Sunday, March 22, 2020
Monet Painting And Impressionism Essays - Visual Arts, French Art
  Monet Painting And Impressionism    The comments about Monet's painting, Impression: Sunrise, gives an insight to  the artistic vision in Waugh's Vile Bodies and Greene's Brighton Rock.    Monet's Impression: Sunrise is a famous and prime example of Impressionism.    The impressionist style of painting is characterized by "concentration on the  general impression produced by a scene as an object and the use of unmixed  primary colors and small strokes to simulate actual reflected light." (WebMuseum)    Impressionist paintings use light and color to imitate a certain setting or  reality. In both novels, Vile Bodies and Brighton Rock, there is an  impressionistic feel to them. There is a sense of darkness and unclearness as  one reads along, but have an element of ?light' that is present throughout.    The ?light' in these novels are represented through characters. In Vile    Bodies, the story is one of nothingness, meaninglessness. None of the characters  have an objective reality, it's all subjective. The reality is different to  each character. There are concessions to nothing outside the self. Their lives  are portrayed as wasted, as if there is no other purpose to them than to be part  of a society that emphasizes the importance of money and social gatherings, in  other words, a social satire. One source of light in this novel is Mrs. Ape and  her angels. They serve as a religious element in a world that is existentialism  at its' best. Brighton Rock is a detective story, a ?who done it'.    Naturally, being that it is a detective story, there is a dark quality to it.    Detective films fall into the film noire genre, because of the dark element.    Rose is the ?light', it is present with her. Throughout the novel, along  with the murders and crime solving, Rose is the balance, the light. Her good  balances with her husband's , Pinkie's, evil. Pinkie seems to be incomplete  without Rose. Monet's painting seems to be incomplete, or unfinished. And like  the painting, Rose is the stroke of color, that reflects light in the novel.    Being that they are married, which is a holy institution, makes her different  from the unmarried characters, i.e. Ida, Charles, etc. Rose is the bonding  element in her marriage to Pinkie. The comment made by Castagnary, in the test  booklet, "They are impressionists in that they do not render a landscape, but  the sensation produced by the landscape...There they take leave of reality and  enter the realms of idealism", has a connection to the life portrayed in Vile    Bodies. The landscape sensation, which is the world and lives of the characters,  is produced by the meaningless conversation, relationships, and subjective  mentality of the characters. In the essay by Paul Tillich, "The Meaning of    Meaninglessness", it states that, "He(man) has sacrificed himself to his own  productions... He who is in the grip of doubt and meaninglessness cannot  liberate himself from this grip, but he asks for an answer which is valid and  not outside the situation of his despair." This is the case for Adam. He is  searching for something that is not outside of the satirical world that he is  trapped in, created by Waugh, constructed as an example of what the world has  become or what the world is soon to become. The author's, as like Monet and  other Impressionist painters, have an artistic vision that is expressed through  strokes and color and a reality, or lack thereof. In the novels, the strokes are  the characters, and the color is the role that the character plays in the world  created by the author. All the elements come together to form a world, created  by the artist, either with paint or words.    
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