OPEN STUDIO ANNOUNCEMENT

Mrs. Switzer and National Art Honor Society will be holding Open Studio time Tuesdays & Thursdays from 2:30 - 5:00 in room 243.
Anyone who wants to work on art can stay after at this time.

SEARCHING for MEANING...

Looking for Meaning in Art? Good! because that's the goal of our semester. As we explore the art elements and various art media, we will be making deeper connections to a Big Idea. Some of the Big Ideas we will delve into will be: SYMBOLS, POWER, PLACE, IDENTITY.

We may examine more Big Ideas than this, or we may just wallow in each of these until we are saturated with all the contents of their possibilities.

Get ready to dive in!!!

More Information BELOW POSTS.

Read posts for important information about what we are learning in class and chances for extra credit below. Then find information for ways to earn make-up points and how to read the Parent Viewer, followed by the Calendar with info on what we do in class at the very bottom. You can also look at the Blog Archive for additional posts.

Monday, May 16, 2011

Mona Lisa's identity revealed under concrete?


The model and inspiration for Da Vinci's masterpiece may be in bones of neighbor's wife
By Jennifer Welsh, LiveScience Staff Writer


LiveScience


updated 5/16/2011 4:30:23 PM ET

Louvre Museum, Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain

This is a retouched picture of the Mona Lisa, a painting by Leonardo DaVinci, currently housed at the Louvre museum in Paris, France. It has been digitally altered from its original version by modifying it's colors.

The mysterious face of the Mona Lisa may be lying under a few feet of cement in a decrepit convent in Florence, Italy. Researchers are currently searching for the bones of what might turn out to be Lisa Gherardini Del Giocondo, the woman many art historians believe to be the inspiration of the iconic painting.

And while they haven't hit pay dirt, last week they took a leap in the right direction: The team members announced they had discovered what may be steps leading down to a crypt where the model is thought to be buried, according to historical documents.

The convent above the stairs, called St. Ursula in Florence, was where Gherardini died in 1542. It was built in 1309 and was used by the church until 1810 when it was converted into a tobacco factory, then used as a shelter during World War II, before it housed university classrooms. Since a failed attempt to turn it into a barracks in the 1980s, the compound has remained empty.


Researchers, including historian Giuseppe Pallanti who published the book "Mona Lisa Revealed: The True Identity of Leonardo's Model" (Skira, 2006), believe that Gherardini's husband, Francesco del Giocondo, commissioned their neighbor Leonardo Da Vinci to paint a portrait of his wife in 1502, around the time she was pregnant with their second child. Da Vinci took until 1519 to hand over the painting, carrying it around with him on his travels and not giving it up until his death, according to the theory. The painting currently hangs in the Louvre museum in Paris.


Historical records, including Gherardini's death certificate discovered a few years ago, place her death at St. Ursula's, where she spent her last two years after her husband's death. The documents note that there is a crypt beneath the church floor, where Gherardini would have been buried.


Excavating and exhumation


The work of excavating the dilapidated building started in late April, led by Silvano Vinceti, the chairman of the nongovernmental organization National Committee for the Promotion of Historical Heritage, Culture and Environment. The group has also uncovered the supposed remains of Italian artist Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggioand reconstructed the face of Dante Alighieri, an Italian poet known for writing the "Divine Comedy" about a fictional journey through hell.
 The team first scanned the floor of the nunnery using ground-penetrating radar, which could "see through" the cement floor poured during renovations in the 1980s. They used this data to identify the area where the crypts could be located in and around the church and convent.
 The team started excavating the site on May 9; they've uncovered a few inches of the floor and have discovered a layer of ancient bricks, each about 35 inches (90 centimeters) wide, possibly steps leading to the tombs or a series of crypts.

"The finding is consistent with our records," Vinceti said in a statement to Italian news agency ANSA. "We should be where the altar once stood, and where a trapdoor led to the crypt we saw on the georadar scan."


Finding her bones

They need to continue excavating the area for possible bones. If they find enough skull bones, Francesco Mallegni, a paleoanthropologist at the University of Pisa, will attempt to reconstruct Gherardini's face, providing extra clues to who was really the subject of the painting, according to ANSA English.

"The excavation is still just the beginning, we made a few inches," Vinceti said to ANSA. "We should go for at least two feet and will serve at least a week of work to get a better picture of the situation."


They will also test the genetic material of the bones and compare it to DNA from Gherardini's children, who are buried in Florence's Santissima Annunziata church. This would prove that the bones found at the convent were actually hers.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43051171/ns/technology_and_science-science/?GT1=43001

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

The Largest Theft of All Time

Stolen Vermeer: The largest theft of all time

October 10th, 2010 
Boston art theft remains biggest unsolved mystery

By John Wilson


Vermeer’s The Concert is estimated to be worth around £200m



The Gardner robbery remains the largest single property theft of all time

As crime scenes go, it has got to be one of the most beautiful.





The Dutch Room of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston is lined with green silk wallpaper, from terracotta cobbled floor to oak timbered ceiling.


On one wall hangs a Van Dyck, on another a Rubens but these artworks are not the first things one notices in the first floor gallery.

It is the empty frames that stop you in your tracks.
One, an ornate gilded rectangle framing nothing but green wallpaper, once held Storm On The Sea of Galilee, Rembrandt’s only known seascape.

And, next to the window, there is an easel on which was propped The Concert, one of only 36 Vermeer paintings known to exist.
In the early hours of 18 March 1990, both paintings were ripped from their frames.

They disappeared, along with two other works by Rembrandt, five sketches by Degas, a Manet painting, a landscape by Flink and – bizarrely – a bronze finial from a Napoleonic battle flag.



Largest theft
Not one of the artworks – worth an estimated $500 million (£350m) today – has ever been seen again.
Now, 20 years on, the Gardner robbery remains the largest single property theft of all time.
Built by Boston heiress Isabella Stewart Gardner in 1903, the museum was modelled on a 15th Century Venetian palazzo.
“I spend an inordinate amount of time in this room, looking at these empty frames,” says Anthony Amore, the director of security at the museum.
“If you were a homicide detective, you’d go to the scene and once the bodies were removed you’d see the taped outline of the person on the floor. I come in here every day and these are my taped impressions.”
The reason the frames remain is due to Mrs Gardner herself. An avid 19th Century collector, she scoured the auction rooms of Europe picking up masterpieces with the help of her personal shopper, esteemed art historian Bernard Berenson.

She curated the museum personally and decreed in her will that nothing should ever be moved. Every frame hangs exactly where she hung it, every ornament exactly where she placed it.


Although Vermeer’s The Concert is probably the world’s most valuable single stolen artwork – estimates value it at around £200m if ever sold – the Gardner Museum holds an even greater treasure.
But at nearly seven feet (2.1m) across, Titian’s The Rape of Europa was probably too big for the swag bag.

Dressed as Boston cops and sporting false moustaches, the thieves spent well over an hour in the Gardner galleries after handcuffing the hapless guards – both young music students doing part-time work – in the basement.
The Vermeer and the Rembrandt were obvious targets for any thief with a rudimentary grasp of art history. But the decision to unscrew five Degas sketches from the wall of a gallery is one that has perplexed every investigator who has worked on the case.


According to Charley Hill, a former Scotland Yard detective turned private investigator, the key to the crime is the time it took place.

“It may technically have been 18 March 1990 but it was just after midnight as St Patrick’s Day celebrations were still going on. And that’s a big, noisy night in an Irish city like Boston,” says Hill.

As an undercover detective, it was Charley Hill who led the sting operation that recovered Edward Munch’s painting The Scream, stolen from the National Museum of Norway in 1994.


Mob boss James "Whitey" Bulger is second on the FBI's most wanted list






In the frame
Hill has been following a network of leads, many provided by underworld contacts, for 16 years. He says they all add up to one name – Irish American mob boss James “Whitey” Bulger.

Number two on the FBI’s most wanted list – behind only Osama Bin Laden – Bulger has a $2m (£1.31m) bounty on his head.
There is also a note on the Bureau website reminding us that – as Whitey is wanted for 19 murders, has a violent temper and carries a knife – we should not approach him.

Thirteen art works were stolen
The thieves were let into the museum through two sets of locked security doors at 1:24am, 18 March 1990
It is believed they spent exactly 81 minutes inside the gallery
A reward of $5 million (£3.28m) has been offered for information leading to the return of the works of art in good condition
There is nothing on the FBI website about Vermeer, Rembrandt and the others.

So what would a man suspected of murder want with the paintings?

Hill believes that – even if Bulger did not order the heist originally – he would have muscled in and taken control of the haul soon after.

“He’s never been interested in the sale of them, he’s interested in using them as barter,” says Hill.

Offering up the long lost art might just buy him, Hill says, “a softer pillow and a better view” in whichever federal penitentiary he would find himself in if he was ever caught.

Hill’s investigations have led him to remote villages in the Republic of Ireland, where – according to his sources – Whitey sought refuge and “laid down” the Gardner art.

Since then, Hill believes, the paintings have been looked after by criminals who owe a debt to Bulger.

FBI Special agent Jeffrey Kelly confirms that Whitey Bulger is on his list of suspects but won’t reveal whether he concurs with Hill’s theory.

20 years on, the Gardner heist remains one of the great crime mysteries. But – with the theft of genuine masterpieces – it is also an act of appalling cultural vandalism and an artistic tragedy.

Source: news.bbc.co.uk


Friday, December 17, 2010

Final Exams

Final Exams start Friday December 17th.
(regardless of weather this schedule will stay the same)
We will work on a review packet going over EVERYTHING we have discussed this semester.
Complete the entire packet for 100 points - - ALL or NOTHING. Due the day of your final.

Final Exam Schedule:
Final Exam Days Schedule (1 full day and 2 early release @ 11:30)


Friday Dec. 17th:
1st Hour Exam 7:25 – 9:00  Passing 9:00 – 9:10
2nd Hour Exam 9:10 – 10:45 Passing 10:45 - 10:50
4Aor 4B Lunch  = Lunch 10:45 – 11:20 * 4th Hour Class 11:25 – 12:00 * 5th Hour Class* 12:05 – 12:40
4C Lunch = 4th Hour Class 10:50 – 11:25 * Lunch 11:25 – 12:00 * 5th Hour Class* 12:05 – 12:40
5AB Lunch = 4th Hour Class 10:50 – 11:25 * 5th Hour Class 11:30 – 12:05 * Lunch 12:05 – 12:40
Passing 12:40 - 12:45
6th Hour Exam 12:45 – 2:20

SCHOOL DISMISSED 2:20



Monday Dec. 20th:
Early Release FINAL EXAM Schedule:
3rd Hour Exam 7:25 -9:00  Passing 9:00 - 9:10
7th Hour Class* 9:10 -9:45 Passing 9:45 -9:55
4th Hour Exam 9:55 -11:30

SCHOOL DISMISSED 11:30


Tuesday Dec. 21st:
Early Release FINAL EXAM Schedule:
5th Hour Exam 7:25 -9:00 Passing 9:00 - 9:10
3rd Hour Class* 9:10 -9:45 Passing 9:45 -9:55
7th Hour Exam 9:55 -11:30

SCHOOL DISMISSED 11:30

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Mona Lisa with her famous smile

Mona Lisa & Leonardo da Vinci Must Be Smiling About La Joconde's New Home at The Louvre

Leonardo.da.Vinci.Mona.Lisa.jpg
It took more than four years, but Mona Lisa and her creator must now be smiling about La Joconde's new home at the Musee du Louvre in Paris, France. La Joconde is the French name for Italian Renaissance artist, Leonardo da Vinci's 500-year-old masterpiece.
Mona Lisa's name in Italian and Spanish? La Gioconda.
In Italian, gioconda means a light-hearted woman.
The Mona Lisa moved to her new home within Paris' Louvre art gallery on Monday, April 4th 2005.
Da Vinci's famous oil on wood painting, perhaps even more famous than his Last Supper painting, now hangs alone on a wall in the museum's Salle des Etats.
The Mona Lisa is often described as the most famous piece in art history.
Few other works of art are as celebrated, reproduced or romanticized.
On Wednesday, she will be ready for public viewing.

The room where Mona Lisa now resides is bigger.
Her new room will give those who come to see her a better view.
Mona.Lisa.Painting.Louvre.M.jpg
The museum's curator Cecile Scaillierez told reporters on Tuesday:
You will be able to rediscover La Joconde.
The lighting, display and space accorded the portrait will make it much easier to admire the museum's top attraction.

The museum's top attraction was brought to France in 1517. She has been in the Louvre since 1804.
In 1911, da Vinci's Renaissance portrait was stolen from the Louvre, but rediscovered two years later in a hotel in Florence Italy.
Other previous homes include: Fontainebleau, the Palace of Versailles, Chateau Amboise, the abbey of Loc-Dieu, the Ingres Museum in Montauban, the U.S., New York City, Washington D.C., Tokyo and Moscow.
Curator Jean Harbert said researchers have determined that da Vinci's painting was of Lisa Gherardini, wife of obscure Florentine merchant Francesco del Giocond. It has also been determined that da Vinci started painting her in 1503.
Those who study art believe that when da Vinci stopped painting her in 1506, it was not because he felt he was finished with her. Harbert said that some of the background leaves doubt that da Vinci was done with his masterpiece.
Leonardo.da.Vinci.jpg
Leonardo da Vinci (April 15, 1452 - May 2, 1519)

It is said that Leonardo himself loved the portrait, so much that he always carried it with him until eventually it was sold in France to King Francois I.
The King bought the painting for 4,000 ecus.
Today, the current value of the Mona Lisa is well over $500 million.
A thin panel of poplar wood was the canvas da Vinci used in 1503. This material is fragile, so to help preserve the painting, the museum keeps the climate at 68 degrees and the humidity at 55 percent, Harbert said.
Peruvian architect Lorenzo Piqueras spent the past seven years designing and supervising the transition of Mona Lisa's home.
Today, he has helped make her easier to find in the museum.
Her new spotlight helps bring out the true color of her hands, chest and face.
Piqueras said:
You can also see the red in the sleeves and in the road in the background, which you couldn't do before.
This room is positioned ideally, running north to south.

Mona.Lisa.Louvre.Room.with.jpg 
Mona Lisa's Room with A View

The closest you will get to da Vinci's 21 by 30 inch creation is 100 feet.
The cost to refurbish Mona Lisa's digs? $6.1 million.
But she is worth every penny, or euro, should I say.
Every year, millions visit the Louvre Museum in Paris. Many come just to see the

Inspire & Be Inspired.
Mona.Lisa.smile.by.da.Vinci.jpg


Tuesday, October 26, 2010

The dead come to life in Mexican folk art for Dia de los Muertos

By Mary Jane Gagnier Mendoza from Mexconnect


For foreigners, the traditions and celebrations in Mexican homes and cemeteries during the Day of the Dead seem strange, if not incomprehensible. There is mourning and rejoicing; sadness and silliness - woven together into one emotional fabric.


To me, it's like welcoming the return of a dear friend or relative, who moved far away and visits just once a year. Mexicans try very hard to be with their families for this fiesta, as the living and the dead gather for the most complete of family reunions.

The Day of the Dead activities actually span several days, beginning late at night Oct. 31, when the spirits of dead children (angelitos) start arriving, followed by adult spirits sometime during Nov. 1. They leave, after joining in a family meal, on Nov. 2. Although exact times for the spirits' entrances vary from pueblo to pueblo, the angelitos always arrive ahead of the adults.

I grew up in a French-Canadian Catholic family. From an early age, I believed that when you died, you put on a white satin smock with lace around the cuffs and joined the anonymous army of souls (in heaven if you were lucky).

Mexicans have a distinctly different view of themselves in the afterlife. First, you keep your identity, since to return to this world for the Day of the Dead, you must remain who you were. This explains the profusion of skeletons of all sizes, doing ordinary day-to-day things. If uncle José was a barber, he continues as a barber after death. Placing a skeleton figure of a barber on your altar reaffirms to uncle José that he has not been forgotten on his spiritual return.

Most Oaxacan homes have a highly adorned Day of the Dead altar. Sugar skulls with the names of dead loved ones inscribed in their icing indicate to the returning spirits that they have indeed returned to the right spot, where the living await their arrival. The altar is a sort of landing pad and its objects serve as signals to guide the spirits home.

Throughout the year, but especially during the Day of the Dead season, calacas, or skeletons, are displayed in shops throughout the city. In the Abastos market, for a few pesos each, you'll find cardboard, wire and cotton-ball figures depicting nearly every walk of life. The more upscale folk art stores display elaborate ceramic and paper mache calacas, individually signed by renowned Mexican folk artists.



DUALITY IN MEXICAN FOLK ART

The skeletons and skulls of Mexican folk art reflect the dualism fundmental to the pre-Hispanic world view. Without duality in all aspects of life, the universe loses its equilibrium. Animal and human forms; masculine and feminine energies - all are needed. Of all these balancing forces, perhaps none is more significant than that of life and death.

Images expressing dualities abound in Mexican folk art. The Nahuals of Oaxacan woodcarvers, for example, are supernatural beings that transform back and forth from animal to human form and from human to animal form. The belief in Nahuals is well-documented in indigenous folk culture. However, if a survey were taken among Mexico's folk artists, the combined imagery of life and death - la vida y la muerte - would emerge as the most popular and pervasive theme.

The iconographic image of the living and dead sharing a single body or head remains a common visual theme in Mexican folk art. The reason is simple: for the Mexican, life and death are part of the same linear process. Birth leads into life, and life leads to death. Join the ends of the process and the cycle of life is created.

The roots of this duality are ancient and deep. The Borgia Codex depicting pre-Hispanic life shows two gods: Quetzalcoatl, the god of life who governs the earth and sky; and Mictlantlecuihtl, the god of the underworld and keeper of the dead. They appear in profile, joined at the spine. At first glance, they seem a single form. Two distinct shapes then define themselves, one complementing the other and the two together forming a complete whole. Each, we learn, needs the other to justify its existence.



THE ALTARS AND THE ROLE OF EPHEMERA

No exploration of the Day of the Dead would be complete without a discussion of the empheral creations used in its celebration. Most of the elaborate Day of the Dead altars found in Oaxacan homes are adorned with authentic works of art meant to last no longer than the fiesta itself.

To Western culture oriented to preserving everything as long as possible, it may seem strange to expend so much labor on objects having no other purpose than to be consumed and destroyed. Mexicans, especially indigenous Oaxacans, see themselves as empheral beings in an empheral world. To enjoy material objects, yet be willing to relinquish them, is totally natural to them.

Nothing is more empheral than the sugar used to make elaborate skulls, angels, and animals for the Day of the Dead. Saving these items for the following year would never occur to Oaxacans. Children used to wait all year for parents to buy them calaveras de azucar with their names inscribed in the icing. Today, chocolate skulls are replacing the sugar ones, but the tradition of eating sweet skulls is as alive as ever.

Papel picados - intricately cut tissue paper banners depicting scenes of skeletons dancing, drinking and otherwise celebrating - are strung along the edge of altars, creating a lacey border. Non-Mexicans often ask how to preserve them. "You shouldn't," I say, "because they were never made for that." Such emphemera celebrate other events and fiestas as well. White tissue paper is used for weddings. Red, white and green commemorate Independence Day. A riot of color surrounds the Day of the Dead. When fiestas end, papel picados are left to fly in the open air until rain reduces them to nothing.

Flowers, candles and incense are indispensable to any lovingly adorned altar. Wax flowers, fruits, and cherubs decorate hand-dipped beeswax candles. As the candles burn non-stop, the wax decorations are set aside to be melted for the next batch of candles.


THE TOYMAKING TRADITION

A thriving tradition of toymaking plays a central role in the Oaxacan Day of the Dead. Among such diverse themes as the Nativity, bullfights and carnival rides, the skeleton is by far the most popular image. Mariachi calaveras in the form of puppets made of painted plywood and string are special favorites among small children. Who knows what makes skeleton toys funnier than toys depicting the living? Maybe it's the surprising juxtaposition of the dead doing something lively and spirited that brings a chuckle to the most sober face. Perhaps by making death more approachable through friendly images, like a dancing skeleton playing a guitar, Mexicans begin to lose their fear of death at an early age.


THE SPIRIT OF POSADA

The name Posada and lively skeletons are linked as few other icons of contemporary Day of the Dead culture. Jose Guadalupe Posada (1852-1913) popularized Mexico's life of the dead in bitingly satiric, mass-produced etchings and lithographs that have enthralled Mexicans for generations.

By depicting social and political personalities as calaveras, Posada's posters achieved lasting and unrivaled popularity. By caricaturing his targets in their bare bones, his scathing and often risky political satire became funnier and thus more acceptable.

In his posters, priests, politicians, farmers and streetsweepers share the same destiny - death, an end neither money nor power can outwit. For a country living in extreme social inequality during the Porfirio Díaz dictatorship, the idea of the rich and poor alike one day rubbing elbows (if only bone to bone) was attractive to the masses.

Posada's handprinted calaveras, accompanied by witty social commentary in rhyming verse, reached the farthest corners of the Mexican Republic. To this day, his work pervades the image and spirit of Mexican folk artists. The Catrina, an upperclass lady of the turn-of-the-century always depicted in her broad-brimmed hat, has become a classic in Mexican folk art and is displayed prominently in many store windows. The images can be found in everything from fine ceramic and artistic paper mache figures, to inexpensive papel picados and plaster miniatures.
Nothing is static about Posada's calaveras (mischievous skeletons). They are always up to something, going somewhere or, as in the Calavera Oaxaquena, just raising hell.

The Calavera Oaxaquena

The valiant calavera
Has just arrived today.
Take off your hat and greet him.
Don't look at him that way!

In Oaxaca they pay for bravery
With a hooter of mezcal.
And without a single rival
Are their beautiful young gals.
No one ever scares me.
At them all I do is guffaw.
And to prove this I danced a two-step
Upon a dandy from Guadalajar.

The Oaxaca calavera
Has just arrived today.
Take off your hat and greet him
Because he's here to stay.

Dios de Los Muertos

While English North Americans celebrate Halloween with costumes and candy, ancient tradition in Mexico calls for family reunions with the dead. For three days, from October 31st to November 2nd, specific rites are observed faithfully. They occur in the home and in the cemetery amid bouquets of flowers, banquets of bread, and ghostly candies ornamented with skulls.



These candies are called Muertos, and are given out much the same as parents dispense candy bars and chewing gum to costumed children demanding trick or treat. But among Mexicans, the dead are considered supernatural guardians. Not only do the dead visit during this time, but they also enjoy their favorite food and drink, (offerings) called "ofrendas," lavishly laid out on home altars and shrines.


In the mountains of Oaxaca, there is a much deeper meaning to the festivity, which begins weeks, perhaps months, before the ordained days, with the collecting of the special dishes and treats which the departed spirits loved most when alive: the best chocolate for mole: fresh eggs and flour for the bread, Pan de Muerto; fruits and vegetables; even cigarettes and mescal. Lux Perpetua votive candles flame day and night, illuminating the decorative wild marigold flowers, Flor de Muertos, which adorn the altars and the graves.

And everywhere, La Calaca, the skeleton carved from wood and dressed for a party, watches with amusement.

To read more from A Journey with La Calaca, visit this link.

Intro to Art Currently

Current Unit: Heroes


Current Project: Calaveras Hero Relief Portraits

Project Description: You will create a portrait painting with elements of relief & 2-D depth that honors a personal hero.

The face will be constructed from a papier mache mask and attached to a flat surface. The surrounding flat surface will provide a painted scene with a foreground, middle ground, and background for your hero (the mask). You should use what you know about creating the illusion of depth on a flat surface to enhance the feeling of space around the figure.


DUE: November 2nd









Past Projects: Street Art Symbolic Artwork