Showing posts with label geocoded Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label geocoded Art. Show all posts

Monday, January 30, 2017

Dozens of Paintings of Rome Geocoded

Painters of many nations have been enchanted by the Eternal City,  and have tried to capture on canvas some of the grandeur, the glory and the significance of the place.  

Over the centuries, different viewpoints have focused on the splendor of the symbols, or on what the lessons that might be learned from contemplating what was lost.

With the exception of Ippolito Caffi, most of the fine art renderings of Rome done after 1800 have been done by non-Italians: first by Dutch; then by French, Scandinavians and Russians, then Americans.

Follow the link to see each view, and compare to Street Views today.



Rome: View of the Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano
by Bernardo Bellotto

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

François-Marius Granet Paintings Geocoded

François-Marius Granet (1775-1849) produced a range of indoor and outdoor paintings, and a vast collection of drawings and watercolors.  His subjects were never ornate nor delicate, and the simpler media that he turned to may have served adequately to convey what he wanted to capture.

His interiors are moody, heavy with contemplation of subjects that do not benefit from speculation in the light of day.  The exterior views, mostly in the area of Rome, rarely include the people that were central to interior scenes.  Bright sunshine is a rarity, though they are in central Italy; he seems more interested in the meaning of these places than in their beauty.



Tivoli
by Fracois-Marius Granet

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg Paintings in GeoCodedArt

Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg (1783-1853) painted architecturally specific views of sites in Rome just as he saw them, and included just as much detail on the people moving past his locations, whatever their state of decay.  Most of his works have a crystal clear light more common to his native Denmark, rather than the golden glow that is associated with Rome.
For an artist whose renderings of buildings had the precision of a draftsman, he did as many fine works capturing human forms in a wide range of natural states;  most are not in formal poses though portraits are also part of his varied catalog.  In later years, and on return to northern climates, he did a number of marine works, again faithfully detailing the features of large ships that were essential to their good function.

The Stairs to the Santa Maria in Aracoeli in Rome
by Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Franz Ludwig Catel Paintings in Geocoded Art

Franz Ludwig Catel (1778–1856) painted scenes in Rome and southern Italy that have a sentimental fondness for a land warmed by the sun, where life is lived at a pace that is not likely to wear one out.  His views are overwhelmingly in brown and yellow tones, as if every site he visited is stuck on yellowing pages of past glory.  The way of life is a prominent feature in these works, not just natural beauty, nor the imposing architecture. They contribute to what makes a scene worth memorializing, but the way one spends their time while there, and the way it feels to be under the warm Italian sun, make for a more charming reflection.


View of Amalfi from the Gulf of Salerno
by Franz Ludwig Catel 

Monday, December 12, 2016

Thomas Jones Paintings Geocoded

Thomas Jones (1743-1803) painted dramatic nature scenes in his native Wales before rendering a series of works in the south of Italy.  There his choice of subjects might be characterized as views that are  "off the beaten track".  Each of his works around Naples is named with detail as to its location, but the views are unexpected ones, with buildings partially obscured, lacking the majestic profiles of the famous landmarks. They have a freshness, though, that permits the viewer to get a strong sense of being there, and getting the feeling that travelers often experience: looking more at the side of a building than one might like, and wondering if a better view might be possible.


Buildings in Naples with the North-East side of the Castle Nuovoby Thomas Jones

Monday, January 11, 2016

Childe Hassam Paintings in Geocoded Art

Quincy, Massachusetts






Painting by Frederick Childe Hassam (1859-1935).  A highly prolific artist who painted recognizable but stylized views of scenes in many countries. His subject matter covered a wide range, from monumental to mundane; the seasons depicted were from blush of spring to harsh winter winds; pure nature scenes and the most urban location were near equally represented in his extensive output.
Surveying his work as a whole shows him to have a wide interest and curiosity, as well as a generous sense for where beauty is found, and recognizing that attitude enlivens the appreciation of each of his works.




Monday, December 21, 2015

Paul Cornoyer Paintings in GeocodedArt

Late Afternoon, Washington Square





Painting by Paul Cornoyer (1864-1923). Cornoyer works are frequently framed with veiny, willowy trees, and the trees are most often bare; he painted more winter scenes in New York than any other painter.
  In this view there is foliage that is drinking in the early season warmth, and is appears to be getting transferred into the street life below.



Monday, June 8, 2015

Johannes Christiaan Karel Klinkenberg Paintings in GeocodedArt

The Port of Enkhuizen





painting by Johannes Klinkenberg.  Great billowing clouds lend a distinctive Dutch air to all his outdoor works.  Touches of modern city life creep into works that still have some Golden Age romance in them, in buildings which strain to reach the light that animates all.



Monday, June 1, 2015

Hendrik Keun Paintings in GeocodedArt

View on the Houtmarkt in Amsterdam





Painting by Hendrik Keun (1738-1788).  Very clear, unemotional pictures of a busy city, with views chosen to emphasize the role of waterways as the life blood of the prosperous, but not ornate, life.


Monday, May 25, 2015

Jan Weissenbruch Paintings in GeocodedArt

View of the Wall Houses at the Thieves Tower in Amersfoort





Painting by Jan Weissenbruch (1822-1880).  The crisp architectural style is quite distinct from that of his cousin's looser landscape work.  He did not pick the most imposing civic structures as his subjects, though they all include recognizable features.  His viewpoints are always such that a feeling for average street life is appreciated.





Monday, May 18, 2015

George Hendrik Breitner Paintings in GeocodedArt

The Toren of Gorkum





Painting by George Hendrik Breitner (1857-1923).  Breitner stuck with a dark, muted palette; his cityscapes particularly looked like days when the pedestrians would be happy to get home and be out of the weather.  His many interiors and figure studies carried the same atmosphere inside.



Saturday, May 9, 2015

Johan Weissenbruch Paintings in GeocodedArt


View of Haarlem from the Dunes








Painting by Johan Hendrik Weissenbruch (1824-1903).  This artist painted a variety of scenes: interior and exterior, city and country, and did some portraits as well.  The outdoor scenes were more likely not to be titled with a specific location, and those that are named tend not to be the recognizable landmarks painted by so many others in the Low Countries.  In the variety of settings and subjects he painted, they might all be described as "moody". 



Friday, May 8, 2015

Cornelis Vreedenburgh Paintings in GeocodedArt

The Montelbaanstoren, Amsterdam





Painting by Cornelis Vreedenburgh (1880-1946) 

His work is uniformly sunny, and evidently optimistic, infused with all that makes Dutch life such a pleasure.  There is a general haziness in place of sharp edges anywhere; the view always appears to be from the perspective of one whose eyes are half-closed in relaxed pleasure, enjoying the scene.


Thursday, April 30, 2015

Oene Romkes de Jongh Paintings in GeocodedArt

A view of Amsterdam





Painting by Oene Romkes de Jongh (1812-1896). A prolific painter of town scenes in Amsterdam, most often without the specific location included in the title of the work.  His many works are curiously monochromatic: brownish buildings against a drab sky.  Somehow they did not possess the charm and vitality for him that they did for the great originators of the Dutch tradition of painting cityscapes.


Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Pieter Gerard Vertin paintings in Geocoded Art

View of the Marekerk, Leiden





Painting by Pieter Gerard Vertin (1819-1893).  This artist produced many works that highlighted the typical architecture of Dutch cities and towns, usually in a style did not add much drama to the scene.  They were not images that you would remark that they captured a particularly beautiful day, and he did more wintry and snowy scenes than most vedute painters.


Sunday, March 22, 2015

van der Heyden paintings in Geocoded Art


View of castle Nijenrode on the Vecht





Painting by Jan van der Heyden (1637-1712).  The master's deep love of his country comes through in works that feature the great buildings of the great age.  Always fair skies, always the presence of an industrious and contented citizenry.



Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Jan van Goyen paintings Geocoded

View of Dordrecht from the Dordtse Kil





Painting by Jan van Goyen (1596-1656).  The heavy atmosphere in all his works give an immediacy that belies the 400 intervening years between their creation and our sense that we could be standing just in the spot he was, feeling the same breeze and hearing the same activity on the nearby boats.



Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Etretat paintings in GeocodedArt

Laundresses by the Sea at Etretat





Painting by Claude-Emil Schuffenecker (1851-1934).  Many of this artist's landscapes appear to be what one might see on a pleasant walk, not necessarily the most impressive vistas. This image is a merger of these approaches, featuring a landmark feature, a spectacular sunset, and common people going about the back-breaking work that was a defining feature of the "good old days".



Thursday, May 20, 2010

GeoCoded Art on Your Mobile Phone


Geocoded Art wins Wikitude World Cup! Voters picked fine art accessible en site as some of the best content for location-based Web services on mobile phones.




http://googlemapsmania.blogspot.com/2010/05/geocoded-art-on-your-mobile-phone.html
Nice write-up of the Wikitude entry at unofficial google map blog