Category The Friday Art Cat

FRIDAY ART CAT – Tsugouhara (Leonard) Foujita (1886-1968) – Katzenworld


FRIDAY ART CAT

 

Tsugouhara (Leonard) Foujita (1886-1968)

Please note the artwork has been edited to keep the age rating of the blog unaffected on the WordPress network. 😉

 YOUKI AU CHAT”, 1923.

(Sotheby’s estimated value in 2017 : £220,000—280,000)

Léonard Tsuguharu Foujita (aka Fujita Tsuguharu / Foujita Tsuguharu / Fujita Tsuguji) was born in 1886, in Tokyo, and died in 1968 in Zurich.

He was a Japanese expatriate painter who applied French oil techniques to Japanese-style paintings, a member of the School of Paris, a group of now-famous artists who resided in the Montparnasse district of that city.  In 1910 Fujita graduated from what is now the Tokyo University of the Arts.  Three years later he went to Paris, where he became the friend of many of the great forerunners of modern Western art, including Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Chaim Soutine, and Amedeo Modigliani.  He exhibited his works for the first time in Paris in 1917.

He became known for his portraits, self-portraits, nudes, city scenes, and drawings and paintings of cats. He also published the limited edition A Book of Cats (1930), which included 20 drawings of cats and became a highly sought-after (and thus very valuable) art book. (In 2014, this was estimated at $60-80,000 at Bonhams.)

In 1921, Foujita met a young woman named Lucie Badoud; for the following decade she lived as his muse, lover and wife, inspiring some of the most sensual and striking paintings that the artist ever produced.  Together, Badoud and Foujita were celebrities of the Montparnasse social scene: they hosted lavish parties at their home while their names continually graced contemporary gossip columns.

Foujita had been taken at once with Lucie’s beauty: her snow-white complexion and sinuous curves. He re-named her ‘Youki’, meaning ‘snow’ in Japanese. She remembers: “I didn’t like my first name, Lucie. So Foujita’s first move was to ‘de-baptise’ me and rename me Youki; his second: to request I pose for a large nude painting”.

Indeed it was precisely at this time, when Foujita incorporated into his œuvre two of the elements for which he is today most celebrated: his motif of the nude figure and his ‘fond blanc’, a specific white ground which he applied on canvases to give them a luminous quality. The latter technique was developed out of the artist’s desire to represent what he now considered the most beautiful of materials: human skin.  Foujita had striven to perfect his fond blanc and reportedly never revealed the unique formula to anyone.

He was no stranger to relentless work, frequently practicing his techniques and sticking to a strict sleeping schedule to maximise his productivity during waking hours. He explained: “I leave all my materials in a state of disorder in my studio; I never tidy them away even to receive a visitor. To do that would be stupid. The visitor would scarcely have left when I would get back to work two minutes later. To save even more time, I cook in my studio” (quoted in Sylvie Buisson, T.L. Foujita inédits, Paris, 2007, p. 122).

Another very important individual in the artist’s life and œuvre was his cat, named ‘Mike’ (meaning ‘Tabby cat’ in Japanese).  This cat was adopted by the artist shortly after his arrival in Paris after following him home one day and refusing to leave his doorstep. The presence of a cat would go on to be a mainstay of Foujita’s works: sometimes as companion to a figure, sometimes as the central subject itself. Foujita adored their individuality and recognised in them a certain indefinability and unpredictability which he also attributed to women: he is noted as saying that cats were given to men such that they could learn from them the mysterious ways of women!

Fujita’s work is distinguished by his strong evocative line, an aesthetic that stemmed from his art training in Japan and was greatly admired by the Paris School artists.  Foujita loved drawing,  and like his illustrious predecessor Hokusai, painted with great skill. Foujita’s drawing is incredibly assured and his lines have an exemplary calligraphic finesse, achieved through the use of sumi (Japanese black ink) on paper and in his oils. Colour played a secondary role in his work but was used in such a decisive way that it enhances the drawing. The subtlety of the gouache and watercolour fills the forms with layers of flat colour, creating subtle effects of transparency in his oils. His gold backgrounds strengthen the impression of refinement and preciousness.

In 1931–32 Fujita traveled throughout Latin America and had a major exhibition of his work in Buenos Aires. During World War II in Japan he was a war artist for the Japanese government, a decision that was criticized by his pacifist peers in the Japanese arts community, who accused him of using his art to promote the militarist actions of Japan. With a marred reputation in his home country, he went to the US in 1949, then back to France in 1950 – for the rest of his life. He became a French citizen in 1955, and a Legion d’honneur in 1957.

Exhibition in Paris in 2018

From 7 March to 15 July 2018, the Musée Maillol in Paris is presenting an exhibition devoted to Foujita.  More than a hundred major works, originating from public and private collections, show the exceptional nature of his period in Montparnasse—where his friends Modigliani, Zadkine, Indenbaum, Kisling, Pascin, and Van Dongen lived— during the Roaring Twenties. The exhibition focuses on the artist’s first and very productive Parisian period between 1913 and 1931.

“Couturier cat”, 1927 painting

“Cat”, 1926 ink on paper

“Les chats”

“Cat”, 1956

Inspired by Foujita

My drawing is in pencil, of my Maine Coon cat Orlando looking over my sewing essentials!

References:

http://www.sothebys.com/en/news-video/blogs/all-blogs/impressions/2017/02/foujita-ahead-of-the-curve.html

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Fujita-Tsuguharu

Sara Day

I am an artist who makes work of animals and people.

Three cats live with me – Maine coon Orlando, Bengal Pandora and black moggy Rio.

Commissions welcomed.

Instagram: Sardine.Art

www.sardineart.com

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Friday Art Cat: Dexter the Sphynx Kitten – Katzenworld


FRIDAY ART CAT

  

Dexter the Sphynx Kitten

What gorgeous green eyes.  And of course those huge ears !  Compared to my smaller-eared three cats, that is (even including the maine coon).

This is Dexter.  He is a twelve week old sphynx and lives in the US with Jessica, who says he’s “very energetic and playful at times but also a big cuddler when he’s sleepy”.

She fell in love with the breed when working with them at an animal hospital a few years ago, their “outgoing and very loving personality winning her over”.

I always love learning more about a cat breed, and to an artist the sphynx is fascinating, as you can see the anatomy of the cat more clearly without all that fluff!  I will definitely be making more work of these beauties!


Sara Day

I am an artist who makes work of animals and people.

Three cats live with me – Maine Coon Orlando, Bengal Pandora and black moggy Rio.

Commissions, and indeed any art enquiries – welcomed.

Instagram: @Sardine.Art

www.sardineart.com

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Friday Art Cat: Henri Matisse (1869 – 1954) – Katzenworld


FRIDAY ART CAT

 

Henri Matisse (1869 – 1954)

“I don’t paint things. I only paint the difference between things.”

 

The cat with Red fish

Throughout his decades-long career as a painter, sculptor, draftsman, and printmaker, the Frenchman Henri Matisse continuously searched, in his own words, “for the same things, which I have perhaps realised by different means.”  Celebrated as both an orchestrator of tonal harmonies and a draftsman capable of distilling a form to its essentials, he long sought a way to unite colour and line in his work. The relationship between these two formal elements can be traced from early works like Dance – in which the side of a dancer’s body, set against fields of rich blue and green, is described in a single, arcing contour—to his late cut-outs, in which the artist discovered a way at the end of his life to “cut directly into vivid colour.”

“Dance (I)” 1909.  Photo from henrimatisse.org

Matisse was born into generations of weavers in Le Cateau-Cambrésis, a northern French town whose woollen mills constituted the main industry. He was raised in nearby Bohain, famous for its luxury fabrics. This early exposure to textiles would shape his visual language: examples from his own collection of carpets and cloths from Europe, Africa, and the Middle East would deeply inform his sense of colour and pattern and appear in his compositions.

Taking up painting after first studying law, Matisse studied with the Symbolist Gustave Moreau and participated in Paris’s official Salons. His breakthrough as an artist came during the summers of 1904 and 1905, when the bright sunlight of the South of France inspired him—along with artists like André Derain and Maurice de Vlaminck – to create optically dynamic works of bright, clashing colours that led to these artists being derided with the epithet fauves (wild beasts).  Known as Fauvism, the work from this period set him on a career-long path that he described as “construction by coloured surfaces.”  This approach remained central through the various stages of Matisse’s body of work—from his rigorous, abstracted paintings of the 1910s to the decorative, sunlit interiors of his so-called “Nice period” of the 1920s to the radically innovative cut-outs of his last decade.

Though much of his work—whether an ink drawing with a flowing arabesque line or a painting with flat expanses of unmodulated color—looks as if it might have been executed with effortless ease, Matisse cautioned that this effect was only an “apparent simplicity.”  In reality, he laboured exactingly to achieve the “art of balance, of purity and serenity” of which he dreamed.

 

Matisse and cat Minouche, in Nice

Matisse had an exceptional love for cats (and also doves).  His cats were called Minouche, Coussi, and La Puce the black cat.  Coussi, it is said, had an “M” for Matisse on his forehead.  He fed his cats pieces of brioche every morning (not sure this was in their best interests !)

Marguerite with a Black Cat, 1910
Photo : Georges Meguerditchian,
Centre Pompidou /RMNGP
© Succession H. Matisse

Photo by Frank Capra 1942

Interior with Goldfish 1914.

Photo MOMA.

This second version is by DeborahJulian, on etsy, who has added cats and don’t they look wonderful ?

More of her work here : https://www.etsy.com/shop/DeborahJulian.

References:

https://www.moma.org/artists/3832

http://www.johnnytimes.com/henri-matisse-artwork-cats/

https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/252120678/blank-note-cards-henri-matisse-goldfish?ref=shop_home_feat_4

Sara Day

I am an artist who makes work of animals and people.

Three cats live with me – Maine coon Orlando, Bengal Pandora and black moggy Rio.

Commissions welcomed.

Instagram: Sardine.Art

www.sardineart.com

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The Friday Art Cat: Yuki the Snow Bengal – Katzenworld


FRIDAY ART CAT

  

Yuki the Snow Bengal

“Yuki”.  Unison soft pastels on ClaireFontaine Pastelmat.  24*30cm.

 

This is a snow bengal cat which I was kindly given permission to sketch.  I was struck by her amazing colouring and regal pose!

I have a soft spot for blue-eyed cats – probably because I have never owned one.  I have only learned that there are some blue-eyed bengals since joining cat groups on Facebook, which has been so educational for me.

I am always looking for what will make the subject special – is it the composition, the pose, the lighting, the colours ?  Here the cat looked composed, alert, interested, authoritative,  … all at once, and her colours were amazing.


Sara Day

I am an artist who makes work of animals and people.

Three cats live with me – Maine Coon Orlando, Bengal Pandora and black moggy Rio.

Commissions, and indeed any art enquiries – welcomed.

Instagram: @Sardine.Art

www.sardineart.com

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Friday Art Cat: Art by Femke Hiemstra – Katzenworld


Hi everyone,

In todays Friday Art Cat seciton we are featuring art by Femke Hiemstra

About the artist:

Amsterdam based Femke Hiemstra is an internationally acclaimed painter who has exhibited worldwide several times over, including solo exhibitions at prestigious galleries such as Roq la Rue in Seattle and Merry Karnowsky in Los Angeles. Femke’s otherworldly works are inspired by her love of vintage toys, Little Golden Books, hand drawn typography and old encyclopedias. She creates her mixed media artwork using thin layers of acrylics, often topped off with coloured pencils or chalk. As well as paper, she likes to paint on found objects and unusual surfaces such as antique books or old wooden panels.Enjoy.

Surprise egg anyone :O?

Thanks,

Marc

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Street Cats of Vis – Katzenworld


Soon after moving to the island of Vis, in Croatia, designer / illustrator Little Shiva noticed a problem: there was no vet on the island, and unwanted cats and kittens were regularly dumped and poisoned.

Animal welfare awareness and infrastructure are underdeveloped in the region, and caring for street cats is still a bit taboo. Aside from the fact that the women who do this work are afraid of being labelled “Crazy Cat Ladies”, many locals get angry about street cats being fed (“They won’t hunt mice or rats if you feed them!”) or sterilized (“It’s not natural”). A mini-war even broke out in the media over an attempt to get a well-known Tom castrated: in such a patriarchal culture, balls are sacred, apparently.

Not finding any local group to join, Little Shiva started a project in June of 2018 called “Street Cats of Vis” in order to try and build community and get cats spayed and neutered. She was joined in August 2019 by Francesca Walker, who lives on Vis now and still works remotely for the SPCA NZ. Before moving to Vis, Francesca worked for them as an animal welfare inspector and volunteered for their National Rescue Unit, which specializes in technical animal rescue (dogs off cliffs, large animals, animals trapped in dangerous confined spaces).

Francesca works on the front lines, handling most interaction with the public (live and on social media), working with local volunteers, responding to emergencies, catching cats to be taken to Split for sterilizing (which the town of Vis pays for), and also oversees the Kaha Kittens and Safe House Network projects (neonatal care and fostering, respectively).

Little Shiva does behind-the-scenes admin work, managing the website she built for the project, designing and illustrating digital as well as printed marketing materials, and also feeds and monitors three colonies (Cats of Wellington is one).

Sadly, dumping and poisoning still happen, and as of this writing, there’s still no vet on the island, although one has been promised in the semi-near future. The good news is that the street cat population is beginning to stabilize thanks to TNR! While the town of Vis pays for sterilizing, it does not cover any other veterinary costs, nor feeding. Work is done on an all-volunteer basis, but Street Cats of Vis depends on donations, which can be made through the website.

Shiva and Francesca

Street Cats of Vis

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The Friday Art Cats of Christmas Past – Katzenworld


I thought I might borrow a bit of Dickens’ A Christmas Carol and play off of the ghosts of Christmas past, present, and future as a theme for my December Art Cat posts. The surprising thing, is that when I went back through my archive to find cats of Christmas past, there were not many from which to choose!  But, I did find this mysterious mound of packages being inspected by ravens from 2007.

I found this watercolor from 2007, when ravens were still invading my work.

I wanted to show it to you because I revisit the pile of presents in this holiday image from 2014, complete with surprise attack cat. I suppose, if I wanted to play on words, this could also be Cats of Christmas Presents. Ha! Get it? Like the ghost of Christmas present? Only with cats?! Never mind…

Look carefully and beware! A sneaky cat hides in the packages.

It was interesting to see how my working method has changed over time. In the earlier work, I drew individual elements like a single bird, or present, and scanned them into Photoshop to arrange the composition. So, the final image only exists as a digital. But, the newer work, the one with the cats, is a fully realized illustration before it gets scanned. Any digital manipulation is only to make the color accurate to the original.

Anyway, I digress. To see more of my arty cats, visit me at Art is not for Sissies. Happy Holidays! See you in future with your Friday Art Cat.

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The Friday Art Cat: Coco Decorates for Holidays – Katzenworld


This pen and ink mixed media is titled “Coco Decorates for Holidays.”

Taken from life as I watching her climb the tree.

Luckily the tree was wited to the wall and didn’t fall. As long as it was up, Coco enjoyed spending as much time as possible in and under it.

By Rachael Ikins
Associate Editor Clare Songbirds Publishing House, Auburn NY
https://www.claresongbirdspub.com/shop/featured-authors/rachael-ikins/
2020 NLAPW Biennial Letters Competition 3rd prize Childrens category
2019 Faulkner Finalist
2019-20 Vinnie Ream semi-finalist
2018 Independent Book Award winner (poetry)
2013, 2018 CNY Book Award nominee
2016, 2018 Pushcart nominee
Www.writerraebeth.wordpress.com

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The Friday Art Cat: Alex Halliday Gwennie the Christmas Cat – Katzenworld


Hi everyone,Today’s entry to the Friday Art Cat comes from Alex Halliday:I am Alex Halliday, an artist living in Berkshire, and my speciality is portraits in graphite of loved ones, non-furry as well as furry.I am owned by a black and white semi-long-haired cat called Gwendoline Lilly. Gwennie encourages me to relax. In this photo of her lounging on ‘her’ sofa, I love her little rear paws poking out behind a mass of fur (her bloomers).Today she would like to wish everyone Merry Christmas!If you would like me to create a portrait in graphite of your loved one, please get in touch with me.Thanks, Alex HallidayEmail:info@art-alexandra.co.ukWebsite:www.art-alexandra.co.ukBest wishesAlex

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The Friday Art Cat Goes Shopping – Katzenworld


‘Tis the season, as they say. And, the astute cat likes to take advantage of a good sale. Here, in the U.S., the official shopping madness for the holidays begins on the Friday after Thanksgiving Day where retailers offer extreme markdowns and specials for one day only. Lucy, a resourceful ginger, prefers to shop the local merchants, and especially favors artisanal, handmade presents for all of her cat friends, but is always first in line for savings.

Never underestimate a clever bargain hunter.

If you like this holiday cat, I invite you to check out my blog where you can see whole series of cats being festive. https://artisnotforsissies.wordpress.com/2014/12/20/advent-drawing-day-20/

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