Steadfast Watch On The River Rhine Painting By Michael Shipman

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All Artworks  ❯   Painting Oil  ❯   Michael Shipman  ❯   Undecided  ❯   Steadfast Watch On The River Rhine
Artist Michael Shipman. 'Steadfast Watch On The River Rhine ' Artwork Image, Created in 2009, Original Painting Oil. #art #artist
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Artist:

Michael Shipman

Title:

Steadfast Watch On The River Rhine

Price:
Not For Sale
Year:
2009
Medium:
Size - (USA):
16 W x 24 H x 1 D (inches)
Size - (metric):
40.6 W x 61.0 H x 2.5 D (centimeters)
Theme:
Edition:
Original
Artwork ID:
341520

Artwork Description:

Michael Shipman was born and raised in Tucson, Arizona, where he now resides. Mr. Shipman attended the University of Arizona with a full Academic Regents Scholarship. He intended to major in Art but found that his ideas were not compatible with the program. He pursued instead a major in Computer Science and graduated magna cum laude in 1995, receiving the Departments Outstanding Senior Award. His Honors Thesis concerned computer visualization. He interned for NASA at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland and for the University of Arizonas Lunar and Planetary Laboratory. Mr. Shipmans time in Maryland gave him the opportunity to explore the Nations Capitol, museums, monuments, and memorials. His experience at the Capitol, together with the atmosphere of NASA, prompted him to return to a career in art. Mr. Shipman is largely self-taught, but benefited greatly from strict foundational training in drawing early in his career from Mr. Don Crowley of Tucson as well as from expert advice in handling paint, canvas, and art materials from Mr. Robert Doak of Brooklyn, New York. In 1998, Michael Shipman held a major exhibit of portraits of contemporary Native Americans entitled Visions and Voices at the Arizona State Museum on the campus of the University of Arizona in Tucson. The exhibit depicts the individual qualities of American Indians in today's society. Mr. Shipman met with each of the participants personally and presented their portraits with quotes from them. The exhibit portrays Native Americans as human beings with feelings and fears of their ownone that does not keep them in the past, but presents them as they are today. In early 1999, the exhibit traveled to Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, and later that year it was displayed at the former Carnegie Library near the State Capitol Building. Mr. Shipmans exhibit Visions and Voices left him feeling that there was more to be said, something outside of the common experience of art that he wanted to bring to his paintings. He needed to go beyond the portrayal of human glory and the suffering of people. This led him to his studies of the book The Bondage of the Will, written by Martin Luther, and thus to his pictorial opera, Das Gold im neuen Altgeist, which took several years to develop. While Visions and Voices depicts the achievements and suffering of people, Das Gold denies the concept of mans self-confidence and glory. Another influence on Shipmans presentation is the work of German composer Richard Wagner, in particular the epic opera cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen, in which Nordic legends and the River Rhine are central. Der Ring dramatizes the struggles among warring forces of spiritual powers in their pursuit to gain ownership of the ring, which is forged from the gold of the river Rhine and represents the force that opposes the gold. These forces are also at play in the opera Lohengrin, in which Elsa is commanded to trust her knight but not to ask for or seek to know his name. A thread that runs through much of Wagners work is the idea that compassion of a mortal man can bring deliverance from the curses that weigh upon the characters. The contrast between this and The Bondage of the Will molds the ideas that pervade Mr. Shipmans artwork. A course on the ideas of German philosophers taught by Dr. Steven Martinson at the University of Arizona during Mr. Shipmans undergraduate studies provided valuable insight into his understanding of Wagners work. Michael Shipmans travels to Germany in 2005 provided an important influence on his artwork. He visited Leipzig, Dresden, Wittenberg, and Berlin and traced the footsteps of Luther through several towns. He also visited Museums and attended performances such as Bachs St. Matthew Passion and Wagners Parsifal. His visits to New York City in 2007 and Washington, D. C., in 2008 provided inspiration for his presentation of Walhalla in Das Gold. Michael Shipman works primarily in graphite, oil, and watercolor. He also works in pastel, charcoal, and sculpture. She does not wear a military outfit; there are no ringing swords or clashing armor on her watch, no heroic glory, not even humble words and sacrifice to bring her honor. The blue waters that cover her and the red disturbance that moves over the waters are her defense. Her watch is true; the line stands here.
Artwork Keywords:   Original Painting
Materials:   Oil Paintings


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