Studies of human genetic disorders have traditionally followed a reductionist paradigm. Traits are defined as Mendelian or complex based on family pedigree and population data, whereas alleles are ...deemed rare, common, benign, or deleterious based on their population frequencies. The availability of exome and genome data, as well as gene and allele discovery for various conditions, is beginning to challenge classic definitions of genetic causality. Here, I discuss recent advances in our understanding of the overlap between rare and complex diseases and the context-dependent effect of both rare and common alleles that underscores the need for revising the traditional categorizations of genetic traits.
In structural analyses of innovation, one substantive question looms large: What makes radical innovation possible if peripheral actors are more likely to originate radical ideas but are poorly ...positioned to promote them? An inductive study of the rise of Cubism, a revolutionary paradigm that overthrew classic principles of representation in art, results in a model where not only the periphery moves toward the core through collective action, as typically asserted, but the core also moves toward the periphery, becoming more receptive to radical ideas. The fragmentation of the art market in early 20th-century Paris served as the trigger. The proliferation of market niches and growing ambiguity over evaluation standards dramatically reduced the costs of experimentation in the periphery and the ability of the core to suppress radical ideas. A multilevel analysis linking individual creativity, peer networks, and the art field reveals how market developments fostered Spanish Cubist Pablo Picasso’s experiments and facilitated their diffusion in the absence of public support, a coherent movement, and even his active involvement. If past research attests to the importance of framing innovations and mobilizing resources in their support, this study brings attention to shifts in the structure of opportunities to do so.
'A working countryside is hardly ever a landscape', Raymond Williams observed fifty years ago in his book The Country and the City; for to perceive it as such is to have both the leisure and the ...distance from it, to aestheticize it. This essay argues that, similarly, art practices have too often been understood 'from the outside in': that in Cubist representations of the Mediterranean, the picturesque quality of the Riviera insinuated itself--indeed that that the influence of the decorative was so far-reaching in the inter-World War years that it co-opted avant-gardism itself, and that the Riviera was one of its vehicles for doing so.
In the fateful year of 1913, events in New York and Paris launched a great public rivalry between the two most consequential artists of the twentieth century, Pablo Picasso and Marcel Duchamp. The ...New York Armory Show art exhibition unveiled Duchamp's Nude Descending a Staircase, a "sensation of sensations" that prompted Americans to declare Duchamp the leader of cubism, the voice of modern art. In Paris, however, the cubist revolution was reaching its peak around Picasso. In retrospect, these events form a crossroads in art history, a moment when two young bohemians adopted entirely opposite views of the artist, giving birth to the two opposing agendas that would shape all of modern art. Today, the museum-going public views Pablo Picasso as the greatest figure in modern art. Over his long lifetime, Picasso pioneered several new styles as the last great painter in the Western tradition. In the rarefied world of artists, critics, and collectors, however, the most influential artist of the last century was not Picasso, but Marcel Duchamp: chess player, prankster, and a forefather of idea-driven dada, surrealism, and pop art. Picasso and the Chess Player is the story of how Picasso and Duchamp came to define the epochal debate between modern and conceptual art-a drama that features a who's who of twentieth-century art and culture, including Henri Matisse, Gertrude Stein, André Breton, Salvador Dalí, and Andy Warhol. In telling the story, Larry Witham weaves two great art biographies into one tumultuous century.
The Success and Failure of Picasso appeared in 1965, three years after John Berger left England for Switzerland. By the time of the move he was established as a combative art critic, but for the next ...few years he concentrated on writing fiction. His biographer Joshua Sperling describes ‘the quiet of exile’ – ‘projects unfurl with greater patience’, ‘a séance with the past becomes easier’, ‘voices a metropolis would drown out can be heard’.1 It cannot have been a period of uninterrupted contemplation, though, since Berger and his partner Anya Bostock, employed in Geneva at the United Nations, had two children in 1962 and 1963. Berger says a lot: about art as a luxury item, the nature of the male gaze (though not till the 1970s did he use that specific term), the moral importance of art (or the possibility, at least, of its being morally important), the intensity of Picasso’s vision (‘He has been able to see and imagine more suffering in a single horse’s head than many artists have found in a whole crucifixion’21), the implications of an artist’s choice of subject matter and Picasso’s lack of good subjects in his later years. He wants criticism to be rooted – in seeing, in experience, in beliefs. He also wants it to make a case. In this instance, the thrust of the case is announced in the book’s title (perhaps in Révai’s eyes its first churlish inversion?), and what follows is argued in a style that is direct and highly personal, as he fixes the reader with the full glare of his intelligence. Most long-form writing about art – as opposed to the critical pasquinades that appear in newspapers – is grounded in the assumption that the work under consideration is, even at its most immature or wayward or geriatric, of high quality (even holy). It’s an assumption that produces a forbiddingly descriptive kind of writing, white-knuckled in its emotional continence and sure to encourage the philistines. Berger breaks with this, violently; elsewhere he accords similar treatment to, for instance, Henry Moore and Francis Bacon. Instead of being content to look closely at the work and write about it in commensurately celibate terms, he must look at it and write about it feelingly.
First a picture with the word, then the picture without: the sequence begins to blur. Is that enough to lead the way out of the labyrinth: the blind alleys and the isolation each one of us lives ...individually, with no hope of community, solidarity, synthesis or vision? ...is this drift to the more-than-one of community enough to repel the divide-and-rule of exploitation? Freedom claims the summer storm-"que s'arrogent"-not the other way around: this not a story of metaphoric storms producing freedom, this is not the utopian freedom to which metaphors confine us, made of an idealism that glorifies conflict rather than addressing it. Freshness unfurls in a snake, or in blond hair, each metaphor entwined in the other, and in the leaves of the palms. fraîcheur d'un serpent blond désormais le palmier épris de ta chevelure the freshness of a blond snake forever the palm tree hooked on your hair Picasso's concentric curves on the next page of "Présence" now also look like hair, with fingers or a comb running through it.
Emily's Blue Period Dawes, Erika Thulin
Language arts,
09/2016, Letnik:
94, Številka:
1
Journal Article
Recenzirano
While her emotional turmoil is expressed internally, Emily's little brother Jack acts out, throwing a temper tantrum as they shop for Dad's new home furnishings.
The cultural heritage community is increasingly exploring synchrotron radiation (SR) based techniques for the study of art and archaeological objects. When considering heterogeneous and complex ...micro-samples, such as those from paintings, the combination of different SR X-ray techniques is often exploited to overcome the intrinsic limitations and sensitivity of the single technique. Less frequently, SR X-ray analyses are combined with SR micro-photoluminescence or micro-Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy, which provide complementary information on the molecular composition, offering a unique integrated analysis approach. Although the spatial correlation between the maps obtained with different techniques is not straightforward due to the different volumes probed by each method, the combination of the information provides a greater understanding and insight into the paint chemistry. In this work, we discuss the advantages and disadvantages of the combination of X-ray techniques and SR-based photoluminescence through the study of two paint micro-samples taken from Pablo Picasso's Femme (1907). The painting contains two cadmium yellow paints (based on CdS): one relatively intact and one visibly degraded. SR micro-analyses demonstrated that the two Cd-yellow paints differ in terms of structure, chemical composition, and photoluminescence properties. In particular, on the basis of the combination of different SR measurements, we hypothesize that the degraded yellow is based on nanocrystalline CdS with high presence of Cd(OH)Cl. These two characteristics have enhanced the reactivity of the paint and strongly influenced its stability.
Brand management has become a key element in museum differentiation and competitiveness. When a museum's brand is associated with a particular artist, the artist is a brand in themselves, bestowing ...the museum added value and shaping its personality. In recent years there has been a growing trend in museum management towards strengthening their brands. The aim of this work is to determine the elements of transmission of brand identity in museums associated with an artist based on the model proposed by Aaker 1996. Construir Marcas Poderosas. Barcelona: Gestión 2000. A qualitative methodology based on thematic analysis has been employed to draw the main conclusions from the in-depth interviews of the directors and heads of Communication and Marketing of the Picasso museums in Spain. The results reflect that the link between brand, artist and museum is not only transmitted through the product, symbolism and organisation but also through its connection with the territory and its digital sphere.