Notice how most are surprisingly smallish, i.e. not 10 x 12 feet "museum size" works only institutions and billionaires can afford to display. They were stepping down in scale during the era when the largest works were Abstract Expressionist style, where egos needed to be displayed as grandiose manifestations. There is also the forgotten aspect of "angle of view" or "proper viewing distance", where perspective and scale recreate the same size picture field that would be seen if viewing the real scene through a window the same size and distance away. Chuck Close is one exception, where the huge scale distorts the sense of reality even if one isn't aware of that aspect. Merely blowing up photos makes viewers instinctively try to move back; Life magazine photo essays worked supremely partly due to the use of lenses resulting in the image fitting the size viewed holding a magazine at reading distance. We modern viewers are so inured to widely varying scales that we are insensitive to any "correct viewing distance" any more, except in extremes like too close to a TV or movie screen.
Interesting video. I just directed a doc featurette about Malcolm Morley (Malcolm Morley: A Studio Visit) who was one of the founders of the movement, and he HATES the term Photorealist. He considers it a put down...
The artist who paint like this are very talented but where is the feeling or painterly interaction between artist and subject ? you just get the cold hard facts of the subject matter , no thank you if I want photorealism I will pick up my camera instead of my paint brush . I'm not putting down another artist talent or work just my feeling on this.
Photorealism is my all time favorite style of painting. SUCH talent. Amazing! Richard Estes is my favorite.
I have been a fan of these painters for years but have never seen them in person. Many thanks for posting the video.
Thank you very much!
Valerie Hillings is a genius.......best wishes to her from London.
So much better than the scribbles on canvass at the Tate Modern.
Notice how most are surprisingly smallish, i.e. not 10 x 12 feet "museum size" works only institutions and billionaires can afford to display. They were stepping down in scale during the era when the largest works were Abstract Expressionist style, where egos needed to be displayed as grandiose manifestations. There is also the forgotten aspect of "angle of view" or "proper viewing distance", where perspective and scale recreate the same size picture field that would be seen if viewing the real scene through a window the same size and distance away. Chuck Close is one exception, where the huge scale distorts the sense of reality even if one isn't aware of that aspect. Merely blowing up photos makes viewers instinctively try to move back; Life magazine photo essays worked supremely partly due to the use of lenses resulting in the image fitting the size viewed holding a magazine at reading distance. We modern viewers are so inured to widely varying scales that we are insensitive to any "correct viewing distance" any more, except in extremes like too close to a TV or movie screen.
Where is that Deutsche Guggenheim? I know the Guggenheim Museum in New York, Venice en Bilbao.
kijkerttt . That is not be Chuck Close, but Ben Schonzeit, :) you can found this picture in net.
Ik heb nog nooit gehoord van het Deutsche Guggenheim.
Waar is dat? Ik ken het Guggenheim in New York, Venetie en
Bilbao. Is het een fantasie?
Interesting video. I just directed a doc featurette about Malcolm Morley (Malcolm Morley: A Studio Visit) who was one of the founders of the movement, and he HATES the term Photorealist. He considers it a put down...
Buenos dias internet,creo q mis comentarios han sido censurados
Hyper-real = more real than the real
The artist who paint like this are very talented but where is the feeling or painterly interaction between artist and subject ? you just get the cold hard facts of the subject matter , no thank you if I want photorealism I will pick up my camera instead of my paint brush . I'm not putting down another artist talent or work just my feeling on this.
Crap...wait until you see Race Jaeger's fish realism...you'll all be begging for mercy...Gemma