Posts tagged Painting

Pablo Palazuelo (1916-2007): painter, architect, Artist! A few years ago I saw his retrospective at MACBA (Barcelona) and has since become one of my artists reference. My connection with his understanding of abstraction is total, especially in my creations that blend Art + Code, but it also affects my graphic design.

Pablo Palazuelo (1916-2007): painter, architect, Artist! A few years ago I saw his retrospective at MACBA (Barcelona) and has since become one of my artists reference. My connection with his understanding of abstraction is total, especially in my creations that blend Art + Code, but it also affects my graphic design.

“Unexpected Return”by Ilya Efimovich Repin (1844 - 1930)Oil on canvas 160,5 x 167,5 cm
One of my favorite paintings of all time. So much emotion and history in one scene! The painting was the final one in a series of the artist’s paintings devoted to the Russian revolutionary movement. Here we see depicted the unexpected return home of a political exile. The reaction of the household is various – from unbelieving surprise (the maid at the door), caution (the little girl behind the table) to an outburst of joy (the wife seated at the piano and the boy at the table) and the moral shock expressed in the hunched over figure of the mother. The pictures on the wall – Golgotha, Emperor Alexander on his funeral bier, the portraits of T.G. Shevchenko and N.A. Nekrasov explain what has occurred and sum up the spiritual and intellectual atmosphere of the house of this intelligentsia family. Repin redid the face of the banished man trying to convey the expression of uncertainty and doubt of a man who has returned to his former world after many years. The times have changed, and the attitude towards revolutionaries, their ideals and methods of combat have become more unequivocal.

“Unexpected Return”
by Ilya Efimovich Repin (1844 - 1930)
Oil on canvas 160,5 x 167,5 cm

One of my favorite paintings of all time. So much emotion and history in one scene! The painting was the final one in a series of the artist’s paintings devoted to the Russian revolutionary movement. Here we see depicted the unexpected return home of a political exile. The reaction of the household is various – from unbelieving surprise (the maid at the door), caution (the little girl behind the table) to an outburst of joy (the wife seated at the piano and the boy at the table) and the moral shock expressed in the hunched over figure of the mother. The pictures on the wall – Golgotha, Emperor Alexander on his funeral bier, the portraits of T.G. Shevchenko and N.A. Nekrasov explain what has occurred and sum up the spiritual and intellectual atmosphere of the house of this intelligentsia family. Repin redid the face of the banished man trying to convey the expression of uncertainty and doubt of a man who has returned to his former world after many years. The times have changed, and the attitude towards revolutionaries, their ideals and methods of combat have become more unequivocal.