art photograph photographer photomontage hack manipulation image simulacrum meat woman girl face anatomy bw vintage
✖ Via Higher Pictures: “Untitled” by Alfred Gescheidt, vintage gelatin silver print, 1970
Alfred Gescheidt is a professional photographer born in Queens, New York on December 19, 1926. He won a scholarship to the Art Students’ League and studied with Will Barnet and Harry Sternberg. He served briefly in the Navy during World War II, then went to the University of New Mexico and studied with Raymond Johnson. He decided to become a photographer and transferred to the Los Angeles Art Center School and here studied with George Hoyningen-Huene. In the 1950s he documented life on city streets and beaches of America. (Escape Into Life: Alfred Geischeidt)

Previously on Skandalon



• Oct 21, 2010 link notes tagged: art  photograph  photographer  photomontage  hack  manipulation  image  simulacrum  meat  woman  girl  face  anatomy  BW  vintage 
art vintage ad technology communication television future past evolution consumption shopping girls woman
✖ Via

x-ray delta one photostream on FLickr: “Shopping by TV” from the Populuxe album.



• Oct 19, 2010 link notes tagged: art  vintage  ad  technology  communication  television  future  past  evolution  consumption  shopping  girls  woman 
art painting photorealism hyperrealism realism painter woman water bath food body nude bodies_and_water  reblog
✖ Via Lee Price: “Strawberry Swirl”, oil on Linen, 36” x 58”

Lee Price graduated from the Moore College of Art in 1990 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts, Painting. It’s interesting to note that he (she?) took private studies with Alyssa Monk.



• Oct 04, 2010 link notes reblogged from buddybradleyblog  [via] tagged: art  painting  photorealism  hyperrealism  realism  painter  woman  water  bath  food  body  nude  bodies and water 
art painting painter nude pin_up woman girl paris portrait
✖ Via

Jean-Gabriel Domergue: “Modèle aux seins nus”, oil on canvas, 85 x 65,5 cm.

Jean-Gabriel Domergue was born in Bordeaux, France on March 4th, 1889.

An extremely talented and precocious painter, Domergue exhibited works at the Salon Des Artistes Français (the French Artists Exhibition) in 1906 at the young age of seventeen. In 1913, he was awarded the Second Prize of Rome and went on to win the gold medal award in the 1920 show. He then began showing outside the exhibition.

Having first been recognized for his landscapes which he painted with great ease, his career took a decisive turn during the 1920’s. At this time he became the painter of the “Parisian lady”.

Domergue invented a new type of woman : thin, airy, elegant, with a swanlike neck and wide seductive eyes which gaze upon the world with longing.

“I invented the pin-up” he later claimed. (more)



• Sep 15, 2010 link notes tagged: art  painting  painter  nude  pin-up  woman  girl  Paris  portrait 
art design poster lithograph vintage steinlen animal veterinary france woman
✖ Via Steinlen.net: “Clinique Cheron”, lithograph, 1905
Théophile Alexandre Steinlen, frequently referred to as just Steinlen (November 10, 1859 – December 13, 1923), was a Swiss-born French Art Nouveau painter and printmaker. (wikipedia)

You may know Steinlen for his famous Tournée du Chat Noir poster (1896).



• Sep 08, 2010 link notes tagged: art  design  poster  lithograph  vintage  Steinlen  animal  veterinary  France  woman 
art comic illustration book woman women nude erotism cartoon dream fantasy girl
✖ Via Little Ego by Vittorio Giardino, Nantier Beall Minoustchine Publishing, 1989, 48 p.
Vittorio Giardino (born December 24, 1946), is an Italian comic artist. Giardino was born in Bologna, where he graduated in electrical engineering in 1969. At the age of 30, he decided to leave his job and devote himself to comics. Two years later his first short story Pax Romana was published in La Città Futura, a weekly magazine published by the Federazione Giovanile Comunista Italiana and edited by Luigi Bernardi. […] Starting in 1984, Giardino produced a number of short stories for the Italian magazine Comic Art, where he introduced Little Ego, a young and sexy girl inspired by Winsor McKay’s Little Nemo who stars in one-page dreamy erotic stories. (wikipedia)

Milo Manara meets Little Nemo



• Sep 04, 2010 link notes tagged: art  comic  illustration  book  woman  women  nude  erotism  cartoon  dream  fantasy  girl 
art painting painter realism photorealism hyperrealism photography photograph artefact grammar media medium code simulacrum woman girl body nude summer light
✖ Via Kravets | Wehby Gallery: “Valentine, Vandee,” by Aaron Romine, oil on linen, 21 1/4 x 25 3/4”, 2007

About Aaron Romine:

In Aaron Romine’s recent paintings his characters have become stand-ins for something larger. Although obviously recognizable as specific people (they are all actually his friends), the work is contemplative and the scenes are a commentary on current culture. His painstaking paintings have become psychological allegories. He has looked past pure sexuality into how his subjects relate to each other, pushing their relationships to a level of intimacy. While influenced by such artists as Manet, Piazetta, Gaugin, Sargent, and Velazquez, his work has recently veered away from (strictly) historical references. (PragueBiennale.org).

First spotted via This Isn’t Happiness.



• Sep 03, 2010 link notes tagged: art  painting  painter  realism  photorealism  hyperrealism  photography  photograph  artefact  grammar  media  medium  code  simulacrum  woman  girl  body  nude  summer  light 

I have watched and read your reviews for years with great honor. I disagree so strongly with your review of “Eat Pray Love” that it makes me sick. You just don’t get it, and many others like you don’t get it. You do not know at all what it is like being a woman in this day and age (or previously) who did not want to be defined by a man or married off to one. If you think Stephen in the movie was an OK husband, you are out to lunch. He was horrible!!!!!!!!!!!!!! (except on paper to people who do not need emotional sustenance). David was the narcissist from hell that many of us have fallen for… do you not get that??????????? Many of the males of the species are frankly overrated and the women’s movement has proven this (or frankly not sufficiently). I hope your wife will bring you up to speed. (Jeanine Carlson, Ph.D., Licensed Clinical Psychologist)
✖ Via Roger Ebert.com: “You do not get that???????” by Roger Ebert, August 18, 2010

The quote is from a woman complaining to Roger Ebert about his review of Eat, Pray, Love. Somehow, I found interesting the fact that she’s a “Licensed Clinical Psychologist”.



• Aug 20, 2010 link notes tagged: art  movie  film  Ebert  critic  review  psychology  woman  women  humor  license  wife  pathology  anxiety  rage  frustration 
art photograph magazine celebrity star famous america counter_culture critic revolution politic representation capitalism irony simulacrum product consumption girl woman pin_up
✖ Via The Thought Experiment: Sharon Tate in Esquire, December 1967. Photo by William Helburn

Excerpt from the magazine:

The little red book which contains hightlights from The thought of Mao Tse-tung is the most influential volume in the world today. It is also extremely dull and entirely unmemorable. To resolve this paradox, we, a handful of editors in authority who follow the capitalist road, thought useful to illustrate certain key passages in such a way that they are more likely to stick in the mind. The visual aid is Sharon Tate and, to give credit where credit, God knows, is due, she will soon be seen in the Twentieth Century-Fox motion picture, Valley of the Dolls.

The Thought Experiment is a blog run by Elizabeth Lamanna:

This animal is a thought experiment. I will try to keep it upbeat and interesting, but it may occasionally swing through bat country, go off broadway, or veer into vapidity as I attempt to disentangle what feels like the crushing simultaneity of where my choices have lead my life.

I realized about a month from turning thirty that I had spent the past year acting like I was going to be audited, as if, casting my memory back through the past ten years, I panicked. Maybe not without reason. Throughout this last decade, I’ve jumped a few ships, burned a few bridges, worded up, partied down, hung loose, and obeyed my thirst, and been just about rolled under by the waves almost as many times as I deserved. The final countdown of my twenties suddenly woke me up to the fact that somewhere along the way, I’d lost track of myself. (more)


• Aug 14, 2010 link notes tagged: art  photograph  magazine  celebrity  star  famous  America  counter-culture  critic  revolution  politic  representation  capitalism  irony  simulacrum  product  consumption  girl  woman  pin-up 
art painting realism photorealism hyperrealism woman girl uncanny
✖ Via Galerie Andreas Binder: “Untitled (Jessica in the Park)” by Yigal Ozeri, 2010, oil on paper, 42” x 60” inch

This photorealist painting belongs to the Desire for Anima series:

an exhibition of new oil paintings on paper by Israeli artist Yigal Ozeri. His paintings of young women are unusual for their uncanny realism and psychologically engaging presence. This is achieved by Ozeris using both still photography and video in their initial stages, and painting the final works with thousands of tiny brushstrokes which animate the paintings, surfaces.

This series of paintings explores portraits of young women, either standing together nude in dense grass fields, or posed alone, often wearing a pink diaphanous and lace gown. Many appear like film still, caught, unawares, unselfconsciously laughing, or moving through the lush backgrounds. Others gaze directly at the viewer in a somewhat challenging and unsettling manner. In some, all that is visible are fragments of the girls, body, faces, limbs, richly textured garments. In every painting, Ozeri captures the vulnerability of the girls bodies, at the transitional age between youth and maturity. For the artist, the results of his paintings express his feminine, anima, Carl Jungs concept of the essential woman. This psychological presence is the hidden essence of his work. (more)

Yigal Ozeri was born in Israel in 1958. He now lives and works in New York.



• Aug 09, 2010 link notes tagged: art  painting  realism  photorealism  hyperrealism  woman  girl  uncanny 
art cover archive magazine woman design vintage feminism secretary ressource
✖ Via Codex xcix: “Today’s Secretary”, May 1961
The magazines’s regular features included phrases such as “the working mother is still on trial,” or “drink your way down the scale with four liquid meals a day,” 2 or “sometimes a secretary’s social life is so exhausting that her job become a mere meal ticket.” I could go on all day like this – there is easily enough material here for a grad seminar in post-Eisenhower gender roles or feminist epistemology. Or perhaps enough material for an episode of Mad Men. (more)

About Codex xcix:

Codex xcix’s an occasionally updated weblog about the history of the visual arts and graphic design. Mostly this means books and their typography and illustration, maps, periodicals, photos and posters as well as other miscellaneous ephemera. The history of visual arts is a rather wide swath to cover and the selection of materials follows the Stewartian argument of “I’ll know it when I see it.” The site is embellished wherever possible with diagrams, drawings, illustrations, maps, photographs, etc., and nearly all of the images in the posts link to a much larger image. (more)


• Aug 09, 2010 link notes tagged: art  cover  archive  magazine  woman  design  vintage  feminism  secretary  ressource 
alone art female figure girl loneliness nude painter painting prostration woman uglow
✖ Via

Artnet: Beautiful Girl Lying Down by Euan Uglow, 1958-1959, oil on canvas, 23,5” x 36,5”

Euan Uglow (10 March 1932 – 31 August 2000) was an English figurative painter. […] [He] is best known as a painter of the figure, particularly of female nudes, as well as portraits, still lifes and landscapes. His ostensibly simple compositions usually consist of a single figure in a setting emptied of extraneous detail; a typical still life may feature a single piece of fruit on a plain tabletop. With a meticulous method of painting directly from life, Uglow frequently took months or years to complete a painting. Planes are articulated very precisely, edges are sharply defined, and colours are differentiated with great subtlety. (wikipedia)



• Aug 08, 2010 link notes tagged: alone  art  female  figure  girl  loneliness  nude  painter  painting  prostration  woman  Uglow 

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