auch das Gemälde „Treffen See“ auf gostevs.com - eines der von diesem großartigen Ort inspirierten Werke.
Parada
Thank you so much ☀
After I heard the title, I saw the other dog. Not you. Somehow, I lost the connection between the two, & the search. Dogs search, nose to ground. The slightest trace of what thier searching for I'd some way put in. Or there's no search for each other, no connection is in the painting. Just one dog, but its not clear to me which. Thats just how I see it.. someone else, im sure will see different.. black moon lit silhouette of a sleeping dog in distance? Love the story.
Thank you so much for your comment. It’s valuable to me that you reflect on painting and that it moves you. Paradoxically, the more explicit meaning the artist tries to put into a painting, the more banal and ordinary it becomes. Take, for example, Surikov’s painting "The Morning of the Streltsy Execution," with its claim to a sense of super-tragedy, and "A Pair of Shoes", 1886 by Vincent Van Gogh. Van Gogh expressed tragedy a hundred times more powerfully with just a pair of boots. No, my dog isn’t searching for anything. She has already found everything - her home, her owner, and the horizon of the Boku-Kotorsky Bay. She is just waiting for me, and nothing more.
@fabervisum thats what I wasn't sure of, was the dog her or you.