We headed first to the 16th-19th century French painting galleries There I found myself unexpectedly fixated on a heavenly color combination:
That's Eustache Le Sueur's "St Bruno Being Carried Up to Heaven," painted circa 1650. And it's how I felt looking at it. Similarly, Le Sueur's "Dream of St. Bruno."
And here's "Imaginary Landscape" by Pierre Patel:
I was seized by lapis and gold, plus variations. Here's an early 17th century painting by Francois Perrier, "Acis and Galatea Hiding from the Gaze of the Giant Polyphemus."
Closer:
Below, an equestrian portrait by Antoine Gros, early 18th century. I am counting the gold in the frames as part of the hypnotic color scheme.
Closer. His shapely knee, in golden yoga pants/tights, enchanted me. (Not to mention that poor tiger saddle.)And speaking of horses, here's Charles LeBrun 17th century equestrian portrait of Pierre Segulier,
Check out the elaborate gold fabric, contrasted with the cobalt/blue-grey tights.
Below, Jean Auguste Dominic Ingres' Joan of Arc, dated 1854.
Next, Ary Scheffer's 19th century "Temptation of Christ,"
My DH had a lively chat with these two amiable guys (they're Parisian city officials, painted by Philippe de Champaigne, circa 1650). I love the sky color against the gold frame, against a wall painted in a color similar to the sky.
The next confection, by 18th century artist Jean-Honore Fragonard was one of my absolute favorites. It's called "Rinaldo in the Gardens of Armida." The colors are brilliant, the frame is perfection.
It's impossible not to get lost at the Louvre, so at some point we found ourselves among Egyptian antiquities, where I was hailed by this Middle Kingdom (1900 BC) Egyptian ceramic hippopotamus. (Replicas are in the gift shop at the Louvre, or in New York, where her twin, William, is the unofficial mascot of the Metropolitan Museum.)
Once we left the Louvre, I started seeing my new favorite colors everywhere. Like at the Orsay Museum - this breathtaking painting by Georges Lacomb, circa 1893, called "Marine Bleu: Effet de Vagues".
Monet's 1880 'Villas at Bodhighera":
Van Gogh's "Church at Auvers", 1890:
Nowhere was it more spectacular than in the apse of the Sacre-Coeur Basilica in Montmartre:
But I also found it in the streets, like this darling tray and teacup set in a shop window.
And this scene at the Theatre Edgar in Montparnasse.
And these two pieces of fabric, in Montmartre fabric stores:
(The piece above is Klimt-inspired. The piece below is macarons alternating with teddy bears in teacups. Yes, you saw them in a blog post a couple of weeks ago.)
And moving across continents, from the sublime to the ridiculous, even Fragonard might approve of the graphics in this arcade game that I photographed at a completely different time, in Ventura, California.
What do you do when you get obsessed with a color combination and need to see more? Go to TinEye, at http://labs.tineye.com/multicolr/. Select the colors you want to include - it searches 20 million Creative Commons images to give you many more examples! A bath for the eyes!
[Note: I have no financial or other affiliation with any of the artists, organizations, or websites in this blog post!]
Fabulous blog post of a lovely subject and wonderful color combination. The tineye search engine is one of the best color tools I've seen. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jane, so glad you enjoyed the tour!
ReplyDeleteThank you,Cathy, your post is fantastic!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your nice comment, I'm so glad you enjoyed it!
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