Sunday, 7 April 2013

Alberto Giacometti




 I looked at Giacomettis ways of drawing prier to attending a life drawing class 6-9 on a thursday night.  I wasnt to keen on the way he worked and the way he used the materials that he did but it gave me an insight on how i could work when life drawing.
As shown on blog at a earlier date i like the isolated and out of proportion figures. Just like

Mario Armengol's http://www.thatartistwoman.org/2010/09/figure-sculptural-project.html   http://www.marioarmengol.com/ and Sot's Art-Leonid Sokov.

As you can gather this way of long isolated figures made out of brass but as i don't have access to brass so i would have to improvise on the medium and make it out of a different medium.

I think Giacometti's way of working is ways which I could tryout as it has lots of texture, long expressive brushstrokes and then worked into with detail in a different medium, which shows contract between the materials he uses in his work.

Alberto Giacometti 1901–1966


Artist biography

Alberto Giacometti 1901-1966School of Paris sculptor, painter and draughtsman born in the village of Borgonovo near Stampa, Switzerland, son of the Post-Impressionist painter Giovanni Giacometti. Began to draw, paint and sculpt at an early age. Studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Geneva 1919-20 and in Italy 1920-1. Moved in 1922 to Paris where he first studied in Archipenko's studio, then for five years at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière under Bourdelle. First one-man exhibition at the Galerie Aktuaryus, Zurich, 1927. Went through a period of intense restlessness in which he experimented with polychrome sculpture, cages, erotic kinetic objects, near-abstraction and other styles. Participated in the Surrealist movement 1930-5. Began in 1934-5 to work again from the model, but each sculpture became smaller and smaller, and was finally almost always destroyed; had no exhibition between 1935 and 1947. Lived 1941-5 in Geneva, then returned to Paris. His characteristic style dates from 1947 when he started to make figures which were very tall and thin. Awarded the First Prize for Sculpture at the Pittsburgh International in 1961, the main prize for sculpture at the Venice Biennale 1962, and the Guggenheim International Award for Painting 1964. Died at Chur in Switzerland.

http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/alberto-giacometti-1159





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