Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Neocapitalism

Hell no, why what's a matter one might ask. Such serious publication will go up for simply subjects. I do really like advertising. There was just a few of a kind of amazing ads. A primary idea dominant as hell. One in Artforum, not a while ago, in planetary scale, Lynda Benglis did. Seriously, i remember all the girls i ever had affection for. A fraction. So her ad was each and every one of them, exclude faces- just look inside one's soul. I encounter one evenly more memorable, one made by quasi-universal girl named Gillian Carnegie. Pretty simple, showing things of. Truly intimate and way simple. I guess multiplied image of a painting of an ass was printed in ArtReview in 2007? While back perhaps. What is strange, sometime artists being lost in time, where is her newest art? Same like John Currin- his brilliant show few years back at Gagosian, was it strike, but where he is for now, beside Metropolitan Opera? where he is seen often i guess. Can art be overappreciated?


http://www.andrearosengallery.com/artists/gillian-carnegie

Monday, January 25, 2010

Art Power

In this comparison chart is the selection of 30 artists. We intended to measure socio-cultural effect for their art in the present tense. Resulting chart; global importance/brand power for selected artists, as calculated January 25, 2010:
1 Pablo Picasso, 2 Andy Warhol, 3 Claude Monet, 4 Ernst Kirchner, 5 Henri Matisse, 6 Vincent van Gogh, 7 Francis Bacon, 8 Jackson Pollock, 9 Jasper Johns, 10 Pierre Auguste Renoir,11 Paul Cezanne, 12 Gustav Klimt, 13 Willem de Kooning, 14 Wassily Kandinsky, 15 Paul Gauguin, 16 Mark Rothko, 17 Rembrandt van Rijn, 18 Peter Paul Rubens, 19 Titian, 20 Piet Mondrian, 21 Amedeo Modigliani, 22 Winslow Homer, 23 Giovanni Canaletto, 24 J. M. W. Turner, 25 Georges Seurat, 26 Kazimir Malevich, 27 Raphael Sanzio, 28 Thomas Eakins, 29 Pontormo, 30 Johannes Vermeer.

Survival rate of a brands link: http://www.scribd.com/doc/2553805/BRAND-REVIVAL * Highest known price paid for work of art to date, known to be a 140 million US dollars paid for Jackson Pollock painting in the private transaction.**Chart was completed January 25, 2010 Reference to top prices are approximate http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_expensive_paintings
http://www.tate.org.uk/
graph image copyright © 2010 after-modern-art.blogspot.com