Link to What's New This Week Art as Expression

Dear Habermas Logo and Link to Site Index A Justice Site



Art as Expression

About Us - Site Map: Where to Find Stuff - NEW on Site
MIRROR SITES: CSUDH - Habermas - UWP
EDITORIAL NEWS: jeanne's World - Susan's World - Pat's World

 

RESOURCES: Community-Building - Visual Sociology - Message-Building
POST on YAHOO GROUP: Dear Habermas Discussion Group - Write Free
SEARCH: - Site Index - Topics Index - Online Sources
FACULTY ASSISTANCE: Susan - jeanne - Pat
UWP Criminal Justice Dept. - CSUDH Dept. of Sociology

Merriam-Webster Dictionary Search:

Google
WWW www.habermas.org

California State University, Dominguez Hills
University of Wisconsin, Parkside
Created: July 2, 2004
Latest Update: April 15, 2011

E-Mail Icon jeannecurran@habermas.org
takata@uwp.edu

Lambert's Picnic Race

Finding Similarities Around the World


The Tirranna Picnic Race Meeting

Untitled (The Tirranna Picnic Race Meeting) George Lambert, large version in black and white. NO LONGER AVAILABLE ONLINE. jeanne 04/14/2011

Art Renwal Center Several of Lambert's paintings available here, but mostly portraits. Of the three outdoor scenes, I chose the sheep shearing scene to indicate Lambert's interest in the middle and working classes. Portraiture paid better. But you still find these outdoor scenes. Lamberts' style was wholly different from Seurat's pointillism. He was a realist, which perhaps shows best in another of his outdoor scenes:

Look at the difference in the sky. Lambert's strokes are completely different from the technique that Seurat was using.

And then look at one of Suerat's skies:

View of Fort Samson, Grandcamp 1885 (130 Kb); Oil on canvas, 25 5/8 x 32 in; The Hermitage, St. Petersburg; Formerly Collection of Bernhard Koehler, Berlin Web. Museum

Notice the tremendous difference in feeling the two painting techniques achieve with the sky.

Compare to Seurat: "La Grande Jatte," at the Art Institute of Chicago.

WebMuseum, Paris Sunday Afternoon on the Island of the Grande Jatte

  • What Seurat Left Out of "La Grande Jatte" By Amanda Paulson | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor. Backup. This is a really nice article that explains some of the social significance of Seurat's message.

    "PRE-JATTE: Seurat painted numerous studies, including 'Rose-Colored Skirt' (shown), which shows a man and woman in an uncertain relationship. In the final version, Seurat omitted the man but added a child in white, inserting a note of innocence among the adults in 'La Grande Jatte.' "
    PRIVATE COLLECTION



 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.5 License.
Individual copyrights by other authors may apply.