One year of posting passed me by last November without me even noticing.  I made a short comment about my 100th post and nothing whatsoever about  200. So in celebration of nothing in particular, I've decided to post this  slightly different format. It is sort of a curated show if you will,  the theme being, obviously, "Night". For a few years now my own work has  been almost exclusively night scenes, and so I am always fascinated to  see how others approach the subject. These pieces have all been posted  on this blog before. Here they are again with occasional comments and  links to the individual artists' websites.
(also, I will be in Santa  Fe trying to find a gallery so there will be no new post until I get  back, next Wednesday)
Many of these can be viewed quite a bit  larger. Just click on the image.
Possibly my favorite night  painting of all time, an absolutely fascinating visual narrative mystery  and a unique capture of the contrast between warm man-made light and a  brightly moonlit snowy landscape.
Amy Bennett  "Surviving  Winter" 9" x14"
I would love t see what this piece looks like  in real life. Leaving more than 3/4 of the painting in absolute  darkness is a bold and visually arresting move, and really evokes the  feeling of night blindness driving on the snow.
Owen McAuley  "Madison NY"  12" x  16"  2004
Of course the night is readily used to create a  haunting atmosphere and that is definitely the case here in this  portrait of a decrepit and empty insane assylum.
Maya Kulenovic  "Sanitarium"   48x36" 
Combining the narrative visual structure of graphic  novels with a diagrammatic interpretation of a house the artist tells  the tale of it's occupants' nocturnal lives.
Mark Andres  "Ice Palace" 
The lights of man and the the unfathomable  depths of the night blue sky are employed to prove that painting the  dark need not be colorless and somber.
Linden Frederick   "No Exit" 2005,  45" x 45"
Nobody does nocturnal cityscapes  like this guy, whose career, if I'm not mistaken, is on a well deserved  and rapid upward trajectory.
Kim Cogan  "Night Owl"  38"x50"   2009
Night scenes are also immensely rich soil for the seeds  of myth and fable.
Kathleen Lolley   "The Creation of Fireflies"  acrylic on wood  2007
Jesus  as a nightlight. And lovingly rendered in egg tempera. What's not to  like?
Dennis Harper  "Jesus  Nightlight" 1995  11" x 9"
This simple composition captures  perfectly the feeling of a fairly plain roadside hotel and piling on all  kinds of emotional inferences for anyone who has ever traveled alone.
Dan Witz  "Sherburne Hotel Lamp" 
Ever  since I stumbled across this sketch it has had a special place in my  heart right next to another one of his, of a woman flying through the front  windshield of her car. Clifford Elgin  "Cop  Finding body in Road"
Another narrative fable, the title works  like a story unto itself.
Amanda Blake  "When  The Sea Turned Purple They Knew They had Gone Too Far"  14x14"   oil on  panel
Another night time tale, this one features zombies.  It's the distant panoramic viewpoint that makes the fate of the rooftop  archer so compelling.
Daniel Danger  “I came to know  an archer”
24×24 three color screenprint with hand  painted elements
Night  time is also of prime time for the dubious  goings on of young men,  captured here with deft  photo-realism.
Alex Roulette  "The  Deal"  19x18"  oil  2007
Technically this may be more of a  twilight scene but night is imminent and the nightmare is already  present, and it may well be one of the coolest paintings I have ever  seen.
John Brosio  "Fatigue"  48" x 60"   2009














Absolument magique... I love i love
ReplyDeleteMerci Martine. I'm glad you like these. I'll try to do other collections periodically.
ReplyDeleteThese are fantastic! I, too, would love to see what was going on in all that black of "Madison NY" up close. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteAmy Bennett is my favourite from the series, a wonderful collection!!
ReplyDeleteI really like this collection.
ReplyDeleteHere is another nice night painter: http://www.mathiasotto.de/urbaner_raum.html
Greeting, Rubin
Thanks for the Link, Rubin.
ReplyDelete-David