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Quadro riportato
Quadro riportato








quadro riportato

When the Swan is in the Sky references the mythological story of Leda and the Swan so sensuously represented in the Renaissance. The viewer, by virtue of drawing’s heroic scale, is both observer of, and participant in, the illusion. Such comparisons become even more interesting to cultural historians in that both Schoengauer and Drake created their work on the verge of major shifts in cultural paradigms. Detritus from Gericault’s Raft of la Meduse? Wraithlike figures of scarcely discernable forms float in the air as ambiguously as the daemons in Schoengauer’s late medieval Temptation of Saint Anthony. In Barca de Oro, the mysterious man and boy child playing in the waves exudes a bizarre, even malevolent, character when one notices the deteriorating corpse drifting ashore.

quadro riportato quadro riportato

With the consummate intuitive knowledge of what medium to use to create the most desired effect, Drake’s decision to work with black and white and gray seems to have been the most effective choice. The nuanced range of values, sweeping gestures and movement, and intuitive mastery of the algorithms of perspective and foreshortening produces a dreamlike world in which the relationship between subject and objective dissolves in a delightful mixture of fantasy, illusion, and realism in the tradition of Mantegna, da Cortona and Gaulli, and twentieth century film fantasies featuring Fred Astaire. The gown that overflows into the foreground space, the dynamic diagonal and counterpoint of the dancers’ elegantly dressed forms, and the two point perspective defined by the pedestal at the left and the voyeur couple on the right serves to establish a continuum from the viewer’s real world space through the fore, middle, and implied distance.ĭrake’s bold, grisaille trompe I’oeil, created through the agency of virtuoso handling of the charcoal medium, deploys witty allusions to Renaissance and Baroque quadro riportato paintings that will delight the historically conscious. Shifting gears, in James Drake’s grand baroque theater drawing, Dancing in the Louvre, the elegantly simulated moldings mediate the viewer’s imaginative transgression of the proscenium plane. James Drake: When the Swan is in the Sky, 2009










Quadro riportato