A History Lesson in the Destinations That Inspired Iconic Artworks
Everyone loves a random fact, and a good old-fashioned quiz to show it off. Armed with the knowledge of our round-up, make art history your speciality the next time you’re playing Zoom quizmaster.
‘A Bigger Splash’, David Hockney
British artist David Hockney set his sights on Los Angeles in his late 20s, arriving in California in 1964. That year came Picture of a Hollywood Swimming Pool, his first painting featuring a pool, which would become a recurring motif in his work. By 1967, he painted what the Tate argues is his best-known artwork, A Bigger Splash. It’s a painting of pure escapism, with a sky as blue as the water itself.
‘Sunflowers’, Vincent van Gogh
‘Vahine no te vi’, Paul Gauguin
Much of Paul Gauguin’s work is in homage to French Polynesia. He began his trip to Tahiti in April 1891, after bidding adieu to his family in Copenhagen and old life in France, which included time spent in Arles with Van Gogh before his death. During his time in this far-flung paradise, the post-impressionist painted some 70 works of art. One of his earliest and most famous from that period is Vahine no te vi, which translates to Woman with a Mango; the woman in question was his controversial 13-year-old lover.
‘Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird’, Frida Kahlo
For Frida Kahlo, one of the most influential artists of the 20th century, it was the place of her birth and death – Mexico – that inspired her seminal works. It was the theme that ran through her art, which questioned the female experience, along with gender, class and race as a whole in Mexican society. Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird is among her most famous self-portraits – one of the 55 she painted. It followed a messy time in her love life, including the divorce from her husband, painter Diego Rivera, and the end of her love affair with photographer Nickolas Muray.
‘The Great Wave off Kanagawa’, Katsushika Hokusai
An artwork that has sparked many artists’ imaginations and knock-off Etsy posters alike, The Great Wave off Kanagawa, which also goes by The Great Wave, is a Japanese classic from the Ukiyo-e art movement. The title of the work is a giveaway for the location: Kanagawa in Yokohama, just south of Tokyo, an area that greatly inspired Hokusai. Most likely published between 1829 and 1833, it’s the first woodblock print in the artist’s series of 36 that featured Mount Fuji.
‘Radiator Building – Night, New York’, Georgia O’Keeffe
The oeuvre of Georgia O’Keeffe, known as the “Mother of American Modernism”, spans from tropical waterfalls in Hawaii to desert landscapes in New Mexico. However, one of her most famous paintings isn’t out in nature; it’s in the centre of it all in New York City. Painted in 1927, Radiator Building – Night, New York captures the Art Deco skyscraper of the same name in Midtown Manhattan. The painting intended to emphasise the oppression felt from what she called a claustrophobic skyline.
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