art painting painter america still_life life death representation fruit bone object light anatomy apple bruce_kurland
✖ Via Smithsonian American Art Museum: “Bone, Cup and Crab Apple” by Bruce Kurland, oil on fiberboard, 8 1/8 x 10 in 1972.
Bruce Kurland painted this still life while he was living in the town of Curriers in Wyoming County, New York. He felt that the city offered dismal prospects for a representational painter and moved to the countryside, where he painted images that focused on simple objects “being revealed by light.” Here, the dried bone, shriveled crab apple, and rusty cup emphasize the transformation of both natural and manmade materials over time. The dark, empty background highlights the delicacy and transitory nature of these strange objects. (more over at the Lucie Foundation Center for American Art)

About Bruce Kurland:

Bruce Kurland began painting in the late 1950s and studied at the Art Students League and the National Academy School of Fine Arts in New York. He spent almost twenty years living a “nineteenth-century life” in Wyoming County, New York, where he was inspired by the dramatic open vistas of the countryside. His small paintings show still lifes in miniature and often include unconventional items, from wilting flowers to old bones and dead mice. (more)

First spotted via On the Sunny Side of the Sunny Side up



• Sep 26, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: art  painting  painter  America  still life  life  death  representation  fruit  bone  object  light  anatomy  apple  Bruce Kurland 
photo photographer bw fossile bone artifact archaeology collection archive
✖ Via Richard Barnes Photography: Past Perfect/Future Tense, no 15

Artist statement :

“In my work I have long been concerned with collection, curation and display and in the transition of objects from their original site to the museum and what happens to them along the way in the process. The passage of time affects meaning, adding value to an artifact in some cases and taking it away in others. Plaster casts of the stone tools in this installation heading towards a kind of extinction through the act of being de-accessioned are displayed beneath a photograph of a recently excavated prehistoric skeletal whale in the process of being cast. I am interested in these connections and disconnections.” (read more by visiting the whole series)

About Richard Barnes:

“Richard Barnes divides his time between commissioned work and personal projects. He looks at architecture as artifact and, placing it within the context of archaeology, challenges our conceptions of the way we inhabit and represent the built environment. His photographs are in numerous public and private collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the New York Public Library and the Harvard Photographic Archive. He was a recipient of the Rome Prize for 2005-06.” (read a whole lote more)


• Mar 12, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: photo  photographer  BW  fossile  bone  artifact  archaeology  collection  archive 

skandalon


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