http://dsc.discovery.com/news/briefs/20050509/medicipix.html
Reminds me of David Hockney's recent "enlightenment"
concerning artist's historic use of drawing aids.
--
Thur
>Later on, when he did meet her in person, he could not stand
>the very sight of her.
You may have seen the news item the past
day or so about the new forensic portrait of
King Tut, and how accurately it proves his
tomb/mummy portraits to have been. I find
that interesting in light of the fact that
the Egyptians otherwise "stylized" their
figures in both paintings and sculptures.
> Renaissance artists hired to paint
> portraits of aristocrats probably
> at times risked beheading - or worse -
> if they did NOT flatter their subjects.
[snip]
I once read that Singer-Sargent was commissioned to do a portrait of
family in which the daughter had an unusually large nose - and that the
father insisted Sargent paint it that way. The story goes that Sargent
gave the girl an improved nose, and plonked a real honker on the father!
--
Andy D.
> "Al B. Traus" <bird...@dontemailme.com> wrote in message
> news:4280...@nntp.zianet.com...
> >
> > Renaissance artists hired to paint
> > portraits of aristocrats probably
> > at times risked beheading - or worse -
> > if they did NOT flatter their subjects. So
> > I'm not sure why the following web article
> > presents recent findings as revelatory:
> >
> > http://dsc.discovery.com/news/briefs/20050509/medicipix.html
> >
> > Reminds me of David Hockney's recent "enlightenment"
> > concerning artist's historic use of drawing aids.
> >
> The idea that Renaissance portraits are exact copies of
> what the artist saw - or observed through a lens is difficult
> to prove.
> Parmigianino "Madonna with the Long Neck" for example,
> alters the body ratios to the extreme.
> Did he do it because it was a fashion to do so, or is it an
> error produced by faulty copying through a lens?
> Maybe - like later painters, he was preparing the portrait
> to be hung well above the viewers eyes so that foreshortening
> would be counteracted? (Although I am not sure if this works)
It should only work if the perspective (and presumably the frame) are also
distorted to the point where the viewer is not aware of the true angle. We
can see this phenomena at many sporting events where distorted signs are
painted on the turf such that from one camera angle, they seem to stand
upright and perpendicular to that camera.
--
Andy D.
And the obverse side of that coin, there's the Velasquez portraits of
the Spanish royalty. Unless, of course they were in fact flattering,
which would be scary indeed... (BTW, kudos to the producers of the
recent "Merchant of Venice" for their Velasquezian (?) portrayal of the
Spanish prince & his family....)
--
Thur