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역시 [레이]의 제이미 폭스가 아카데미 남우주연상을 탔군요.

여우주연상의 케이트 윈슬렛 (Eternal Sunshine of the spotless mind)가 타길 바랬는데...

 

스크롤의 압박이 심할 겁니다.

돌아가신 레이 찰스



 빌게이츠



신디 크로포드



다이앤 키튼



골디 혼



오프라 윈프리



윌 스미스



폴 뉴먼



마사 스튜어트




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희망이란 왓츠의 그림에 대해 페이퍼를 읽은 적이 있어서 옮겨본다. tate미술관 기사에서 퍼왔다.

George Frederic Watts’s Hope

Hope (1886) is undoubtedly the most in.uential, striking, memorable and strange of all George Frederic Watts’s paintings. This sad musician has struck a chord with audiences and critics from the first time it was exhibited at the fashionable Grosvenor Gallery in 1886. The following year at the epic ‘Royal Jubilee’ exhibition in Manchester it was placed in the middle of an entire wall of his work, taking its place as the symbolic and artistic centre of his achievement. Since then, reproductions have spread Hope around the world. During his lifetime, Watts received letters testifying to its emotional impact on those who saw it. Even today, I know one woman who carries a reproduction in her wallet, and a man who can quote a poem he wrote about it in his youth.
So what makes this such a compelling work? Watts certainly didn’t know. He claimed that the idea came to him quickly and easily. Other works were pondered over and reworked for years before being exhibited, but none had the same impact. His attempts to follow up Hope with Faith and Charity – the other two “theological virtues” – were far less well received.
Perhaps the answer lies in the fact that it is not, in essence, a traditionally Christian image. This hunched, isolated, blindfolded and barefoot woman seems, despite the title, to be on the edge of despair. This is not the “sure and certain hope” of Christian tradition. It is more like the hope implied by the expression “hoping against hope”. It is the hope of those who refuse to submit to despair when it beckons.
This is probably why the painting seemed so persuasive to Watts’s Victorian contemporaries. As the art historian Malcolm Warner has pointed out, in an age beset by religious doubts, the work appeared to visualise Tennyson’s dubious expression of faith from In Memoriam: “To faintly trust the larger hope.” The trust expressed by the figure is certainly faint. Only one string on her crude wooden lyre remains unbroken. It is her only hope of music, but seems as likely to snap as to sound. In other words, she remains entranced by beauty even when it seems so tenuous.
This preoccupation with music and beauty is unsurprising in a painting exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery, which was strongly associated with the Aesthetic movement. In many ways Hope is as much concerned with pictorial harmony as a painting by Whistler or Albert Moore – a Nocturne in blue and silver perhaps. Despite its traditionalcuse of allegory, however, it is much more humanly engaging than anything by these artists. The stooping woman is both vulnerable and serene. Clearly many Victorian viewers experienced a fellow-feeling with the character, recognising the vulnerability and aspiring to the serenity. Nor were these the genteel and cultured visitors to the Grosvenor. They were far less elevated individuals, whose own hopes and fears were much more immediate than theological doubt. Watts received a letter from a poor man who had been “down on his luck”, but who told the artist he was cheered and encouraged by a reproduction of the painting, which brought him back from the brink of despair. It was said that a prostitute, who felt that “life had become unbearable”, saw a photograph of Hope in a shop window. She bought it with “her few saved coppers” and gazed at it until “the message sank into her soul, and she fought her way back to a life of purity and honour”.
This may seem a rather sentimental tale of moral redemption. Yet it is exactly the effect that Watts sought to achieve. While Whistler sneered at the vulgar masses who could never appreciate art, Watts had always aspired to find a universal language through which to convey his message to as many people as possible. His efforts can sometimes appear patronising, but his sincerity is difficult to dispute. His earliest works were fairly conventional patriotic narrative paintings destined for the Houses of Parliament, but his aspirations towards public art were later manifested in the more diffuse project of the House of Life, intended as a kind of modern Sistine Chapel in which a series of symbolic images would express the spiritual progress of humanity. Hope was one of many designs envisaged for this great public display. Needless to say, it was never realised. Instead, Watts showed work at the Royal Academy and the Grosvenor, but also loaned paintings to the free Whitechapel Art Gallery run by his friends the Reverend Samuel and Henrietta Barnett.
The Barnetts were devoted to the cause of moral improvement through art, and were firm believers in the qualities of Watts’s works. Their East End parishioners were not always quite so willing to be “improved” by paintings, but the couple insisted that Hope did communicate to the often impoverished and oppressed locals. It did so because it made human desolation seem beautiful, noble and morally redeemable. For one acquaintance of the Barnetts, a trade union leader, it justified his struggle to overcome injustice, despite numerous setbacks. The same message was apparently read into the painting almost a century after it was created, when the Egyptian government issued copies of it to its troops, humiliatingly defeated by the Israelis in 1967.
Watts’s humanitarian aestheticism may have reached out into the twentieth century in other, more purely artistic ways. Such a widely reproduced and circulated image would certainly have been known by the young Picasso. The blue, angular body, plucking at a string, seems like the precursor to Picasso’s own Blue Period paintings, such as The Old Guitarist (1903 – 1904), another hunched, helpless musician. Like the subject of Hope, Picasso’s Blue Period characters are all outsiders, half-real, half-symbolic; both wandering performers and timeless human archetypes. They too occupy a mysterious no-man’s-land between pleasure and desolation, hope and despair.
Watts would probably have recognised the connection between the young Picasso’s art and his own. His style was constantly evolving. He painted at least six different versions of the composition, a common practice for him. Watts continued to rework or revise his most successful images, often with the intention of donating versions to public collections. This included the Hope now in the Tate collection, donated in 1897. His last version is little more than a sketch, painted like other late works in pulsating waves of colour that seem to emanate from the figure. The lyre is barely marked, and the string unindicated. By this stage in his career Watts appears to have believed, like the Spiritualist thinkers who influenced the pioneers of abstract art, that painting could express the force of life itself in colour. This spiritual hope is no longer a Tennysonian fragile string, but a pantheistic life force suffusing the image.

The Symbolic Paintings of G F Watts display is in room 14 at Tate Britain. ‘G F Watts: Portraits Fame and Beauty in Victorian Society’, National Portrait Gallery, 14 October–9 January 2005. ‘The Vision of G F Watts’, Watts Gallery, Compton, Surrey, until 31 October.

Paul Barlow lectures in art history at the University of Northumbria, Newcastle, and is reviews editor of the journal Visual Culture in Britain.


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Jacques Henri Lartigue 
Photographs 1901-1986
24 June - 5 September 2004

어려서부터 유약한 아이를 위해 Henri Lartigue가 쥐어준 카메라... 제대로 공교육을 받지는 못했지만 Jacques는 부유한 집안 덕택에 카메라, 자동차, 초기 경비행기 등을 즐기고 많은 아름다운 여성과의 교제를 통해 elegance란 무엇인지를 고민하기도 했다. 

회고전이란 것 외에는 아무런 지식 없이 접한 이 전시는 인상적이게도 초기 작품이 자동차 장난감이 주제로 바닥의 자그만 자동차 모형이 선명히 부각되어 있었고 방을 구성하는 서랍장이나 그 위의 장식 시계며 옆의 문이 모두 우러러 크게 찍혀 있었다.

작가가 이 작품을 찍었을 떄의 나이가 6살(?)인 줄 몰랐던 나는 정말 감탄하며 '꼭 어린아이의 마음과 같은 느낌이네~'라고 중얼거렸었다. 물론 사실을 확인하고는 웃음이 나왔었고. 후 

이 때부터 사진과 함께 매일매일의 다이어리가 쓰여지기 시작했으며, 그에게 있어 그것들은 작품이라기 보다는 한 인생의 기록이였다. 얼마나 꼼꼼하고 매 순간에 대한 집착이 큰 지, 그의 한 장의 일기를 예를 들어보면, 날씨며, 그날의 기온, 몇시에 무엇을 했는지 그리고 어떤 것들이 중요했는지, 페이지의 마지막은 사진을 찍은 장면이나 사진을 찍은 곳의 전체적 분위기 등을 그려냄으로 확인할 수 있다. 130여권의 앨범과 만삼천개가 넘는 사진들이 그 결과물이다. 

사진, 일기, 그의 일생을 그린 다큐멘터리 영화, 그리고 자신의 초상화를 직접 그려볼 수 있는 거울이 놓여진 컴퓨터(정확히는 얼굴이며, 머리 등 옵션을 선택하는 초상화 프로그램이다.) 등의 매체를 통해서 그를 감상자에게 전달하고 있었다.

steroscopic이었던가? 카메라가 같은 위치에 있는 것들을 인식해 여러번의 같은 장면을 찍어내면 유리판으로 된 필림을 겹쳐서 3차원과 같은 입체를 연출해 낼 수 있는 사진이 또한 여러장 있었다. 들여다 보는 형식으로 전시된 이 코너는 충분히 peeping의 즐거움과 개인적인 discovery라는 점에서 나에게 끝없는 탄성을 자아내기에 충분했다. 보여드리고 싶지만, 전시의 모든 내용은 촬영 불가라서 아예 처음부터 사진찍기를 포기하고 온 전시이다. 

이하는 인터넷 상으로 구할 수 있는 사진을 옮겨 놓았다. 즐감~


Grandma, Mummy, Zissou and me with my camera in the Bois de Boulogne, Paris, 1903 (photo by Dad).
(print from stereoscopic glass negative, 6x13 cm)


- Jacques Lartigue uses his father’s camera to take his first photos. He starts noting his thoughts and impressions on scraps of paper. This is the beginning of his diary.


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Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind -  
코벤트 가든에서 간만에 영화를 보았다. 6파운드... 오후 4시 10분이라 학생할인이 적용되지 않는다.
25분 간의 긴 광고 시간이 끝나고 (관중으로서의 의무인가. 쩝)서야 겨우 영화를 볼 수 있었다. Paul빵집에서 사온 쇼꼴라 빵이 체했는지 명치 끝을 두드리면서 영화에 집중했다. 클라리넷 선율이 돋보이는 BGM에 짐 케리의 진지한 연기가 돋보였다.

여주인공 케이트 윈슬릿은 얼마전에 자신과 똑같이 성형수술을 시도한 여성 때문에 그 스트레스를 신문지상에 호소하였는데, 내가 볼때는 고친 그 여성의 경우, 자신은 수술 결과에 만족하지만 어느 한곳도 캐서린을 닮지 않았음을 확인하고는 웃음이 나왔다. 요는 주관적인 만족감이 아니었나 한다^^

친구가족의 파티에서 만난 두 사람은 서로의 공통점 - 사람들사이에서 쉽게 융화되지 않는 - 을 발견하고는 쉽게 친해진다...
라고, 이야기는 이렇게 시작할 수 있어도, 영화의 시작은 이렇지가 않다.

틀에 박힌 일상을 접고 겨울 바닷가로 무작정 기차를 갈아타는 조엘(짐케리)는 해변에서 클레멘타인을 만난다. Blue ruin이었던가, Tangerine이었던가... 특이한 그녀의 머리색깔과 처음 만난 것 같지 않은 다정함에 둘은 너무도 자연스럽게 친해 진다.

하지만, 그렇게 사랑하게 된 연인이 자신과의 기억을 훗날 지워버리고 싶을 만큼 괴로와 할 줄이야...

처음부터 끝까지 영화의 줄거리를 얘기해 드리고 싶지만, 직접 보시는 것이 어떠실지...:p
영화 내내 사용된 여러가지 key들 - 현대미술과도 그 맥이 많이 닿아 있다. 어떤 것들은 정말 멋지게 적용되어 박수를 보내고 싶어졌다.

감각적인 디테일이 사용될 수 있는 탄탄한 스토리 구성에 찬탄을 보낸다.

이 곳 영국의 비평가 평점 5점에 4점으로 줄곧 3위를 고수하고 있다. 물론 box office에는 순위에 조차 올라있지 않지만 말이다. 
개인적으로 2004년의 "퐁네프의 연인"이라고 이름붙이고 싶은 영화 - 즐감하시길.

 


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