The Drunken Silenus

The Drunken Silenus
Author: Morgan Meis
Publisher: Slant Books
Total Pages: 119
Release: 2020-04-09
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1639820566

The Drunken Silenus is a book that is as hard to categorize as it is to put down--an enlightening and mesmerizing blend of philosophy, history, and art criticism. Morgan Meis begins simply enough, with a painting by the Baroque master Peter Paul Rubens of the figure from Greek mythology who is mentor to Dionysus, god of wine and excess of every kind. We learn who this obscure, minor god is--why he must attend on the god who dies and must be re-born and educated all over again--and why Rubens depicted him not as a character out of a farce, but as one whose plight evokes pity and compassion. The narrative spirals out from there, taking in the history of Antwerp, bloody seventeenth-century religious wars, tales of Rubens's father's near-execution for sleeping with William of Orange's wife, Nietzsche's Birth of Tragedy and the impossibility of there being any meaning to human life, and the destruction of all civilization by nefarious forces within ourselves. All of this is conveyed in language that crackles with intelligence, wit, and dark humor--a voice that at times sounds a bit tipsy and garrulous, but which ultimately asks us to confront the deepest questions of meaning, purpose, and hope in the face of death and tragedy.

Drunken Silenus

Drunken Silenus
Author: Morgan Meis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2020-04-09
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781639820542

The Drunken Silenus is a book that is as hard to categorize as it is to put down--an enlightening and mesmerizing blend of philosophy, history, and art criticism. Morgan Meis begins simply enough, with a painting by the Baroque master Peter Paul Rubens of the figure from Greek mythology who is mentor to Dionysus, god of wine and excess of every kind. We learn who this obscure, minor god is--why he must attend on the god who dies and must be re-born and educated all over again--and why Rubens depicted him not as a character out of a farce, but as one whose plight evokes pity and compassion. The narrative spirals out from there, taking in the history of Antwerp, bloody seventeenth-century religious wars, tales of Rubens's father's near-execution for sleeping with William of Orange's wife, Nietzsche's Birth of Tragedy and the impossibility of there being any meaning to human life, and the destruction of all civilization by nefarious forces within ourselves. All of this is conveyed in language that crackles with intelligence, wit, and dark humor--a voice that at times sounds a bit tipsy and garrulous, but which ultimately asks us to confront the deepest questions of meaning, purpose, and hope in the face of death and tragedy.

The drunken Silenus with Satyrs and Bacchantes

The drunken Silenus with Satyrs and Bacchantes
Author: Anton van Dyck
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1643
Genre:
ISBN:

Ein trunkener Silen, der von einer Bacchantin und drei Männern gestützt wird. Zwei der Männer im Hintergrund trinken und verhalten sich lüstern. Laut Beischrift in Tinte ist die Vorlage Gonzalo Coques zugewiesen, ebenso im alten Inventar. Bei diesem handelt es sich um den Widmungsempfänger; die Vorlage bildet das gleichnamige spiegelverkehrte Gemälde von van Dyck.

Rubens

Rubens
Author: Anne T. Woollett
Publisher: Getty Publications
Total Pages: 194
Release: 2021-11-02
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1606066706

The first study devoted to classical art’s vital creative impact on the work of the Flemish painter Peter Paul Rubens. For the great Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640), the classical past afforded lifelong creative stimulus and the camaraderie of humanist friends. A formidable scholar, Rubens ingeniously transmitted the physical ideals of ancient sculptors, visualized the spectacle of imperial occasions, rendered the intricacies of mythological tales, and delineated the character of gods and heroes in his drawings, paintings, and designs for tapestries. His passion for antiquity profoundly informed every aspect of his art and life. Including 170 color illustrations, this volume addresses the creative impact of Rubens’s remarkable knowledge of the art and literature of antiquity through the consideration of key themes. The book’s lively interpretive essays explore the formal and thematic relationships between ancient sources and Baroque expressions: the significance of neo-Stoic philosophy, the compositional and iconographic inspiration provided by exquisite carved gems, Rubens’s study of Roman marble sculpture, and his inventive translation of ancient sources into new subjects made vivid by his dynamic painting style. This volume is published to accompany an exhibition on view at the J. Paul Getty Museum at the Getty Villa from November 10, 2021, to January 24, 2022.

The Making of Rubens

The Making of Rubens
Author: Svetlana Alpers
Publisher:
Total Pages: 178
Release: 1996
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780300067446

The second problem is that of art and its consumption. Beginning with Watteau, the making of a Rubensian art is traced in the taste for Rubens in the eighteenth century in France, where many of the pictures he had kept for his own collection had found their way. In the writings of Roger de Piles and in the work of the painters to follow, art is made out of the viewing and discussing of art. A binary system of taste emerged for Rubens as contrasted with Poussin, and critical distinctions came to be fashioned in the binary terms of gender. Finally, Alpers considers creativity itself and how, as a man and as a painter, Rubens could have viewed his own generative talent. An analysis of his Munich Silenus - fleshy, intoxicated, and, following Virgil's account, disempowered as a condition of producing his songs - reveals a sense of the creative gift as humanly indeterminate and equivocal.

The Rape of the Masters

The Rape of the Masters
Author: Roger Kimball
Publisher: Encounter Books
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2005-11-25
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1594033021

Colleges and universities used to teach art history to encourage connoisseurship and acquaint students with the riches of our artistic heritage. But now, as Roger Kimball reveals in this witty and provocative book, the student is less likely to learn about the aesthetics of masterworks than to be told, for instance, that Peter Paul Rubens' great painting Drunken Silenus is an allegory about anal rape. Or that Courbet's famous hunting pictures are psychodramas about "castration anxiety." Or that Gauguin's Manao tupapau is an example of the way repression is "written on the bodies of women." Or that Jan van Eyck's masterful Arnolfini Portrait is about "middle-class deceptions ... and the treatment of women." Or that Mark Rothko's abstract White Band (Number 27) "parallels the pictorial structure of a pieta." Or that Winslow Homer's The Gulf Stream is "a visual encoding of racism." In "The Rape of the Masters: How Political Correctness Sabotages Art," Kimball, a noted art critic himself, shows how academic art history is increasingly held hostage to radical cultural politics--feminism, cultural studies, postcolonial studies, the whole armory of academic antihumanism. To make his point, he describes how eight famous works of art (reprinted here as illustrations) have been made over to fit a radical ideological fantasy. Kimball then performs a series of intellectual rescue operations, explaining how these great works should be understood through a series of illuminating readings in which art, not politics, guides the discussion.

Ruins

Ruins
Author: Morgan Meis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 156
Release: 2013-01-05
Genre:
ISBN: 9780615751740

A collection of the best essays from one of America's best (winner of an Andy Warhol Foundation Grant) and most poignant, personal and philosophical young critics, Morgan Meis Ph.D, on art, culture, politics and the transitory and illusory nature of time.

Painting for the Eye

Painting for the Eye
Author: Anna Buxton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 66
Release: 2012
Genre: Electronic dissertations
ISBN:

In 1747, newly appointed Directeur general des Batiments du Roi, Charles - Francois Le Normand de Tournehem organized a concours, or competition, in the French Royal Academy. He hoped to reinvigorate history painting at a time when Rococo themes dominated. With this challenge before him, Tournehem invited ten of the better known academic painters to produce works which challenged the norms of the popular frivolous style. De Tournehem expected edifying subject matter, such as the ennobling themes produced by Poussin in the previous century, however, the majority of the competitors chose traditional mythological scenes which were not so different from their Rococo counterparts. Among the participants, Carle Vanloo submitted a painting of the Drunken Silenus (L'Ivresse de Silene) in a scene that seemingly mocked those very goals of the concours. In this work, the central figure is an old man so incapacitated by wine and his own weight that he leans unsteadily on his fellow revelers. This thesis explores the tension between the goals of the competition and the subject matter produced by Vanloo within the larger context of academic pedagogic shifts in the 18th century.