Thursday, November 05, 2009

The great wave of Kanagwa




What makes a great artist? Its a million dollar question.Should we consider popularity?Well art can be popular for all sorts of reasons....Last I heard Bryan Adam has decided to buy a fancy DSLR and go over to his other famous friends houses and shoot some stuff.And thats apparently popular.Ronnie Woods art being converted to t shirts and hand bags and even apna sallu has picked up a brush once in a while. How about style- Picasso and Monet rose to fame with the radical difference they brought into the art world with the subject they focussed on, the strokes they showed the world that the 'old masters' wouldnt have dared to .
Without going into a detailed essay on art, Id say I would want to define a great artist as someone who can mesmerise you with his/her art.
If thats a blank page with a series of squares a.k.a. joseph albers or Van Goghs colourful canvasses , whatever works for you.And if that mesmerized group is restricted to a eccentric bunch of 20 people, so be it.Why should that make an artist with 20 followers any less than one with 20 million . I know, a lot of us will say ' well I can drop a ink drop on a white page and does that become art'.Well if you truely have even one mesmerized follower- and you really have to be honest about this- if there is even one person who feels like staring at you art work and is moved by it - that does make you an artist.
What would be interesting,is if that only one person, happens to be you !
I have a soft spot for illustrations.Theres something about clean black lines filled with smooth colours, a 3d world reduced to a simplistic layout. I guess years of Marvel Comics addition would have done that to my brain. Chanced upon a poster the other day , by Katsushika Hokusai and truely felt mesmerised.It was just a giant wave that had almost created a whirlpool which seemed like had been drawn in an illustration style. And yet I could stare at it long enough to realise I really really liked it.My eyes wanted to trace every line on that wave .Sadly , when I came back home, I couldnt locate that poster anywhere on the net.Maybe I havent searched well enough.
Hokusai started painting at the age of 6 and was known by at least 30 names during his lifetime. Although the use of multiple names was a common practice of Japanese artists of the time, the numbers of names he used far exceeds that of any other major Japanese artist. Hokusai's name changes are so frequent, and so often related to changes in his artistic production and style, that they are useful for breaking his life up into periods
He painted a 36 panel series , of views around Mt Fuji. Here is one of the more well known ones from that series - The great wave of Kanagwa.

2 comments:

CDot said...

Wow! You posted again. The honeymoon is over already ?? :) I have actually seen an 11x14 reproduction of the above image (or some other image of a wave that looked quite similar) in a Target store.

poached salmon said...

Yeah, its been a long time since my last post.Blame it on a content life.