Fishing boats by georges braque biography
•
The power of sea is on beautiful display in this composition as two weathered fishing boats pierce the horizon line in Georges Braque Bord de Mer (The Seaside), 1960. These boats appear on their sides far from the sea, apparently abandoned and weathered by the salty ocean winds. We can see the blue of the ocean in the left corner, looking calm and distant. Along the right-hand side of the image three spherical representations of the sun are depicted, perhaps an abstract representation of the passage of time or the gleam of the setting sun over the ocean. A rather contemplative work, this composition speaks to Braque’s unique take on life.
Braque uses a mixture of muted and intense colors in Bord de Mer. Grays and dark greens make up the shoreline and one of the boats, while the other is rendered in a stunning and vibrant red, which is mirrored in the piercing sun that lingers in the upper right corner.
Created in 1960, this color lithograph is hand signed by Georges Braque (A
•
Lithograph Braque : La barque échouée
Georges Braque
Additional cultural and artistic upplysning about the artist
* * *
Main works
The Estaque (1906), The Large Nude (1908), The Man with the Guitar (1912)
Artistic movements
Fauvism, Cubism, Analytical Cubism
Inspiration, influence
He began with fauvism, and it was Matisse and Derain who influenced him in his research around color and the juxtaposition of colors. But it was the black outline surrounding the reliefs of Paul Cézanne that led him to cubism!
His contemporaries
Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Paul Cézanne, André Derain, Paul Gauguin
To keep in mind
Without causing as much controversy as his Spanish accomplice, Pablo Picasso, he managed to impose Cubism through a long process of shaping space and researching materials. His "Great Nude", to be seen alongside the "Demoiselles d'Avignon", which ushered painting into the 20th century of modernity, perfectly illustrates the eternal sökande eller uppdrag of this discreet man: star
•
Fishing Boats (1909) by Georges Braque
The artwork “Fishing Boats” by Georges Braque, created circa 1909, is a renowned example of the Cubist movement. This oil on canvas painting, with dimensions of 92.1 x 73.3 cm, depicts a landscape and is part of the collection at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Texas. Braque crafted this piece while in France, poignantly illustrating the influence that Cubism has had on the interpretation of reality through art.
“Fishing Boats” is characterized by its fragmented surfaces, geometrical shapes, and a muted color palette, typical of the analytical phase of Cubism. Braque has dissected the visual experience of boats and their surroundings into a series of overlapping planes, presenting multiple perspectives within a single frame. The composition is a complex network of tilted and interlocking forms that suggest the structure of the boats, the water, and the buildings in the background.
In a rather subdued manner, Braqu