Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What is the name of the picture of a girl with a bird on her head and a cat in her arms?

What is the name of the picture of a girl with a bird on her head and a cat in her arms?

What is the name of the picture of a girl with a bird on her head and a cat in her arms?

Foujita is one of the most influential oriental artists in the west in the first half of the 20th century. As the first Japanese artist to succeed in Europe, Fujita communicated with artists from different cultural backgrounds in panas in the early days, trying to explore the intersection of eastern and western art, and then won the highest reputation in European painting circles by establishing a unique style that combines traditional Japanese art with modern western art.

Paolo Pietro Gallery is the main promotion organization of Fogarta art, and has held solo exhibitions for him at 1956, 1960 and 1964. The picture shows the exhibition poster. The lot was released on 1956.

/kloc-French artists in the middle of 0/9th century loved Japanese culture, especially ukiyo-e prints. Because of its whimsical composition, flat and simple visual expression, it subverts the inherent mode of European traditional oil painting, which is a perfect embodiment of high compatibility with modern art. The artist integrates the unique language of ukiyo-e prints into oil painting creation, outlines the image with smooth and slender ink lines, and then renders and shapes the details, finally combining the flatness of the picture, the plasticity of lines, the subtlety of colors with the realism of oil painting, and successfully creates a "breeze"

1927 Fujita was filmed in Madame Dora's studio in Paris.

Embrace Catgirl (1956) is the result of Fujita's innovation in artistic theme, emotion and expression after his return from France. By depicting the themes in daily life, the artist established the image of "cat" as the core symbol of his creation. This love stems from the artist's psychological self-projection, trying to stare at and present himself through this image, and because he thinks that cats and women are similar in essence, he even said that "women and cats are the same creatures."

Foujita

In the work, a girl in a dress sits on a green leather chair with a kitten in her arms. Painted tiles with different patterns are symmetrically arranged on the white wall in the background, which is full of rich life breath and decorative interest. Black-and-white background, with girls' dresses and chairs, is divided into red, blue, white and green blocks to construct a bright, harmonious and unified color relationship. The wrinkles of girls' facial features, arms and dresses are all drawn through thin lines, and the rhythm of the lines is reminiscent of traditional Japanese ink painting. After painting, the artist indulged in making dolls and took them as the objects of repeated description. This girl with a hat and bow keeps appearing in the artist's picture-full face, exquisite dress and elegant posture-an idealized imaginary image and an uncritical partner.