time travel tuesday — ferdnand leger
I’d like to start rolling out some features on Brown Paper Bag now that the site is rapidly approaching its two month birthday. I’ve always enjoyed looking at both contemporary and older works of art. After all, you have to understand where the rules came from to effectively break them! It’s also helpful in predicting where things are going and informing your own work.
So… without further ado… I introduce to you Time Travel Tuesday (I can’t help that I watch too many terrible space-related films)! To kick it off, I’ll be featuring the work of Ferdnand Leger, a French painter that was making work in the early to mid half of the 20th century (1902 — 1955).
Originally studying as an architect, Ferdnand began seriously painting at the age of 25. As an artist, he was influenced by a number of different artistic movements and artists, including cubism, purism, and futurism. Starting in 1927, he gradually moved from doing work inspired by architecture was placing greater importance on organic forms. His work at this time was still fairly abstract, until 1945. It was then he joined the Communist Party and his images became more monumental figures, and it was his determination to depict the common man. Ferdnand can be identified as not necessarily a fierce Marxist, but passionate Humanist.
When I first saw his work, I viewed Ferdnand’s later pieces — scenes of popular life featuring acrobats, builders, divers, and country outings. This work still resonates with me — I love the mixture of abstraction and his weighty lines and sharp shapes. It’s also very interesting to see where he’s come from, because although he uses a more illustrative touch to his later work, it still holds cubist tendencies and offers unique perspective.
Images via the Fine Arts Museum San Francisco, Guggenheim Museum, and MoMA.




