You talkin’ to me?

Written by Andrea on . Posted in Books, Masters

taxi-driver

“Steve Schapiro was the special photographer on the set of Taxi Driver, capturing the film’s iconic moments and actors behind the scenes. This book features hundreds of images selected from Schapiro’s archives, offering fans a trip back in time to witness the making of Scorsese’s masterpiece.”
Edited by TASCHEN Books.
(via laughing squid)

After Arcimboldo

Written by Valentina on . Posted in art, Masters, sculpture

haas

Winter (After Arcimboldo) (2010) is a colossal 15-foot-tall, fiberglass sculpture by American artist and filmmaker Philip Haas. It is inspired by Arcimboldo’s painting Winter (1563), which is on loan to the exhibition “Arcimboldo, 1526-1593: Nature and Fantasy” on view at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, from September 19, 2010 through January 9, 2011.

Alfred Rethel, Death as a cutthroat

Written by Valentina on . Posted in Masters

Alfred Rethel, Death as a cutthroat, 1851

Alfred Rethel, Death as a cutthroat, 1851

This work was engraved by Alfred Rethel in 1851. Not only the plague provided an opportunity for the creation of new representation of Death. At the 19th century, another illness infected Europe in waves: the cholera. Rethel drew Death as a cutthroat, and engraved it later, since woodcut was a very popular genre at this time. He was inspired by by an account that the celebrated poet Heinrich Heine had made of the sudden outbreak of cholera in the year 1832, at a masquerade during the carnival of Paris. Here, Death plays a kind of violin, while the musicians flee. Close to them,stands a emaciated female silhouette, wrapped in a shroud: symbol of the disease. In the foreground, some people have already died of the cholera.

[source: La mort dans l’art]