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PLATE 62.—NICOLAES MAES (1632-1693)DUTCH SCHOOL" THE IDLE SERVANT "NICOLAES MAES was a pupil of Rembrandt. From him he acquired a love of chiaroscuro, though he never learnt to handle that dangerous artifice with the profundity of his master. What was in Rembrandt almost a law of his imagination becomes in Macs merely a mannerism, a trick of emphasis. He concentrates his high lights upon the figure or group of figures which he wishes to bring into prominence, and fills in the background with dark shadows, often warm and pleasantly atmospheric in their effect, but in this picture inclined to turn into a brown fog that soaks up light like a sponge, and blurs rather than stresses the contrasts he intended to produce.The subject is treated with a good-natured sense of humour. Hogarth would have given us a much more racy version, but we are arrested by the episode, and the two chief figures are rendered in an exceedingly life-like way. Less happy is the glimpse of the farther room. The murk to which we have referred has settled there quite unmistakably. His painting lacks crispness of touch, and the result is a rather woolly texture.The truth is that the virtue of genre pictures of this type, and of the relatively small-scale Dutch conversation pieces, depends to a great extent on the vivacity of the artist's handling and the perfection of his finish. When these are not of an outstanding quality there is often little left, beyond some passing pleasure of anecdote, to claim our attention.
You can see this type of satire in some of the paintings in the late baroque, early classical movement. Goya especially adapted this style, though in a far more subtle way.
I have looked up Goya's pictures.Some are nice, but the vast majority is a little bit creepy. http://eeweems.com/goya/artpage_index.htmlHere is an interesting one: http://eeweems.com/goya/for_being_a_jew.html
I don't know why art critics don't like that picture with the cat. I think it's great.
I like it too, specially the lesson that we learn from it.Do you think cat's have really such a thievy character?
Quote from: Rubystars on September 21, 2008, 10:34:21 AMI don't know why art critics don't like that picture with the cat. I think it's great. I like it too, specially the lesson that we learn from it.Do you think cat's have really such a thievy character?