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18: Deadly Roses & Haunting Wells: Hokusai - House of Plates, 1832 / Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh - Perfumed Death, 1921

18: Deadly Roses & Haunting Wells: Hokusai - House of Plates, 1832 / Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh - Perfumed Death, 1921

FromArt Slice - A Palatable Serving of Art History


18: Deadly Roses & Haunting Wells: Hokusai - House of Plates, 1832 / Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh - Perfumed Death, 1921

FromArt Slice - A Palatable Serving of Art History

ratings:
Length:
61 minutes
Released:
Dec 30, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Spookephanie Dueñas and Russell Cryptmaker are back for this special Creature Double Feature episode:Pick up our new Art Slice Museum Shirt by Son Siwakorn here: https://www.artslicepod.com/shopBe sure to listen to all the cuts that didn’t make it into the episode (and there are plenty in this one) on our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/artslicepodHere to lift the spooky spirits, Spookephanie and Russell discuss - not one but two - ghoulish works, from two different continents, separated by a century, but sharing eerie similarities like gruesome stories of doomed protagonists:A woodblock print, House of Plates, 1831-32 by Japanese Ukiyo-e master Katsushika Hokusai and the overlooked Scottish mixed media artist Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh’s painting, La Mort Parfumée (Perfumed Death) from 1921.In Part One, they briefly discuss the environment in which Ukiyo-e blossomed in 17th - 19th century Japan, 3 ghostly prints from Katsushika Hokusai’s series One Hundred Ghost Stories and the Featured: House of Plates print while discovering that Okiku’s story ends . . . well (no bueno).In Part Two, they introduce the 1913 play, La Pisanelle written by Gabriele D’ Annunzio* which inspired Margaret’s Featured work: La Mort Parfumée (perfumed Death). They also dive into Margaret’s life as she rejected Victorian gender roles and ideologies; her mesmerizing work, which embodied the Glasgow Style, as well as her overlooked contributions to art history, especially the Arts and Crafts and Art Nouveau movements that would inspire artists like Gustav Klimt from Vienna.Topics include: Weird Al & Hawaiian shirts, triggering Glassdoor HR responses, playing pinball with plate-bodied ghosts and big, floppy bow ties.The Art Pantry this week is Rhythm.Special thanks to Bryan Knotts, https://bryanknotts.com/ designer of our Art Slice pizza box logo, for lending us his voice for the Creature Double Feature intro. Check out Austin’s beautiful, lost-wax technique jewelry on Instagram: @spicywitchsoupCheck out the new Art Crime podcast Caper:https://ochentastudio.com/caper-podcast Reviewing, subscribing, liking, and sharing really helps support the show:Follow us on twitter, tiktok, youtube, and instagram all @artslicepodYou can also support us on Patreon here and/or grab some merch: https://www.artslicepod.com/shopAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
Released:
Dec 30, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (50)

A humorous, inclusive, and Palatable Serving of Art History, brought to you by visual artists and Art Historian Stephanie Dueñas and Russell Shoemaker. We cover Art History in a totally different way - without all the gatekeeping, privilege, and that cognitive fog called ‘art speaking’. We dig into the famous artists you may have slept through during your Art History lectures, and the ones that have been left out; possibly due to their ethnicity, gender, race, sexual identity, or lack of institutional access. We talk about the context of the time, relate it to today and then we discuss the actual artwork: what’s in it, what it’s about, what’s it made from - is it any good? All from an artist’s perspective, and then we decide if it goes in the eclectic Art Slice Museum - which is definitely real and NOT imaginary. Oh… and we have to keep our hungry, hungry Pantrémons satiated by feeding them practical descriptions of art mediums and movements from our Art Slice Pantry, or they might eat us. Follow along with the images we discuss at artslicepod.com or @artslicepod on Instagram.