painting – The Cultural Exposé http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk A blog from a lifestyle journo covering culture, food and style in London and beyond. Mon, 23 Jul 2018 21:50:47 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/cropped-logo_2017-32x32.jpg painting – The Cultural Exposé http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk 32 32 Five Dope Tracks is a curation of dope music, five tracks at a time. Check out the monthly playlist each month on Spotify. painting – The Cultural Exposé clean episodic painting – The Cultural Exposé megerecooper@gmail.com megerecooper@gmail.com (painting – The Cultural Exposé) The Five Dope Tracks music podcast painting – The Cultural Exposé http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/powerpress/five_dope_tracks_podcast_cover.jpg http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk What we’ve been up to (in Paris)… Musée d’Orsay http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/what-weve-been-up-to-in-paris-musee-dorsay/ http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/what-weve-been-up-to-in-paris-musee-dorsay/#comments Wed, 11 Mar 2015 13:30:16 +0000 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/?p=9832 After visiting the D’orsay on the Sunday afternoon , I can say I have a new-found appreciation for the movements that shaped art from 1848-1914. This museum, which used to be a former train station, is home to the world’s largest haul of impressionist and post-impressionist art, and it’s such a precious collection that they’re not […]

The post What we’ve been up to (in Paris)… Musée d’Orsay appeared first on The Cultural Exposé.

]]>
After visiting the D’orsay on the Sunday afternoon , I can say I have a new-found appreciation for the movements that shaped art from 1848-1914. This museum, which used to be a former train station, is home to the world’s largest haul of impressionist and post-impressionist art, and it’s such a precious collection that they’re not letting you take any photos beyond the main hall. But to be fair, this isn’t the type of stuff you want to appreciate via a mobile device; the uniqueness of styles and techniques used by the liked of Gaugin, Van Gogh and Monet has to be seen in reality.  Entry is €11 and the museum is closed on Mondays.  www.musee-orsay.fr/en/ (nearest Metros: Solférino and Assemblée Nationale) 

dorsay_2

Friday’s post:  Somewhere you should eat (in Paris)… Le Bistro du Pientre and Chez Janou

The post What we’ve been up to (in Paris)… Musée d’Orsay appeared first on The Cultural Exposé.

]]>
http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/what-weve-been-up-to-in-paris-musee-dorsay/feed/ 1523
What we’ve been up to (in Paris)… The Louvre http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/what-weve-been-up-to-in-paris-the-louvre/ http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/what-weve-been-up-to-in-paris-the-louvre/#comments Wed, 11 Mar 2015 11:30:36 +0000 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/?p=9819 Much love to everybody who sent me recommendations of things to do for this trip! As it was a quick one, I decided to go for the art and cultural biggies and make it my mission to see Mona at The Louvre, Jeff  Koon at The Centre Pompidou and learn more about impressionist art at the Musée […]

The post What we’ve been up to (in Paris)… The Louvre appeared first on The Cultural Exposé.

]]>
Much love to everybody who sent me recommendations of things to do for this trip! As it was a quick one, I decided to go for the art and cultural biggies and make it my mission to see Mona at The Louvre, Jeff  Koon at The Centre Pompidou and learn more about impressionist art at the Musée d’Orsay:

You could spend a week at The Louvre

The Louvre is one of the largest museum’s in the world and houses a breathtaking collection of classics that have to be seen in real life. To save time, I bought my €12 ticket in advance through the Fnac website (I picked them up from a local ticket outlet merely 10 minutes away from the museum), which ensured I could avoid waiting in the ridiculous queue when I arrived. Once inside, it felt like I’d walked into a mini-city: so I decided to do a little bit of the 90 minute Masterpieces Trail and whatever else I could come across. In two hours, I managed to marvel at a number of paintings and sculptures including the Venus de Milo, Mona Lisa, The Wedding Feast at Cana, Cupid and Psyche and The Winged Victory of Samothrace. I’ll definitely return to see more – and next time I’ll plan my trip to coincide with the first Sunday of the month, when entry to the Louvre is free! www.louvre.fr (nearest Metros: Louvre Rivoli and Palais Royal Musée du Louvre)

mona

cupid

louvre

 

 

 

The post What we’ve been up to (in Paris)… The Louvre appeared first on The Cultural Exposé.

]]>
http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/what-weve-been-up-to-in-paris-the-louvre/feed/ 108
Something you should see… Manet: Portraying Life at Royal Academy of Arts http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/something-you-should-see-manet-portraying-life-at-royal-academy-of-arts/ http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/something-you-should-see-manet-portraying-life-at-royal-academy-of-arts/#comments Tue, 29 Jan 2013 11:00:25 +0000 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/?p=6240 Edouard Manet is probably best known for his highly controversial painting Olympia, the scandalously and decidedly naked Parisian prostituée with her arresting gaze. But the woman depicted in Olympia is just one of a whole host of models who sat for the French nineteenth-century painter. This month, the Royal Academy of Art is putting on the […]

The post Something you should see… Manet: Portraying Life at Royal Academy of Arts appeared first on The Cultural Exposé.

]]>
Edouard Manet is probably best known for his highly controversial painting Olympia, the scandalously and decidedly naked Parisian prostituée with her arresting gaze. But the woman depicted in Olympia is just one of a whole host of models who sat for the French nineteenth-century painter. This month, the Royal Academy of Art is putting on the first ever exhibition dedicated to Manet’s portraiture – and astonishingly (given the extensive curatorial coverage of the Impressionists) this has never been done before.

Manet at Royal Academy of Arts

Manet is recognised as the pioneer of the anti-academic style of the 1860s and he is widely celebrated for his paintings’ dialectical reflection on the conditions of industrial modernity. However, although Manet’s work is today the subject of a blockbuster exhibition, it was not always so well-received. Throughout his three decade-long career (cut short by his sudden death at 51) the artist endured repeated rejections from gallerists and an onslaught of damning reviews by prominent critics. Many works now considered masterpieces were then derided as tasteless and vulgar. His sitters – rich young girls and their governesses, fellow artists, friends and family – are painted neither idealistically nor satirically, but as they might appear: in sunlit parks and in harbours, in bars and on the streets. Each gazes directly out to us. Manet instigated a much more intense relationship between sitter and beholder than that which had been previously attempted or achieved in painting. But the paintings’ lack of finesse repelled his critics who favoured the glossy, impenetrable surfaces of the work of some of Manet’s more commercially successful contemporaries.

Manet at Royal Academy of Arts

Nonetheless, with the support of his circle of literary and artistic friends, Manet persevered. Any struggling artists or students today who are going against the grain with projects that break the mould or unfashionably question the status quo should look to Manet. His is a success story in the face of critical adversity, and all with a little help from his friends. (Words: Florence Ritter) 

Manet: Portraying Life runs until 14th April. For more info, visit: www.royalacademy.org.uk/exhibitions/manet

A Date for the Diary:
Manet is most commonly identified with the origins of Modernism and with the beginnings of Impressionism, but has also had a considerable impact on contemporary photographic portraits. Catch seminal photographer Rineke Dijkstra discuss his work in her talk on 8th March at the RA.

The post Something you should see… Manet: Portraying Life at Royal Academy of Arts appeared first on The Cultural Exposé.

]]>
http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/something-you-should-see-manet-portraying-life-at-royal-academy-of-arts/feed/ 2168