Linkages through paintings
Wroclaw 2016
As part of the city's effort to stay linked with San Sebastian 2016, and therefore Spain, there has been organised an exhibition about the bull fight as depicted by Picasso, Dali and other strong painters.like Goya. Picasso had the art of showing the bull as a continuity of the mythos of Minotaurus, and therefore it can be linked to the tale about King Minos as told by Ernst Schnabel in his novel "I and the kings".
Picasso, Dalí and Goya in Wrocław 2016 - exhibition in 2014
- Event Category: Visual Art
- When: 24 Jul 2014, 00:00— 16 Nov 2014, 00:00
- Where: Museum of Architecture in Wrocław
Organised by Galeria Miejska in Wrocław, the exhibition will be hosted by the Museum of Architecture in Wrocław from 24 July to 16 November 2014.
Bullfights and the associated corrida are a colorful and, at the same time, controversial element of the culture of Spain, which had been changing over the centuries, gradually taking the characteristics of a sophisticated ritual; a spectacle whose cruelty has been provoking much emotion for years.
The form of the exhibition presented in Wrocław is influenced by the process of evolution of the phenomenon of corrida as well as major events in the political and social history of Spain. Visitors to the exhibition will find that each of the presented masters approached the problem of tauromachia in a different way. Francisco Goya's engravings entitled Tauromachia depict various techniques of fighting bulls, characteristic of the times when the corrida was just developing. In turn, the works of Pablo Picasso, who was perfectly familiar with Goya's oeuvre, they become, in addition to the visualisation of his juvenile fascinations, also an expression of his protest against the events taking place in Spain during the rule of General Franco.
The Wrocław presentation will include the graphic cycles showing the corrida as seen through the master's eyes and the facsimiles of preparatory drawings for the artist's most famous painting entitled Guernica, on the basis of which the visitors will be able to trace the process of creation of this extraordinary work. Picasso wanted it to call the world's attention to the drama of the Basque town, bombed on 26 April 1937.
On the other hand, the famous surrealist Salvador Dali perceived the bullfighting more in terms of a magical ritual, confrontation with the animal which had an aesthetic dimension, hence the works ehxibited in Wrocław, such as Bullfight No. 1, excellently capture not only the impenetrable world of the artist's imagination, but also his personal vision of tauromachia.
The death of General Franco in 1975 was followed by prophecies of imminent extinction of bullfighting, as an entertainment associated with the years of terror. However, the number of corridas organised in Spain has not decreased. Its opponents emphasize the gratuitous cruelty of this form of entertainment, while the supporters raise the confrontation of man with a wild animal to the rank of art and passionate happening. Through the works presented, the Wrocław exhibition will certainly make us reflect on this ritual, providing significant aesthetic experience and allowing us to penetrate into Spain's rich tradition.
http://wroclaw2016.pl/exhibition-picasso-dali-goya
Van Gogh in Mons 2015
Van Gogh superstar
La star des expos à Mons en 2015, ça a été «Van Gogh au Borinage, la naissance d’un artiste». Les toiles et les dessins du peintre impressionniste ont été admirés par 180.000 personnes. Dans leur ensemble, les musées montois (dont les cinq nouveaux, ouverts en avril) ont accueilli cette année 455.000 personnes. Dans les salles, on parlait beaucoup néerlandais... et allemand! « La provenance des visiteurs va encore devoir être analysée en détail dans les prochaines semaines, précise la directrice de VisitMons, Natacha Vandenbergh, mais je peux vous dire que les visiteurs allemands étaient particulièrement nombreux». L’Office du Tourisme annonce aussi une progression spectaculaire du nombre de groupes qui ont réservé une visite guidée: près de 5000 en 2015, soit 25 fois plus qu’en 2014. Une des images qu’on retiendra en effet de Mons 2015, ce sont ces nombreux touristes sillonnant les rues, leur petit plan à la main.
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