Sunday, July 26, 2020

Bare Minimum

Alterations by Will Wilson (1957 - )

Will Wilson is an American artist whose style might be described as New Classicism. His painting titled Alterations is in a similar vein to the paintings that the artist Edouard Danton made in his father's sculpture studio.

Casting from Life by Edouard Danton (1848 - 1897)

Both paintings perfectly capture the matter-of-fact attention that an artist gives to the work in progress as against, as some might suspect, day dreaming on the charms of his nude model.

In my book Notes on the Nude I delve deeper into the working relationship between artist and model. The human body is less alluring nude than when dressed. If one of my regular models had posed in the flimsy white dress she wore on arrival, I would have been lost beyond recall. But as soon as she took it off we were back to our work-a-day relationship. 

As a sculptor I can recognize every detail in Edouard Danton's painting and those who have taken a life cast from the model will relate to the concentrated effort involved. 

The same goes for Will Wilson's painting, especially as at the moment I'm working on ideas for my Caribbean fashion label Bare Minimum. The label's objective is keeping cool in the tropics and my material of choice is 100% cotton voile; a fabric that is light as a feather and semi-sheer. As a natural fiber it lends itself to dying. The gathered samples shown pinned to my dress maker's mannequin were dyed from the clay I use for my sculpture. 



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