213. 从里到下。。。结构主义基石是什么?来自通用动力联合国投资组合,1970年 by Eduardo Paolozzi 高清作品[28%]

Inside Down Under... What are the Building Blocks of Structuralism? II from General Dynamic F.U.N. Portfolio, 1970

材质 :Photolithograph 尺寸 :38.1 × 25.4 cm Print

图片文件尺寸 : 5630 x 4332px

从里到下。。。结构主义基石是什么?来自通用动力联合国投资组合,1970年-爱德华多·包洛奇(British, 1924–2005)

英文名称:Inside Down Under... What are the Building Blocks of Structuralism? II from General Dynamic F.U.N. Portfolio, 1970-Eduardo Paolozzi

215. 思想者》青铜雕塑`The Thinker, Bronze Sculpture by Auguste Rodin 高清作品[28%]

AF-The Thinker, Bronze Sculpture

图片文件尺寸: 4552×5800 px

思想者》青铜雕塑-奥古斯特·罗丁

-François Auguste René Rodin (1840–1917) was a 法国艺术家 sculptor generally considered the founder of modern sculpture. He was schooled traditionally and took a craftsman-like approach to his work. Rodin possessed a unique ability to model a complex, turbulent, and deeply pocketed surface in clay. He is known for such sculptures as The Thinker, The Kiss, The Burghers of Calais, and The Gates of Hell.
Rodin originally conceived The Thinker as a depiction of the Italian poet Dante Alighieri (1265–1321) sitting in the upper center of a monumental sculptural doorway titled The Gates of Hell (below). Inspired by Dante’s description of a journey through the underworld in his epic poem The Divine Comedy (about 1320), The Thinker contemplates mankind’s fate while gazing at a host of damned figures writhing in anguish below. Stripped of clothing, the figure’s rippling muscles convey an inner, animating life force symbolic of mental activity or creative effort. The figure leans forward, as if ready to spring from his perch, yet seems simultaneously caught in the inaction of deep thought. Rodin produced independent versions of The Thinker, first in this original size and later in a monumental version.

220. 思想家勒彭瑟尔`The Thinker, Le Penseur by Auguste Rodin 高清作品[27%]

AF-The Thinker, Le Penseur

图片文件尺寸: 8450×9800 px

思想家勒彭瑟尔-奥古斯特·罗丁

-The Thinker was originally conceived not in heroic isolation, but as part of Rodin\'s monumental Gates of Hell—a pair of bronze doors intended for a museum of decorative arts in Paris. Although the doors were never cast during the sculptor\'s lifetime, they nevertheless provided Rodin a rich source of ideas for individual figures and groups that he worked and reworked for the rest of his career.
The theme for Gates of Hell was taken from Dante\'s Inferno, and this figure, planned for the lintel on top, was initially conceived as the poet himself. His nudity, though, marked him as a universal embodiment of every poet—every creator—who draws new life from the imagination. In the late 1880s Rodin began to exhibit the figure, sometimes with the title Poet, other times as Poet/Thinker. By 1896, however, it had become simply The Thinker, a still more universal image that reveals in physical terms the mental effort and even anguish of creativity. As Rodin himself described: \"What makes my Thinker think is that he thinks not only with his brain, with his knitted brow, his distended nostrils and compressed lips, but with every muscle of his arms, back, and legs, with his clenched fist and gripping toes.\"
Rodin\'s Thinker exists today in many casts and sizes. More than fifty are known in this size—which is the size of Rodin\'s original handmade clay model.