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Upon studying the shadow it is found that not only is it not correct for this young man's pose, but it is almost a cartoonish caricature compared to the rest of the painting.
Originally posted by Nygdan
Why is it thought that there is a 'cryptic' meanign in these paintings anyway??
Originally posted by Nygdan
Just for reference, here is
Les Bergers d'Arcadie (big pic) from 1640 which is being discussed.
external image
, I thought that the blue tunic man is illuminated by a different light source, and that the artist was trying to state that many can come to the unground stream, but only some are illuminated by it.
originally posted by masqua
If you haven't yet read this fascinating little booklet, I suggest you find a copy, published by Corgi Books in 1992.
Lincoln identifies the right side background landscape in the Poissin painting as being that of the rocks of Toustounes and Cardou as well as the crest of Blanchefort, all descending unmistakebly to the mound on which the village itself sits.
There are people who say the tomb, as it now, was erected in the 20th century, but, whatever that means, Poissin's excellent artistry establishes the proximity of the tomb to Rennes-le-Chateau even if it only was just in his minds eye.
When Lincoln studied the painting, he was intrigued by the positions of the shepherds’ staffs, by way of which he ascertains a pentagon as the underlying symbol upon which the tomb was painted. This is not only seen by the staff angles alone, but also on an x-ray plate which hinted that the tomb was painted on after the shepherds were rendered, since the tip of the shepherds staff to the right (kneeling figure) does not reveal itself to be in front of the tomb. (more mystery) I know I'm confused by these abnormalities.
Originally posted by Valhall
However, the shadow cast on the side of the
sarcophagus in Les Bergers absolutely cannot be the shadow of the young
man pointing at it.
Originally posted by Byrd
Originally posted by Valhall
However, the shadow cast on the side of the
sarcophagus in Les Bergers absolutely cannot be the shadow of the young
man pointing at it.
Actually, yes it can. And it was probably copied from a model who stood in front of a surface and pointed.
You're looking at the young man as a two dimensional figure... but he's actually three dimensional. His shadow won't be flat, but will be a distorted representation of himself.
The sun is coming at approximately a 45 degree angle. The head, which is at least a shoulder and a half's length from the wall, casts that part of the shadow on the wall at a lower angle. As the body parts move closer to the wall, the shadow cast is more exactly like the part.
Take a photo of someone in that same position at about 10 am (or 3 pm) on a sunny day.
My expertise here is as an artist myself. In learning to draw shadows (which they made us do) I found that the shadow is not always a flat representation of the object but is often distorted as parts of the object are further from the flat surface than other parts.
Your mileage may vary. This is what I learned in many still life drawing classes.
Originally posted by Egg Mundane
Is it just me or does there sem to be a lot of implacation going one here. I am sure that I could impose a picture of Mickey Mouse on the painting if I wished.
A search for complexities will serve only to generate complexities. Experience has shown that the route to a provable valid discovery is found by choosing the simplest possible approach. One of the simplist statements that can be made about the shepherds staff is that it is cut in two by the shepherds arm. Measurements with dividers will show that the division is exact. Moreover, that exact measure is repeated from the top of the staff to the tip of the shepherds pointing finger. It is also repeated in the division of the left hand shepherds staff, which is bisected by the line of the kneeling shepherds back. A straightforward check, maintaining this half staff measure, will quickly produce numerous repititions of this fixed distance in the painting. This discovery was a clear indicator that there was an unexpectedly rigid geometry underlying the composition of The Shepherds of Arcadia.
one was based on the account of the creation given in Plato's Timaeus, and was published by Alberti in his Ten Books on Architecture (Florence, 1485). It proceeds by calculation as much as by constuction using instruments, and it had great appeal in the High Renaissance and its aftermath, since it both disassociated art and architecture from the old, manual masonic tradition of mediaeval times, and associated them with humanist scholarship. Moreover, the number system used was a kind of invocation of the divine inasmuch as the building or painting became a microscopic rehearsal of the primal act of creation.
The other type of system was the masonic-geometric. According to Professor Cornford, this was 'incomparably the older of the two, indeed it seems to have been known to Ancient Egyptians and to our own megalithic culture. It survived, often by an atmosphere of craft (if not cult) secrecy, until Alberti's time and subsequently went into eclipse...'
...as he worked on his analysis, he was surprised to find evidence of the older and long-outdated masonic-geometric system.
What so startled Professor Cornford was not my 'half staff' measure, but something which seemed unconnected with it. The ancient geometric symbol which Poussin had used was the Pentangle.