Monday, December 2, 2019
Jazz Essays (1029 words) - English-language Films,
  Jazz    Jazz    Jazz has been an influence in many artist's  work, from painting to other forms of music. Jazz is an American music  form that was developed from African-American work songs. The white man  began to imitate them in the 1920's and the music form caught on and became  very popular. Two artists that were influenced by jazz were Jean-Michel    Basquiat and Stuart Davis. The influence is quite evident in many of their  works, such as Horn Players, by Basquiat, and Swing Landscape, by Davis.    Stuart Davis was born in Philadelphia  in 1894. He grew up in an artistic environment, his father was art director  of a Philadelphia newspaper, who had employed Luks, Glackens, and other  members of the Eight. He studied with Robert Henri from 1910 to 1913, made  covers and drawings for the social realist periodical The Masses, which  was associated with the Ash-can School, and exhibited watercolors in the    Armory Show, which made an overwhelming impact on him. After a visit to    Paris in 1928 he introduced a new note into U.S. cubism, basing himself  on its synthetic rather than its analytical phase. Using natural forms,  particularly forms suggesting the characteristic environment of American  life, he rearranged them into flat poster-like patterns with precise outlines  and sharply contrasting colors.    He later went on to pure abstract  patterns, into which he often introduced lettering, suggestions of advertisements,  and posters. The zest and dynamism of such works as Swing Landscape reflect  his interest in jazz, which Davis considered to be the counterpart to abstract  art. Davis is often considered to be the outstanding American artist to  work in a cubism idiom. He made witty and original use of it and created  a distinctive American style, for however abstract his works became he  always claimed that every image he used had its source in observed reality.    Davis once said " I paint what I see in America, in other words I paint  the American scene."    Stuart Davis?works of the late 1930's  celebrate the urban and technological environment and are quite complex  and frequently recall Legers's brightly coloured geometric forms. Early  works depict saloons and ragtime musicians. Titles and images of his works  in the 30's reflect syncopation and unusual rhythm of jazz, particularly  swing.    Jean-Michel Basquiat was born in    1960, four years before Stuart Davis?death. At an early age Basquiat showed  an interest and love for drawing. His mother often took him to The Brooklyn    Museum, The Museum of Modern Art, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art. At  the age of seven he and a friend of his wrote and illustrated a children's  book. Basquiat was inspired by Alfred Hitchcock films, cars, comic books,  and Alfred E. Newman from Mad Magazine. By the time he was seven he was  an avid reader of French, Spanish, and English texts. In his teenage years    Basquiat ran away from home often. He did not like obedience. By 1978 he  was in with the "in crowd." The filmmakers and artists of New York. He  enjoyed doing graffiti work using the name SAMO ( same old shit ).    Basquiat's career was divided into  three broad phases. From 1980 to 1982 he used painterly gestures, mostly  skeletal figures that signal his obsession with mortality. He also used  figures that represent street existence, such as policeman, buildings,  and graffiti. From 1982 to 1985 he was using more phrases and words in  his paintings. They reveal a strong interest in his black and hispanic  identity and his identification with historical and contemporary black  figures and events. The last phase was from 1986 until his death in 1988.    His work displays a new type of figurative depiction, using different symbols,  sources, and content. He was seeking a new territory in his work.    When Basquiat's Horn Players and    Davis?Swing Landscape are displayed side by side it is quite obvious that  they were done by two different artist. In Swing Landscape it is not obvious  that this piece was inspired by jazz, as where in Horn Players the influence  of jazz is evident. These painters have two completely different styles  but are inspired by the same types of things. They are inspired by society  and music. They both appreciate the art value of music, especially jazz.    Stuart Davis?Swing Landscape is  quite colorful and vibrant. The colors give a feeling of jazz with the  use of blues and cool colors. The use of the warm colors shows the unpredictability  of jazz. There are many forms of geometric shapes used in this painting.    The shapes used in this painting again show the unpredictability of jazz,  as well as the vibrancy of that music form.    
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