Tom

Tricky Thursday

Post image

After lengthy analysis….

Today is the birthday of Antonio Vivaldi (1678). What better to enjoy than ‘Spring’ from his ‘Four Seasons’. Sit back and enjoy.

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music

Wednesday in the Middle

ItsPeteski
20040922.jpg

Today is the birthday (in 1929) of Doc Watson. Blind from a young age he was renowned for his fingerstyle and flatpicking skills. He won seven Grammies and a lifetime Achievement Grammy. Here he plays and sings one of my favorite songs.

Posted by Tom in folk, Humor, Music

A bit of Tuesday Trouble!

Good point…

busMISSCELLANIA

Of course, yesterday was the birthday of Frederic Chopin (in 1810). He was pretty good! Here are some of his most recognizable pieces.

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music

Yes…Monday again.

Schools are beginning to reopen…

backtoschool1
bowel

Uh Oh….

Scientists have grown human vocal cords in a petri dish.The results speak for themselves.

The two horses slipped behind the barn and quickly removed each other’s harness. There, with nothing to rein them in, it would be a night of unbridled passion.

I can’t take my dog to the park as all the ducks keep trying to bite him…My fault for getting one that’s pure bread.

If you put Greg Abbott, Ted Cruz, and Rick Perry together in a room, who’s the first to realize they’re full of shit?The room.

Greg Abbott, Ted Cruz, and Rick Perry are stuck on a deserted island, who survives? Texas.

I used to date an air stewardess from Helsinki.I dropped her off at work one day and she vanished into Finnair.

Paddy and John are working on a building site. Paddy says to John, “I need a day off, I’m going to pretend I’ve gone mad!” Paddy climbs up to the rafters, hangs upside down from them, and shouts, “I’m a light bulb! I’m a light bulb!” while John looks on in amazement. The foreman shouts, “Paddy go home, you’ve gone mad!” As Paddy packs his kit, the foreman sees John packing his kit as well. Foreman says, “John where do you think you’re going?!” John says, “Well I’m not working in the friggen’ dark!”

My wife is really mad at our next door neighbor because she is always sunbathing nude in her backyard.Personally, I’m on the fence.

What’s the difference between an amateur thief and a professional thief?The amateur thief says, “Give me all your money!”The professional thief says, “Sign here please.”

I took the job at a bakery because I kneaded dough.

Lots of birthdays today including Glenn Miller, Roger Daltrey and this guy who was born on this day in 1927

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, World

Pierre Auguste Renoir

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8d/Pierre-Auguste_Renoir_-_Luncheon_of_the_Boating_Party_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Luncheon of the Boating Party, 1880–1881

This past week saw the birthday of Pierre Auguste Renoir (February 25, 1841), one of my favorite artists. He had a very long career and was a prolific artist with thousands of works. While there is no way I can do him justice in this little blog, I’ll try to show some of his work that I admire.

Renoir was born in Limoges but, when he was very young his father, a tailor, moved the family to Paris. Tellingly, the location of their new home, in proximity to the Louvre, would have a major impact on Renoir’s future.

He had a talent both for drawing and singing but, at age 13, the family’s financial circumstances forced him to withdraw from school and work in a porcelain factory. He was good at his work but found it boring and often wandered away to the galleries of the Louvre. The owner of the porcelain factory recognized is talent and Renoir started taking lessons. While studying he met Alfred Sisley, Frédéric Bazille and Claude Monet. At time he didn’t have enough money to buy paint. Nevertheless, he began showing paintings at the Paris Salon.

One of his first successful paintings was of Lise Tréhot, his lover at the time.

Renoir’s early work was influenced by the colorism of Delacroix and the realism of Courbet and Manet as well as their use of black as a color. Another example of Renoir’s early work is this painting of Diana, which shows the influence of Courbet’s realism. Lise Tréhot is again the model.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c2/Pierre-Auguste_Renoir_020.jpg
Diana – Pierre Auguste Renoir 1867

The bright green colors and red accents are considered to reflect the impressionism that Renoir would become associated with a few years later.

In the late 1860s, he and his friend Claude Monet, through painting light and water en plein air, discovered that the color of shadow is not black or brown but reflects the color of the objects around them. The worked side-by side frequently and often painted the same scene. I like the contrast and similarity in their styles as shown in these two paintings.

La Grenouillère MET DT833.jpg
La Grenouillère, Claude Monet 1869
Auguste Renoir - La Grenouillère - Google Art Project.jpg
La Grenouillère, Pierre Auguste Renoir 1869

His impressionist period was prolific. One of his most famous impressionist paintings is Dance at Le Moulin de la Galette which depicts an open-air dance garden close to where he lived. It’s full of action, color and light.

Bal du moulin de la Galette, Pierre Auguste Renoir 1876

In 1881 he took a trip to Italy and saw works by Raphael and other Renaissance painters which convinced him he was on the wrong path. He began painting in a more severe style trying to return to classicism. He painted works such as ‘The Large Bathers” which emphasized line and form.

File:Pierre-Auguste Renoir, French - The Large Bathers - Google Art Project.jpg
The Large Bathers – Pierre Auguste Renoir 1887

Notably (to me at least) two of the models for this painting were his lovers at one time or another. Suzanne Valadon on the left was a long time model for him who became a noted painter in her own right and Aline Charigot on the right who modeled for many of his paintings and became his wife.

After 1890, he changed direction again and his work showed dissolved outlines and thinly brushed work. You can see the contrast of styles between The Large Bathers above and ‘Girls at the Piano’ below which he painted in 1892.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/73/Auguste_Renoir_-_Young_Girls_at_the_Piano_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Girls at the Piano – Pierre Auguste Renoir 1892

In the mid-1890s, Renoir developed rheumatoid arthritis. in 1907 he moved his family to the south of France to take advantage of the warmer climate. He continued painting during the last 20 years of his life even as the arthritis severely limited his mobility. Renoir died at Cagnes-sur-Mer on 3 December 1919.

The love of his life was Aline Victorine Charigot who was a dressmaker. She met Renoir when she was twenty and he was nearly forty and started modeling for him. She gave birth to his first son, Pierre, in 1885, and married Renoir in 1890. They had two other sons, Jean born in 1894 and Claude in 1901.

She modeled for Renoir over a long period, 1880 to 1915. She cared for her husband as his arthritis became severe. After Claude’s birth she developed diabetes but hid this from her husband. Pierre and Jean were drafted into the army during World War I and both were injured, Jean seriously. Aline died of a heart attack in Nice after a visit to Jean in the hospital in 1915.

Charigot appears in many of Renoir’s paintings. In ‘Luncheon of the Boating Party’ at the top of this post, she is the woman playing with the dog on the far left. Here are some more of his paintings that include her.

Madame Renoir with a Dog 1880
Boating Couple (also known as Aline and Renoir) 1891
Blonde Bather – 1881
In the Garden, 1885
Aline and her Pierre 1886
Madame Renoir and Bob – 1910

Renoir was, to me, an amazing artist. The largest collection of his work is at the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia. Go and see it.

Posted by Tom