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the art of making a world ART111

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Chapter 1, Pierre Bonnard, The Art of Making a World

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 1

the art of making a world

ART111

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“…beauty is often where you don’t expect to find it; that it is something we may discover and also invent, then reinvent, for ourselves; that the most important things in the world are never as simple as they seem but that the world is also richer when it declines to abide by comforting formulas. And that it is always good to keep your eyes wide open, because you never know what you will discover. The drive to live life more alertly being an instinctive need, whether you are an artist by trade or by desire, the art of seeing well is a necessary skill, which fortunately can be learned.”

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Picasso, Le Demoiselles d'Avignon, 1907

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Picasso, Weeping Woman, 1937

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Picasso in his studio

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“Don’t talk to me about Bonnard. That’s not painting, what he does…Painting isn’t a question of sensibility: it’s a question of

seizing the power, taking over from nature, not expecting her to supply you with

information and good advice.”

Picasso on Bonnard

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Pierre Bonnard in his studio, photographed by Cartier-Bresson

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Pierre Bonnard, photographed by Cartier-Bresson

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Bonnard, The Breakfast Table, 1930-1

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Pierre & Marthe Bonnard, 1920

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Pierre Bonnard, Nude in the Bath

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Pierre Bonnard, Marthe in the Bathtub

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Pierre Bonnard, Marthe in the Bath (detail)

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Bonnard, Marthe Entering the Room, 1942

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Pierre Bonnard, Jardin Vu De La Terrasse

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Bonnard, Woman in a Green Dress in a Garden

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Bonnard, Last Self-Portrait, 1944

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Joan Mitchell, 1925 – 1992

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Mitchell, After April, Bernie, 1987

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“We are all vaguely tormented with a desire to know a world which appears to us a dungeon…I should feel as if I could not depart in peace out of this narrow sphere unless I endeavored to explore my prison. The more I examine it, the more beautiful and extensive it becomes in my eyes.”

Astolphe de Custine

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Kimsooja, Looking into Sewing

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Henry Darger 1892 – 1973

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Henry Darger’s home

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Henry Darger

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Henry Darger

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  “No work of art is more important than the Christian’s own life, and every Christian is called upon to be an artist in this sense. He may have no gift of writing, no gift of composing or singing, but each man has the gift of creativity in terms of the way he lives his life. In this sense, the Christian’s life is to be an artwork. The Christian’s life is to be a thing of beauty in the midst of a lost and despairing world.”

Theologian Francis A. Schaeffer

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Caine’s Arcade, East LA

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Caine’s Arcade, East LA