#georges braque

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Nothing I could say.The Painter and His Model (1939), Georges Braque / From TG&Y, The Mountain G

Nothing I could say.

The Painter and His Model (1939), Georges Braque / From TG&Y, The Mountain Goats


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Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963) ~ ‘Bass’, 1911.Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm)Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963) ~ ‘Bass’, 1911.Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm)
Georges Braque[France]
(1882–1963) ~ ‘Bass’, 1911.
Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm).

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Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963) ~ ‘Bass’, 1911. Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cmGeorges Braque [France] (1882–1963) ~ ‘Bass’, 1911. Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm
Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963)
~ ‘Bass’, 1911.
Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm).

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Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963)~ ‘Bass’, 1911.Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm).Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963)~ ‘Bass’, 1911.Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm).
Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963)
~ ‘Bass’, 1911.
Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm).

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Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963)~ ‘Bass’, 1911.Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm).Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963)~ ‘Bass’, 1911.Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm).
Georges Braque [France] (1882–1963)
~ ‘Bass’, 1911.
Drypoint and etching (45.7 x 32.8 cm).

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Georges Braque | Bottle Newspaper, Pipe, and Glass France, 1913Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque expl

Georges Braque | Bottle Newspaper, Pipe, and Glass 

France, 1913

Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque explored the medium of collage introduced it into the realm of “high art” (as opposed to “folk art”). From the French word coller, meaning “to stick,” a collage is a composition of bits of objects, such as newspaper or cloth, glued to a surface. Braque’s Bottle, Newspaper, Pipe, and Glass is a type of collage called papier collé (“stuck paper”) in which the artist glues assorted paper shapes to a drawing or painting.

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In Braque’s papier collé, charcoal lines and shadows provide clues to the Cubist multiple views of various surfaces and objects. Roughly rectangular strips of printed and colored paper dominate the composition. The paper imprinted with wood grain and moldings provides an illusion whose concreteness contrasts with the lightly rendered objects on the right.

The artist kept his audience aware that Bottle, Newspaper, Pipe, and Glass is an artwork, a visual game to be deciphered, and not an attempt to reproduce nature. Picasso explained the goals of Cubist collage in this way:

“Not only did we try to displace reality; reality was no longer in the object… [In] the papier collé … [w]e didn’t any longer want to fool the eye; we wanted to fool the mind… . If a piece of newspaper can be a bottle, that gives us something to think about in connection with both newspapers and bottles, too.”

Like all collage, the papier collé technique was modern in its medium—mass-produced materials never before found in high art—and modern in the way the artist embedded the art’s “message” in the imagery and in the nature of these everyday materials. (x)


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Georges Braque (13 May 1882 – 31 August 1963) 

Georges Braque (13 May 1882 – 31 August 1963) 


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nemophilies:

What is the use of art? The answer to this question resides in a formula: “art is a prayer.”

— Andrei Tarkovsky: Interviews, edited by John Gianvito

Therein lies the enormous aid the work of art brings to the life of the one who must make it,—: that it is his epitome; the knot in the rosary at which his life recites a prayer, the ever-returning proof to himself of his unity and genuineness, which presents itself only to him while appearing anonymously to the outside, nameless, existing merely as necessity, as reality, as being—

— Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters on Cézanne

Art is a wound turned into light.

— Georges Braque

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