Yesterday I went with my pal Brad Marshall to see Anders Zorn: Sweden’s Master Painter at the National Academy. Yes, I loved it. Here are a few paintings that really impressed me.
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Herdsmaid (Walk), 1908.
The softness of the firs is quite incredible. It appears to be wet-on-dry but I
wouldn’t stake my life on that. He feels no need to be didactic about his narrative; instead, the figure of the girl and the cows disappear
into the background. There is no brown in the dirtscape; it’s all shades of
mauve.
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Summer Vacation, 1886,
watercolor. Emma Zorn posed as a tourist in this painting along the Baltic Sea.
I’m blown away by the perspective in the waves; it’s perfect. So too is the
soft wet (light) modeling and the dry (dark) modeling of the waves. It could be
the Maine landscape with that outcrop in the background.
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Lapping Waves, 1887,
watercolor. Again the reflections in the water are stunningly realized, both in
terms of shape and color. The houses rising on the far hillside are in perfect
counterpoint.
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Reflections, 1889. The
foreground reed or branch screen is a problem in the intimate landscape.
Painting them in can be fey; leaving them out ruins the sense of closeness. Zorn
deals with this by bringing the contrast between the reeds and the background
way down. The colors in the water are magical, and the light and chroma are all
in the far bank, not in the figure.
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Man and Boy in Algiers,
1887. JoaquĆn Sorolla and John Singer Sargent were renowned for their
handling of white-on-white; here Zorn proves he’s just as competent at it. More
than that, I feel like I know this guy; he may have been part of the late 19th
century mania for Orientalism, but he’s a fully realized person.
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Anders Zorn: Sweden’s Master Painter runs until May 18, 2014 at the National Academy of Art, XX Park Avenue, New York, NY.
Let me know if you’re interested in painting with me in Belfast, Maine in August, 2014 or in Rochester at any time. Click here for more information on my Maine workshops!
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