After first Communion | |
---|---|
Artist | Carl Frithjof Smith |
Year | 1892 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 136.5 cm× 183 cm(53.7 in× 72 in) |
Location | Museo Revoltella, Trieste, Italy |
After first Communion is a 1892 painting by the Norwegian artist Carl Frithjof Smith. It was purchased in that same year at the International Art Exhibition in the Royal Glass Palace in Munich by the Museo Revoltella of Trieste, where it is hanging now [1] [2]
It is the late 1800's. A group of people leave the church, mostly young girls after their first communion. The girls wear white dresses; on the contrary, the older figures are in dark tones, emphasizing the contrast between youth and old age. [3]
While most people are involved with each other, a girl in the foreground, painted with almost “photographic” definition, is staring intensely at the viewer, breaking the fourth wall. This contrast creates a disconcerting effect that is the distinguishing feature of the painting.
Late 19th century. On the left, a group of people emerge from the side door of a church and spread out onto the street: they are mostly young girls who have made their first communion, dressed in white and holding missals and candles, symbols of the sacrament. [4] In the background, others walk or carriage away.
The pictorial space is organized into two distinct perspectives of architecture and people, with the foreground having an atelier realism, while the background shows a sfumato effect. [5] A large arched branch helps frame and focus the eye on the foreground.
The girls are mainly involved with each other or absorbed in themselves; the candles that they keep loosely in their hands are diagonally arranged, which gives a sense of movement. [6] In contrast, the girl standing in the foreground, intensely staring at the viewer and actively holding the candle away from her body, generates an effect of eerie stillness. Because of her intense dark eyes and the “photographic” sharpness of her contours, she almost seems to “step out of the picture”, contributing to the disconcerting effect that is the distinguishing feature of this painting. [7]
Wearing mostly dark clothes, the adults create a play of chiaroscuro, thus emphasizing the contrast between youth and old age that is always repeated in Smith's paintings and finds its meanings in positivist culture and social analysis. [3] All characters are well researched and depicted, as they say, with marked "atelier" realism, although there is no lack of atmospheric effects, here highlighted by the warm brightness of the background on the right where the buildings and sky fade into the distance. [3]
In 1880, at the age of 21, Carl Frithjof Smith, a Norwegian by birth, enrolled in the Munich Academy of Fine Arts with Ludwig von Löfftz among the principal instructors, a genre painter who certainly influenced him toward this type of painting. [8] As early as 1890, however, Frithjof Smith moved to Weimar where he obtained a teaching position at the Grand-Ducal Saxon Art School, Weimar and where he would remain for the rest of his life. [9]
In Weimar the climate was rather conservative and intransigent, nevertheless Frithjof Smith managed to reconcile academicism with the new en plein air fashions to such an extent that his paintings were appreciated both by opponents of "en plein air" and in Munich. [3] This “After first Communion” in particular is enthralling and beloved also today. [10]
Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky was a Russian painter and art theorist. Kandinsky is generally credited as one of the pioneers of abstraction in western art. Born in Moscow, he spent his childhood in Odessa, where he graduated from Odessa Art School. He enrolled at the University of Moscow, studying law and economics. Successful in his profession, he was offered a professorship at the University of Dorpat. Kandinsky began painting studies at the age of 30.
In art, chiaroscuro is the use of strong contrasts between light and dark, usually bold contrasts affecting a whole composition. It is also a technical term used by artists and art historians for the use of contrasts of light to achieve a sense of volume in modelling three-dimensional objects and figures. Similar effects in cinema, and black and white and low-key photography, are also called chiaroscuro.
The Garden of Earthly Delights is the modern title given to a triptych oil painting on oak panel painted by the Early Netherlandish master Hieronymus Bosch, between 1490 and 1510, when Bosch was between 40 and 60 years old. It has been housed in the Museo del Prado in Madrid, Spain since 1939.
Felice Casorati was an Italian painter, sculptor, and printmaker. The paintings for which he is most noted include figure compositions, portraits and still lifes, which are often distinguished by unusual perspective effects.
The Maestà, or Maestà of Duccio, is an altarpiece composed of many individual paintings commissioned by the city of Siena in Tuscany in 1308 from the artist Duccio di Buoninsegna and is his most famous work. Duccio's the Maestà was originally composed with a front and back side that relied on each other to encompass the full knowledge of the altarpiece. This was the first altarpiece to contain both a front and back side. The front panels make up a large enthroned Madonna and Child with saints and angels, and a predella of the Childhood of Christ with prophets.
La rendición de Breda is a painting by the Spanish Golden Age painter Diego Velázquez. It was completed during the years 1634–35, inspired by Velázquez's visit to Italy with Ambrogio Spinola, the Genoese-born Spanish general who conquered Breda on June 5, 1625. The painting depicts the exchange of the key of Breda from the Dutch to the Spanish.
The Abbey in the Oakwood is an oil painting by the German Romantic artist Caspar David Friedrich. It was painted between 1809 and 1810 in Dresden and was first shown together with the painting The Monk by the Sea in the Prussian Academy of Arts exhibition of 1810. On Friedrich's request The Abbey in the Oakwood was hung beneath The Monk by the Sea. This painting is one of over two dozen of Friedrich's works that include cemeteries or graves.
Mountain Landscape with Rainbow (1809-10), is an oil painting by the German Romantic artist Caspar David Friedrich. Depicting a traveler who has stopped to view a mountainous landscape with a rainbow shining above, the painting was inspired by Friedrich's travels through Germany and along the shores of the Baltic Sea in 1809. Influenced by the Romantic values of subjective experience, Friedrich portrays a figure enraptured by the sublimity of nature.
Wolfgang Petrick is a German painter, graphic artist and sculptor. From 1975 to 2007 he was Professor of Fine Arts at Berlin University of the Arts, now UdK. In addition, and until 2016, he also worked in his New Yorker studio in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
Effect of Snow on Petit-Montrouge is an 1870 landscape painting by the French painter Édouard Manet. The 61.6 cm x 50.4 cm oil on canvas composition depicts the 14th arrondissement's district, Petit-Montrouge, under a wintry landscape.
Peter Seitz Adams is an American artist. His body of work focuses on landscapes and seascapes created en plein air in oil or pastel as well as enigmatic figure and still-life paintings. He is noted for his colorful, high-key palette and broad brushwork. Adams has held numerous solo and group exhibitions in galleries and museums, including throughout California, the Western United States, and on the East Coast in Philadelphia, Vermont, and New York. Adams is the longest serving President of the California Art Club and has served on its board of directors in Pasadena, California from 1993 to 2018. He is also a writer on subjects relating to historic artists for the California Art Club Newsletter, as well as for a number of the organization's exhibition catalogs.
Still life paintings by Vincent van Gogh (Paris) is the subject of many drawings, sketches and paintings by Vincent van Gogh in 1886 and 1887 after he moved to Montmartre in Paris from the Netherlands. While in Paris, Van Gogh transformed the subjects, color and techniques that he used in creating still life paintings.
Self-Portrait with Dr Arrieta is the English title given to a painting by Spanish artist Francisco Goya. The work is an oil on canvas, painted in 1820, and is currently held in the Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minnesota. Many scholars have seen religious themes in the work. Other interpretations compare and contrast the painting with Goya's series of Black Paintings, contextualizing the work within his career at large.
The Fur or The Pelt, also called The Little Fur, or Helena Fourment in a Fur Robe, is a c. 1636–1638 portrait by Peter Paul Rubens of his second wife Helena Fourment getting out of her bath and wrapping her voluptuous body in a fur. It is now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
The Confirmation dress is a traditional style of dress that was designed to be worn by girls partaking in the Catholic ritual of Confirmation. Confirmation is the public declaration, made by children or young adults who have already been baptized in their infancy, to follow the Christian faith in their adult life. The traditions of this ritual vary between the different branches of the Christian religion, however, the dress has remained similar across some of the denominations.
Leo von Littrow was an Austrian-Fiuman painter known for her landscapes and marine paintings.
Carlo Wostry was an Italian painter and illustrator.
Carl Frithjof Smith was a Norwegian portrait and genre painter who spent his career in Germany.
Girl with Chrysanthemums is an 1894 oil painting by the Polish post-impressionist painter Olga Boznańska (1865–1940). It resides in the Gallery of Polish 19th-Century Art at the National Museum in Kraków, Poland.
Light in painting fulfills several objectives, both plastic and aesthetic: on the one hand, it is a fundamental factor in the technical representation of the work, since its presence determines the vision of the projected image, as it affects certain values such as color, texture and volume; on the other hand, light has a great aesthetic value, since its combination with shadow and with certain lighting and color effects can determine the composition of the work and the image that the artist wants to project. Also, light can have a symbolic component, especially in religion, where this element has often been associated with divinity.