Artist Ken Spirduso with horse Bluff Image

On Portraiture: I traveled to England as an art student with the intention of learning
how the great masters painted. When I stood before portraits by Rembrandt and
Van Dyck, however, I was struck not by their technique but by the humanity of their
sitters. My instructor commented that Rembrandt’s painting of an old woman
seemed to capture her entire life, not just a moment in time as a photograph would.
Van Dyck’s portrait of Cornelis Van Der Geest was similar in its stunning, lifelike
quality. Here was a real man from the past, staring out at us from the canvas. So
skillful were each of these artists that they were able to step aside and let the viewer
meet the subjects of their portraits. Their brush strokes, which deftly described the
sitters’ faces and figures, somehow captured their stories as well. The beautiful
layers of paint seemed to melt away revealing people who, although dressed in
uncomfortable collars and lots of black, were not so different from us.

    Next Reflection
© Kenneth J. Spirduso 2007
No part of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without written permission from Kenneth J. Spirduso