Showing posts with label Judith Leyster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Judith Leyster. Show all posts

Monday, December 19, 2022

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Judith Leyster Saves the Day (An Addendum of Sorts)

The Cheerful Drinker (or Jolly Toper), 1629, Judith Leyster. Geometry: 2022, DS.


"One perk is that I keep finding golden spirals in paintings... specifically from the Netherlands (in recent weeks)... and all of them from the 1600s (amongst some real Plague Years). Judith Leyster was a painter from an earlier part of that century, however, and one I didn't expect to find as it's unlikely that she and the other artists (who may be theoretically involved) ever crossed paths. While they were just blooming, Judith Leyster had already been cut down and claimed by matrimony, children, and, at the age of 50, death.

(Update 4/11/22) Note: Due to new information regarding the Italian painter, Caravaggio (1571-1610), Judith Leyster's involvement with pentagonal geometry becomes increasingly feasible.)"

- Quoting myself from the post: Judith Leyster and a Double Golden Spiral. (Added: 8/27/22Inset right: Another spiral position for the Jolly Toper (above).  Also, Leyster is known for her puns using graphic symbols. Question: does the line-up of objects in the foreground (lying diagonally across the table) represent a word?

***

It's an odd thing, but whenever I find myself deeply involved in a specific subject, very often certain books will synchronistically fall into my hands which, upon opening, just happen to address the things I had recently been researching. The latest book - which appeared one day this week in the library's "Free Books" bin - was this gem: The Age of Rembrandt and Vermeer by J.M. Nash, 1972... that is, a book about the Dutch Golden Age!

But, there's another book, too, a novel - The Last Painting of Sara De Vos by Dominic Smith - which also fell into my hands in the same way. "Sara Vos" is a fictional character based on an actual artist from the Dutch Golden Age, Sara van Baalbergen, who, according to Wiki, was the first female member of the Haarlem Guild of St. Luke (Judith Leyster came a little later). As for her artwork, tragically: "No known works survive."

Anyway, so, while researching Sara I found an amazing spiral by Leyster - in this article - which has been posted above. And, really, finding this perfect spiral made my day. It immediately struck me as a confirmation: yes, Judith Leyster did know of the GTS... and (via the J.M. Nash book) I may have picked up a clue as to her source of knowledge...
 

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Judith Leyster and a Double Golden Spiral

 

A Boy and a Girl with a Cat and an Eel, 1635, Judith Leyster. Geometry: 2022, DS.


"Artist Judith Leyster wanted to follow her star as a painter. Her name even spelled it out - Leystar means "lodestar" or guiding star in Dutch. When she signed a painting, Judith made a visual pun, adding a JL monogram and attaching a star to it.

Born in 1609 in Haarlem, Judith won wide acclaim in her time - a reputation that went into eclipse at her marriage and, by her death (around 1668), had vanished almost completely. Funny, just like many of her paintings..."

- Via Uppity Women of the Renaissance, 1999, Vicki Leon.  Leon is referring to the fact that after Leyster's death her paintings were not identified for 200 years - and attributed to a male artist instead - despite the fact that her signature was present. In other words, that story... and we've heard it before.


"A Boy and a Girl with a Cat and an Eel is a 1635 oil painting by Judith Leyster that is now in the National Gallery, London.

Academic interpretation
There have been various interpretations of Judith Leyster's A Boy and a Girl with a Cat and an Eel by different scholars. Some, such as Neil McLaren, have argued that it represents the Dutch proverb "Een aal bij de staart hebben" (or "to hold an eel by the tail") meaning that you do not get to hold onto something just because you have it. This moralistic interpretation is supported, Cynthia Kortenhorst-Von Bogendorff Rupprath says, by the eye contact with the viewer made by the little girl in the painting as she wags her finger."

- Via the Wiki entry for the painting by Judith Leyster ((July 28, 1609 – February 10, 1660) above. Of course, this interpretation doesn't really fly... that is, if anyone (who isn't blind-folded) actually looks at the painting. For instance, does the woman (inset right) look remotely like a little girl? True, she is quite small and Leyster refers to her as a "girl," but if you look at the skin on her face and hands, you soon realize she can't be a day under 50. And you'll also notice that she is not looking directly at the viewer, but slightly off to the right side... as if she's pointing to something else - also to the viewer's right - and possibly out of the frame.

Then, there's the glass eel... held up - by it's neck (upper body), not it's tail (lower body) -  by a "boy" who may be her son... or grandson, although he doesn't look like a child either (note his teeth and hands). All in all, this painting may be another "pun" by Leyster... something about deceiving the eye... but it has nothing to do with morality... or with brutality towards cats (another academic theory). So much for expert opinions... similar to the expertise which somehow missed Leyster's signature on paintings for 200 years!

***

Wow, this is my 3rd (intensive) post this month; it must be the first time this has happened in 2 years (also known as the "plague" years). And, I'm back sooner than I expected... but, not because this is an ideal time for a new post. Hardly. The order of the day seems to be a strange chaotic brew - cooked up by trolls and served-up by artificially intelligent clowns -  under the Big Top. In other words, I seem to have my own personal Circus-from-Hell thing going on these days which defies all non-metaphorical description. The weird thing is, this existential maelstrom has it's perks. Perks that just happen to work in my creative life... but, not at all in my corporeal existence.

One perk is that I keep finding golden spirals in paintings... specifically from the Netherlands (in recent weeks)... and all of them from the 1600s (amongst some real Plague Years). Judith Leyster was a painter from an earlier part of that century, however, and one I didn't expect to find as it's unlikely that she and the other artists (who may be theoretically involved) ever crossed paths. While they were just blooming, Judith Leyster had already been cut down and claimed by matrimony, children, and, at the age of 50, death.

(Update 4/11/22) Note: Due to new information regarding the Italian painter, Caravaggio (1571-1610), Judith Leyster's involvement with pentagonal geometry becomes increasingly feasible. See here.)

She sometimes signed her paintings with a star. The reason given is that her surname means the "lode" or pole star. But don't you bet she loved stars anyway? A lot of people love star symbols and rarely think about their geometry, but I think Leyster may have...if the GTS in her painting (above) means anything.

Or, perhaps, I'm referring to the GTS below...

 

Same painting, flipped GTS. (Click to enlarge.)


Yes, it looks like there might be a double spiral thing happening - and its the first of its kind I've seen - a mirror spiral!

But, I wouldn't be convinced unless I found the correct spiral; one that could "mirror" itself. It'd have to be of identical size and level of placement in the painting to do so...