Showing posts with label sight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sight. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

The Radiant Redon

Woman Amid Flowers, 1909 - 1910

Closed Eyes, 1890

The Green Death, 1905 - 1910

Inclined Female Head, around 1910

Portrait of Madame Redon with a Yellow Scarf, 1890

Portrait of Marie Botkin, 1900

The Dream, around 1912

The Cyclops, 1898

Eve, 1904

The Japanese Warrior Vase, 1905 - 1908

Some images from the book Odilon Redon by Jean Selz.
Selz writes:
Of all the painters whose secrets are known to us, Odilon was the one who experienced the greatest difficulty - or used the greatest discretion - in explaining his painting. However, he formulated a lucid definition of his art by saying that it consisted of putting "the logic of the visible at the service of the invisible." His work does in fact occupy a place between sight and vision.
How torturous it is to write an artist statement. I'm interested in this comment of Salz's regarding Redon's tremendous difficulty in explaining his own art, because it was an act of great discretion. What do we tell people about our work? Are artist statements even necessary?