Art in the Time of Corona

We are so quarantined. I hope you are hanging in there. When anxiety starts creeping in on me, I am trying to think about all the incredible art that is probably being created right now when artists can’t leave their homes. Silver lining! Or maybe red, or green, or purple!

For some artists this lockdown requires zero change in habit. Pordenone Montanari, for one. Montanari is an Italian painter, who has not left his home in Milan in eighteen years. He relies on his wife for food and art supplies. No word on whether she makes him break to tackle a giant honey-do list. (So far, this quarantine, my husband has hung pictures and light fixtures for me, fixed appliances, moved furniture, put our new doorbell up, and cleaned his half of the closet!) Think of all he could do if he were home eighteen more years!

Some think Montanari’s art has a strong Cezanne influence, but I think they’re more Picasso-ey than anything. What do you think?
Here’s the Montanari….

…and here’s the Picasso. Similar feel, right?
Being a recluse, seems to have had little impact on Montanari’s success. His art has been exhibited around the world, and art experts are saying things like, “he’s the cat’s pajamas!” Or the art expert equivalent of that anyway. Recluse though he may be, nobody can say Montanari isn’t productive. When a potential buyer came into his home (Montanari didn’t come up to talk to him, reportedly. His wife does the talking in their relationship.) he found every inch of the house covered in art. Canvases and cardboard stacked “meters” high, murals on every wall, sculptures out of wood and stone. Even the garden hedges were elaborately shaped.

No doubt about it, recluses sure can get stuff done. These days, whether we want to or not, we join the ranks of Emily Dickinson, J.D. Salinger, Edvard Munch, and Bobby Fischer. I can’t wait to see what awesome art is produced in the next several weeks!

Happy Belated St. Paddy’s Day!

I’m a day late and a dollar short, but… HAPPY ST. PATRICK’S DAY! Did you remember to wear green yesterday? Were you pinched to within an inch of your life? Did you even remember it was St. Patrick’s Day in all the chaos that is our world right now? If not, you weren’t alone. I’m pretty sure there were a lot of empty leprechaun traps yesterday.

I’ve been saving this beautiful painting for St. Patrick’s Day. It was at the Gibbes Art Museum in Charleston. It isn’t by an Irish artist, but the emerald green dress is super St. Patrick-y. I love it. I actually want that gown, if I’m being honest. I feel it would be practical to wear anyplace! Or, at home doing homeschooling, if it turns out I never leave my house again.

“April” The month after the longest month EVER in 2020.

Childe Hassam painted it in 1920. Word has it, Hassam painted this portrait of his mother, using his imagination to guess how she would have looked having just found out she was pregnant with him. Like many women receiving that news she looks deep in thought and a little pale. I think the daffodils are a darling touch in their shallow little vase. 

Here is another piece at Gibbes, that I posted several weeks ago, but I love it so much I can’t resist posting again. Plus, green!

I still love it!

The internet is providing so many awesome ideas for us to do with our kids while we’re cutting our homeschooling teeth. Here’s how I’m making my kids learn about art if you’re interested. Every day they are assigned a famous piece of art. At the end of the day they present it to us with information about the painting and artist. Yesterday, for instance, we did Yellow-Red-Blue by Wassily Kandinsky, The Girl With the Pearl Earring by Johannes Vermeer, and The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dali. If your kids are like mine they will make it into a competition and make you rank them 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place. Enjoy!

Strong Salad

It is time for one of my family’s favorite events of the year. Not Daylight Saving time, not March Madness, not even St. Patrick’s Day… do you give?

The presentation of the 2020 Minnesota State High School All Hockey Hair Team. Or MSHSAHHT if you’re in the biz. The video has it all: amazing hair, great puns, inexplicable slang, and a peppy narrator (haha, Just kidding about that last one. He really does make it about the hair and not himself.) It’s hard to believe some people don’t even know about the MSHSAHHT! Just in case my gentle readers aren’t familiar, here is the link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuDeBAYhKO0

Naturally, all this hair talk made me seek out some art featuring strong salads. Take Degas’ Combing the Hair, for instance.


I love this, because I think it really shows the weight of the woman’s hair. I’m not sure if the subject is supposed to look relaxed, but I think she looks a little like my daughters when I’m working through a snarl. Not fun. I have to comment on the color here too. Degas somehow makes the oranges and red look good, even though he is featuring two redheads. I would guess their hair gets lost in the background, but he makes it work. Have you seen Wild Wild Country on Netflix yet? Watch it, and tell me if this doesn’t remind you of the commune members’ outfits.

Oluwole Omofemi has a series of paintings featuring black women with abundant hair (a metaphor for freedom). This is my absolute favorite of his paintings.


Any hockey player worth their weight would salivate to have this hair. Never mind how you’d get a helmet over it.

Finally, one of my all-time favorites from the Chicago Institute of Art:

I don’t think the artist meant for it to be funny, but it so is.

I’ve blogged about this before, but still don’t know the title or artist. Still, I love it and identify with it. This is pretty much what my hair looks like when I take my helmet off. Look out MSHSAHHT!

Things are a little hairy in our world right now, but I hope in between hand washing you’re taking time to enjoy some art!

Spring Into Art!

Spring is in the air! It’s almost daylight savings time, the ground is gloriously brown, my kids shoes are filthy with mud… yes, we just had a blizzard last Wednesday, but never mind that- it’s most definitely Springtime! Don’t you find everyone in a better mood? At least until allergies start hitting? I just love it. Friends from school start showing their faces again after a long winter of doing the carpool line, everyone is discussing Spring Break plans, Easter is right around the corner… life is good in the Spring, if you ask me.

Judging by the number of paintings featuring Springtime scenes, artists must be as moved by Spring as I. Claude Monet did some of his best work during this season, as did Van Gogh. Persephone, the goddess of spring, has inspired plenty of beautiful art, and birds and blossoms are popular subjects for numerous artists. One of my personal favorite warmish weather artists is John William Waterhouse.

A Song of Spring. It’s still too chilly in Michigan to go topless, but good for her!

I love Waterhouse’s paintings and not just because his subjects are often redheads. I think they’re beautiful and flowy, which fits my Spring mood exactly. His details are gorgeous, his subjects are interesting, and his technique is top notch (says the girl who has no technique). He often painted scenes from Greek mythology, but my favorites are A Song of Spring (above) and Windflowers:

He painted this in 1902, but couldn’t this be a breezy hippie wedding in 1968?

There is a theory floating around that the subject in Windflowers may represent Persephone. We know Waterhouse was a fan, having painted her before, plus the flowers are apparently the same sort of poppy as those that Persephone was collecting before Hades kidnapped her. I think it’s a pretty solid theory. In other news, if I ever open a flower shop it will be called “Persephone’s Poppies.” 

Until next week (when we may very well have an ice storm!), put a little Spring in your step!