Wednesday, April 1, 2020
A Comparison Between The Works Of Amedeo Modigliani And Jacques Villon
  A Comparison between the Works of Amedeo Modigliani and Jacques Villon    A    Comparison between the Works of Amedeo Modigliani and Jacques Villon    Italian-born Cubist painter, Amedeo    Modigliani (1884-1920) and the French, Jacques Villon (1875-1963), both  painted vibrant and expressive portraits during the early twentieth-century.    In this case, the chosen portraits are Modigliani's "Portrait of Mrs. Hastings",    1915 and Villon's "Mme. Fulgence", 1936.    Both of these compositions are portraits.    Nothing is of more importance than the sitter herself. The female sitter  in Modigliani's piece, sits in an almost dizzying pose with a twist in  her elongated neck (a Modigliani trademark), a stylized and mask-like head  and a columnar neck. All of which give the sitter a blank and  ashen expression. She looks at the viewer, head-on with a most piercing  air in her eyes. In Villon's case, his female sitter has been created  solely with the use of layered colours and a very random synthetist outline  technique (a similar technique the post-impressionist painter Gaugin used).    Modigliani outlines his figure moreso in black than Villon.    Mme. Fulgence's age is understood by the strong dynamic colour quality  that has been used to break her face apart. In a way, these colourful  divisions act as wrinkles. For instance, the chunk of layered pink  on her lip creates a scowl and the heavily applied white on her nose helps  it to seem upright; a 'snobbish' upturn. Colours such as the orange,  have been used to highlight her left cheek and only visible ear.    With these effects, the viewer sees Mme. Fulgence as a very proper and'posh' (if you will) woman. Bitterness is only a common linkage with  the other attributes. Modigliani's Hastings on the other hand seems  to be an intense woman of a compassionate nature. Both of these pieces  have relied heavily on the expressive and wild use of colour to create  emotional expressions and unerring form.    Both of these portraits are created  using oil paints--Modigliani's on cardboard and Villon's on canvas.    The most important element that draws their work away from the mainstream  is their heavy application of paint. Although they both apply their  colour liberally, Modigliani's strokes are thick, jagged, and for the most  part random. His brushstrokes are also particularly long, whereas    Villon's are short and brief. Modigliani uses monochromatic hues  of red to create the prominent colour of the piece and like Villon, he  has used a very vague background to express the importance of his sitter.    Colour is of equal importance in both pieces as it draws the viewer in  and allows the viewer's eyes to be brought around the piece. Modigliani  has split his background from top to bottom, using red and strokes of burnt  sienna at first, then an auburn and deeper red for the bottom. This  definite split in the background creates a base so that the chair on which  the sitter is seated does not get lost and mistaken for part of the background.    The weighty application in both portraits  creates a brilliant textural finish. The expressive nature that is  brought out in the quick brushstrokes is equally defined in the actual  texture of the painting plain. In Modigliani's background, the strokes  are long and applied at a rapid pace. Whereas in Villon's background,  his strokes are shorter and seem to have more of a planned location (just  as Seurat applies his paint).    Villon has placed his subject in  front of the background in an almost symmetrical manner. This poses  the idea that the two really do not have an intense relationship whatsoever.    The 'Madame' is not quite centred to look at the viewer dead-on as Modigliani's  is, her body is shifted slightly to the left. Modigliani's sitter,  on the other hand has been placed carefully on her foreground, off to the  left. This brings in ample space for the chair. Having his  subject seated, Modigliani says more about the subject's surroundings.    Villon has merely placed Mme. Fulgence in front of a green background,  with only the highlights of her age to carry one through the piece.    As stated before, the negative space that is prevalent in both pieces is  highly effective as it does not take away from the issue at hand: the seated.    Both artists have used the application  of their colours to their advantage in creating emotion merely through  its use. Whether the colours are blended like Modigliani or choppy  and difficult to ingest (for the colours are used at their most vibrant  tone) as Villon's are, both artist's used an extreme colour palette to  bring forth the ideal emotions and/or physical standing of their models.    
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