Wendt had a neat way of reducing his forms into squared off shapes which was idiosyncratic and gave a blocky powerful look to his work. Below is the painting again, and I have marked it up a little.
This is pretty obvious but I will quickly describe the thrusting of the forms in bullets. Their purpose is to carry the eye through the painting. This is more commonly thought of as being done with line direction, but the idea is the same.
- 1, thrusts powerfully upward.
- 2, curves in front the right and feeds you into 1.
- 3, feeds you upward toward 1.
- 4, starts you into the painting and up to the greater thrusting forms that make this big pyramid work.
- 5, carries you up and out the upper right hand corner. That is like solving the equation of direction he has established with the rest of his forms..
- Waugh has used the foreground rock at 1, to drive the viewer deep into the scene.
- 2 and 3, also channel us into the middle "punchline" area.
- 4, the wave itself is thrusting inward from the right, entering the scene with great force.
- 5, like 1 stands solidly ready to receive, unmoved, the force of the oncoming surf. Seascape painters routinely set up these two forces, the oncoming power of the wave and the the unyielding resistance of the shore.
I often see contemporary landscape paintings that have static forms, rather than forms used to aid the feeling and power of the painting. Both of these paintings are dynamic and exciting largely as a result of their thrusting forms.
9 comments:
One thing that is difficult to grasp here on a little monitor is a sense of scale - any idea how large these paintings are? I'm guessing that they are medium-sized paintings.
wonderful post Stape!! I love your blog so much. Thanks for all the hard work you put into it.
I have to thank you for once again shifting my focus to where it should have been. When I first saw the Wendt I immediately started to pick out the thrusts, the problem is I went straight to my usual way of seeing and looked at the edges of light and shadow to define those emphasis for me. While observing the edges of light and shadow does give the same eye movement through the painting looking at the larger shapes changes the speed the eye travels and provides a deeper understanding of what he had in mind.
Thanks,
Steve Baker
I really like the Waugh oil you posted. Great asymmetry.
And although it's not directly related to your discussion of thrusts, the color gradation in that left foreground rock is beautifully handled. I'm impressed.
I'm pretty sure a whole bunch of Waugh paintings ended up in the permanent collection of the Ulrich Museum of Art in Wichita, KS, which is totally land-locked. It's an ironic resting place for them. Do you know the story behind how they ended up there?
Bill:
They are mid sized as you suggest. I suppose if I were a scholar I would record and post dimensions on everything, but this blog is a bit home made.
.......................Stape
Jake;
Thanks, it is a lot of work!
.................Stape
Steve;
I guess that form thrust is line direction squared.
.........DStape
Philip:
I do know that story and I will tell it. But I will wait until I get to Waugh. I have a lot of Waugh material and will spend a great deal of time on him when I get there.
.....................Stape
To the guy who comments in Japanese,If I can't read your post, I delete it.Your comment may be very nice or it might be viscous slander, who knows? Please post in one of the romance languages.
...........Stape
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