Naoki Satō
Author of Hammershøi: The Poetry of Silence [exhibition] Royal Academy of Arts, 2008
About the Author
Image credit: via Art of Problem Solving
Works by Naoki Satō
Hammershøi: The Poetry of Silence [exhibition] Royal Academy of Arts, 2008 (2008) 74 copies, 1 review
Art of Problem Solving: Intermediate Algebra Books Set (2 Books) - Intermediate Algebra Text, Intermediate Algebra Solution Manual (2019) 2 copies
Eureka Seven 2 copies
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Satō, Naoki
- Legal name
- 佐藤 直紀
Satō Naoki - Birthdate
- 1970-05-02
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- Japan
- Birthplace
- Chiba, Japan
- Associated Place (for map)
- Chiba, Japan
Members
Reviews
This is the catalogue of the exhibition of the works of Vilhelm Hammershoi held at the Royal Academy of Arts, London in the summer of 2008. Hammershoi is, perhaps, the most important painter to come out of Denmark. He was highly regarded, if controversial, during his working life but fell into international obscurity after his death. His reputation revived with the development of interest in symbolism in the 1950s. The majority of his paintings are in public collections in Denmark or in show more private hands so this exhibition was a rare opportunity to see a representative selection of his work.
The overwhelming impression given by these monochromatic pictures is of northern gloom, isolation and depression. His characteristic interiors, mostly painted in his own apartment in Christianhavn, show almost empty rooms, doors variously open and closed with pale light filtering through uncurtained windows. The dark-clad female figures are mostly painted from the rear, not from any lack of portraiture skill, but rather to emphasise their anonymity. In the same way as the rooms are largely devoid of evidence of human existence his grey landscapes, even in cities, lack any human figures.
Hammershoi's technique is skilful, if unvarying, but his subject matter and the limited palette - influenced by Whistler - left me longing for Provencal light. These pictures could be seen as representations of seasonal affective disorder and one wonders what he painted in the long northern summer days. show less
The overwhelming impression given by these monochromatic pictures is of northern gloom, isolation and depression. His characteristic interiors, mostly painted in his own apartment in Christianhavn, show almost empty rooms, doors variously open and closed with pale light filtering through uncurtained windows. The dark-clad female figures are mostly painted from the rear, not from any lack of portraiture skill, but rather to emphasise their anonymity. In the same way as the rooms are largely devoid of evidence of human existence his grey landscapes, even in cities, lack any human figures.
Hammershoi's technique is skilful, if unvarying, but his subject matter and the limited palette - influenced by Whistler - left me longing for Provencal light. These pictures could be seen as representations of seasonal affective disorder and one wonders what he painted in the long northern summer days. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 10
- Also by
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- Members
- 126
- Popularity
- #159,215
- Rating
- 4.4
- Reviews
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- ISBNs
- 18
- Languages
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