Thursday, October 26, 2006


















The Power of Art - Friday 9.00pm BBC2


Last Friday evening I caught The Power of Art on TV. This was the first episode of 8 week series covering a whole range of artists - the first being the story of Michelangelo Merisi di Caravaggio.

Starting in his home town, moving to Milan and then on to Rome, Carravagio bagan to really attract attention and win some great commissions from the church. Working straight onto the canvas wthout first taking time to make preliminary drawings Carravagio's passionate, immediate and more importantly brutally real stlye really caught the imagination of the church. Traditionally a painter's job was to romanticise and glorify religeous stories, however Caravaggio thought otherwise. Many of the gospels, depict pain and suffering resulting in some kind of enlightenment. Caravaggio painted the precise moments of suffering and enlightenment in everyday settings, featuring everyday people. This served to maximise the impact and severity of each teaching.

Consequently, Caravaggio's work hits you between the eyes. He painted the exact moment when gruesome events took place - he captured the essence or horror of each moment, depicting the facial expressions and body contortions that communicated the intensity of the situation. He ingnored formalised composition and injected passion and life into his work.

Caravaggio also attracted attention as a personality. He was often found drinking, carousing, and brawling in the streets of Rome - his antics landing him in real trouble when he killed Ranuccio Tomassoni, local hard man and play boy. So he fled Rome with a price on his head and arrived in Naples. Here he actually settled a bit and produced some more great work under the patronage of the Colonna family. However this was short lived, and he headed off to Malta in an attempt to become a knight. This was so that he might be granted a pardon by the Roman authorities for the death of Tomassoni.

He managed to get his knighthood by winning over the senior officials with his painting skills but after a short time hi temper revealed itself once more and was again involved in more fighting. It was reported that he had threatened and been abusive to the other knights in the order. Eventually this led to him being kicked out and labelled as a "foul and rotten member." He then went to Scicily and then back to Naples, but died suddenly from a fever. Although there seems to be much specualtion around his final days.

Overall - what a legend the bloke was a total madman yet produced some of the most moving pictures of his time!

Anyway, I'm looking forward to this weeks episode on Bernini. My final thought being - what a really inconvenient time to put such a great program on...

Monday, October 16, 2006

More on second life...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6054352.stm

I think I might start an army and force a military coup, that'll be much more like real life... it'll also give Reuters something to report on.

Friday, October 13, 2006

This may be a bit old news now, however I've been following the Lonelygirl15 drama for some time now and it seems that it's finally coming to some kind of conclusion...

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-lonelygirl8sep08,0,5310001.story

Although not before the UN have got in there and asked her to speak about the 'stand up against world poverty' campaign...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_2ETsRObMQI

















I think this is hillarious... what a dude!

http://www.wherethehellismatt.com/

Watch the movie, and then read the about section.

I suppose it's nothing new that brands should try and attach themselves to unique people or stories however what I do find interesting is the way that Matt's story has come into the public domain and the way in which it continues. User generated websites, like Youtube.com are shaping our culture really dramatically. No longer are the idiosyncrasies of people and their quirky pursuits being confined to bedrooms or damp community centres, but now they have global exposure! Consequently, heroes are born, ha ha... not superheroes mind you just regular people doing, slightly different stuff.

Monday, October 09, 2006














Seems like second life is really taking off at the moment, largely due to some big brands like Adidas, Amazon, Radio1, (even Duran Duran!), getting in on the action and attracting some big press.

Now Leo Burnett/Arcww have created their own brainstorm area allowing 1600 creatives to come together. I don't know what they're going to do with the space - I don't think they do either, but that's not the point is it!

http://www.brandrepublic.com/bulletins/br/article/595241/leo-burnett-opens-virtual-agency-second-life/

http://www.secondlife.com

Monday, October 02, 2006

This Guinness ad has been flying around some of the ad blogs of late... I really like it's simplicity...












I caught the tail end of the Modigliani exhibition at the Royal Academy on Sunday. I've always been a bit of Modigliani fan anyway, so it was great to see so much of his work all in one place.

The show opens on a large head carved from limestone. Modigliani was introduced to Brancusi who persuaded him to get into sculpture to explore form as expression. The combination of this exploration, and Modigliani's existing knowledge of Afican and Asian sculpture informed the style he developed in his painting - the elongated features, the almond shaped eyes filled in with flat colour etc.

Even though Modigliani was not into Cubism, it is possible to see it's influence in some of the backgrounds of his portraits. His figures are usually seated in front of and framed by large panels of colours that seem to lock the subject in place.

Something you do get from seeing the paintings 'live' is a greater understanding of Modigliani's use of colour and also of how he used brush marks to differentiate foreground from background. Anyway take a look for your self...

http://www.royalacademy.org.uk/