Joels Blog in Art History

Joels Blog

Italian painter Sandro Botticelli (Alessandro di Mariano Filipepi) sure has some great paintings, don’t you think? I enjoy his highly individual and graceful style founded on the rhythmic capabilities of outline. You can easily see how the style of Filippo Lippi informs his earliest dated work. A couple of his paintings circa 1485 exemplify this:

Botticelli_young_man
“Portrait of a Young Man”

Joel Botticelli
“Portrait of Joel, 500 Years in the Future”.

The most unusual painter in 16th-century Europe, El Greco combined the strict Byzantine style of his homeland, Greece, with influences received during his studies in Venice and the medieval tradition of the country where he worked, Spain. The life of proud and independent El Greco in Spain, who always signed his pictures by his Greek name, demanded constant self-assertion. For example, he remade Botticelli’s famous “Portrait of Joel, 500 years in the Future” in his own style. “Portrait of Joel, 400 years in the Future” is now regarded as one of his best works.

Joel Botticelli
“Portrait of Joel, 400 Years in the Future”.

El Greco did not have followers, and his art was forgotten for 300 years. The re-discovery of his painting was a sensation; he became one of the most popular masters of the past, his painting rosed the interest of collectors, artists, lovers of art and art historians. El Greco is now one of the most important representatives of European Mannerism.

During the early 1900s in Paris, the Italian painter and sculptor Amedeo Modigliani, b. July 12, 1884, d. Jan. 24, 1920, developed a unique style. Today his graceful portraits and lush nudes at once evoke his name, but during his brief career few apart from his fellow artists were aware of his gifts. Modigliani had to struggle against poverty and chronic ill health, dying of tuberculosis and excesses of drink and drugs at the age of 35. The strong influence of Paul Cezanne’s paintings is clearly evident, both in Modigliani’s deliberate distortion of the figure and the free use of large, flat areas of color.

His last work before he died was another remake of “The Joels”. This one, “Portrait of Joel, 70 years in the Future”, will forever stand out without question as his absolute best work. There is speculation that he was working on a NUDE Joel, but it was never found. The world will forever morn this loss.

Joel Botticelli
“Portrait of Joel, 70 Years in the Future”.

The latest “Joel” is a Magna Cartoon. It is
predicted that artists of the future will be
enamored with creating various “Joels”.

Joel Botticelli
“Magna Joel”.

Long Live “The Joels”.

How to Procrastinate Well

Procrastination

Most people who write about procrastination write about how to cure it. But this is, strictly speaking, impossible. There are an infinite number of things you could be doing. No matter what you work on, you’re not working on everything else. So the question is not how to avoid procrastination, but how to procrastinate well.

What’s “small stuff?” Roughly, work that has zero chance of being mentioned in your obituary. It’s hard to say at the time what will turn out to be your best work (will it be your magnum opus on Sumerian temple architecture, or the detective thriller you wrote under a pseudonym?), but there’s a whole class of tasks you can safely rule out: shaving, doing your laundry, cleaning the house, writing thank-you notes– anything that might be called an errand.

Good procrastination is avoiding errands to do real work.

Okoboji images

Okoboji Images

Lloyd B. Cunningham has logged more than 320 dives in West Lake Okoboji exploring the bottom, making photographs and recovering antique bottles, anchors, and ice harvesting tools.

In 1948, a 1935 Ford truck driven Ralph Gregerson was being used to harvest ice on West Okoboji when it slipped into the water and sank into Smith’s Bay. Don Gregerson ,Spirit Lake. Iowa, and son of the driver says that the truck didn’t settle into the bottom. Its air-filled tires and wooden box left it buoyant enough to move along the bottom for years.

Recent divers have collected the tools that rested on the truck’s bed. They are in the Iowa Maritime Museum. There you can also see a photograph of the truck as it looked before it sank into the lake.

Pipe Dream

Pipe Dream

Animusic‘s debut DVD presents 7 breathtaking music animations unlike anything you’ve seen before.

As Pipe Dream was by far the favorite from Animusic 1, the Pipe Dream 2 instruments return, aged and a little more dented, playing a manic tune with even more ball bearings flying everywhere.

You can view the entire Pipe Dream here or download a free MPG version of Pipe Dream from ATI.

via Nothing Important.