Prestudy in Graphite Surely it is time to pay homage to Eugène Durieu, especially his photograph of a seated female nude. First I made a study in graphite pencil last year. By clicking the link you can read on the who and the why, otherwise I would introduce him twice. As for now, since the completion of my Risque Series I am selecting multiple drawings from the recent past. Some posts ago I explained that from last February on I am converting my drawings into oil. There are simply too many good ones to ignore, some better than others of course. Straight Cubist Planes This time I found it was time to return to straight cubist planes after the latest anaglyphical experiment. My initial cubist styling was all straightly lined up, roundism came later. I don’t know why I would like to return to that initial styling again. Maybe it was that some time back I finished Ode to Tamara de Lempicka – 31-03-22 and I liked the result. In the back of my mind I kept the intention to do another one of the kind shortly. Deviation It is what I am used to do with different sub-styles I developed through time. Furthermore, the task I set myself was simple: Display the female form in the cubist style and for the rest give it some kind of realist look. It is a slight deviation from my first cubist paintings such as Cubist Nude 01 (2013). The latter has much more color saturation and it was time for me to turn a different corner. I used slightly less strong colors in order to match with a more realistic look. See if I could get away with that. Rip Associations Apart You see, we as artists always play with the imagination of people who watch our paintings. Rubbing them the right way they will be able to see more than the painting actually lets on. Therefor I present figuration on the cutting edge of recognizing the female form as well as aesthetic cubist planes. Both at the same time. From early childhood on we have learnt to associate forms with what they represent. In fact we simply equate these associations with the names we have given them. I try to rip them apart a bit. So, don’t you agree there is a narrative in my kind of formalism? Oil on linen (70 x 100 cm) Artist: Corné Akkers
Homage to Eugène Durieu’s Seated Female Nude – 02-08-22 was created by artist Corne Akkers in 2022. This art piece , which is part of the Oil Paintings - Corne Akkers portfolio, is a Paintings artwork. The style of this artwork is best described as Cubism, Fine Art. The genre portrayed in this piece of art is Anatomy, Composition, Figurative, Inspirational, Nudes, People. The artwork was created in Oil. The size of the original art is 100 (cms) H x 70 (cms) W.
Words which artist Corne Akkers feels best describe this work of art are: abstract, akkers, artist, artista, artiste, arts, művészet, corne, cubism, corneakkers, cubisme, cubismo, cubist, cubistic, ölgemälde, print, poster, artprint, artposter, olieverf, dutch, femaleform, female, durieu, eugenedurieu, finearts, frau, 艺术 , कला , buyart, iloveart, kubistisch, nghệthuật, nackt, inspiration, creative, nude, nu, desnudo, oilpainting, creativity, painting, inspirational, seni, sanat, في, naakt, oil, kübizm, abstractie, kubisme, kubist, الرسم, кубизм, مذهب, art, 인상주의, សិល្បៈ, 立體主義, 立体主义, キュビズム, کوبیسم.
My work can be seen in many countries all over the world. I employ a variety of styles that all have one thing in common: the ever search for the light on phenomena and all the shadows and light planes they block in. My favorites in doing so are oil paint, dry pastel and graphite pencil. It is not the form or the theme that counts but the way planes of certain tonal quality vary and block in the lights. Colours are relatively unimportant and can take on whatever scheme. It is the tonal quality that is ever present in my work, creating the illusion of depth and mass on a flat 2d-plane. I combine figurative work with the search for abstraction because neither in extremo can provide the desired art statement the public expects from an artist. Besides all that, exaggeration and deviation is the standard and results in a typical use of a strong colour scheme and a hugh tonal bandwith, in order to create art that, when the canvas or paper would be torn into pieces, in essence still would be recognizable.
I teach art (drawing / painting) at Voorburg, Netherlands where I have my second studio next to my first at The Hague, Netherlands, where I live.