Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Artist of the Day, December 22, 2021: Alberto Giacometti, a Swiss sculptor, painter, draftsman, and printmaker (#1450)

 Alberto Giacometti (1901– 1966) was a Swiss sculptor, painter, draftsman and printmaker. Beginning in 1922, he lived and worked mainly in Paris but regularly visited his hometown Borgonovo to see his family and work on his art.

Giacometti was one of the most important sculptors of the 20th century. His work was particularly influenced by artistic styles such as Cubism and Surrealism. Philosophical questions about the human condition, as well as existential and phenomenological debates played a significant role in his work.

Giacometti's work of the 1930s represents probably the most important contribution to Surrealist sculpture. In an effort to explore themes derived from Freudian psychoanalysis, like sexuality, obsession and trauma, he developed a variety of different sculptural objects.

In the late 1930s, Giacometti abandoned abstraction and Surrealism, becoming more interested in how to represent the human figure in a convincing illusion of real space. He wanted to depict figures in such a way as to capture a palpable sense of spatial distance, so that we, as viewers, might share in the artist's own sense of distance from his model, or from the encounter that inspired the work. The solution he arrived at involved whittling the figures down to the slenderest proportions.

Between 1938 and 1944 Giacometti's sculptures had a maximum height of seven centimeters (2.75 inches). Their small size reflected the actual distance between the artist's position and his model. In this context he self-critically stated: "But wanting to create from memory what I had seen, to my terror the sculptures became smaller and smaller". After World War II, Giacometti created his most famous sculptures: his extremely tall and slender figurines. These sculptures were subject to his individual viewing experience—between an imaginary yet real, a tangible yet inaccessible space.

In Giacometti's whole body of work, his painting constitutes only a small part. After 1957, however, his figurative paintings were equally as present as his sculptures. The almost monochrome paintings of his late work do not refer to any other artistic styles of modernity.

Giacometti's post-war achievement - finding a language through which to represent the figure in real space - impressed the many writers of the period who were interested in Phenomenology and Existentialism. Both of these philosophies contained ideas about self-consciousness and how we relate to other human beings, and Giacometti's art was thought to powerfully capture the tone of melancholy, alienation and loneliness that these ideas suggested.

Although the 1950s art world of both Europe and the United States was dominated by abstract painting, Giacometti's figurative sculpture came to be a hugely influential model of how the human figure might return to art. His figures represented human beings alone in the world, turned in on themselves and failing to communicate with their fellows, despite their overwhelming desire to reach out

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 Alberto Giacometti

 Femme cuillère, 1926

 Composition (Man and Woman) 1927

 Femme au bouclier, 1927

 head of the father II flat and engraved, 1927

 Femme égorgée, 1932

 Femme qui marche, 1932

 Hour of the Traces, 1932

 Femme debout ("Leoni"), 1947

 Grande Figure, 1947

 Le nez, 1947

Man Pointing, 1947

 Man Pointing, 1947

 Piazza, 1947

 Three Men Walking II, 1949

 Four Figurines on a Stand, 1950

 Homme qui chavire 1950

 Homme qui chavire, 1950

 Homme traversant une place par un matin de soleil, 1950

 The chariot, 1950

 Thin Bust on a Base (known as Amenhotep), 1954

 Annette assise (petite), 1956

 Femme Assise II, 1956

 Woman of Venice VII, 1956

 Femme debout, 1957

 Buste de Diego, 1959

 Buste de Diego, 1959

 Grande femme II, 1959

 L’homme qui marche II, 1960

 Bust of Annette IV, 1962

 Bust of a Man (known as Chiavenna I), 1964


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