Sunday, 21 July 2019

ARTIST’S BRUSHSTROKES AND DETERIORATING VISION



Artist use their eye sight to survey a scene, scenery, faces etc, which guides them over the canvas and provide feedback on the colour and form of the work. Through this article Gaurav Goswami provides information about some of the famous artist who has been known to struggle with vision impairment.

Prime concern of an artist
Painter delivers the three dimensional world on a flat surface. In a way, in which artists depart from reality, by filtering it through their perception into a physical object capable of inducing a similar perception in the viewer. That is why a perfect vision is the basic necessity for an artist, failing which; can happen in old age or caused by an injury, can translate into an eerie loss of precision and detail in painting.

An aging artist’s vision
Studies have established that, the aging eye of an artist makes fewer tears, the cornea may lose clarity, the pupil stays smaller in both light and dark, the lens becomes – thicker, dense, more yellow and less elastic, and the retina loses a small percentage of its nerve cells every year. The artwork produce by such artist becomes complicated as the eye or brain forces them to see their surroundings in ways that diverge from standard experience.

Some famous artists with suspect vision
Many famous artists have been known to struggle with eye diseases that changed the vision of their works later in their lives.

Leonardo Da Vinci
Da Vinci is believed to have suffered from a type of eye disorder called intermittent exotropia; a condition which causes one or both eye to turn outward. Researchers have suggested that the disorder may have helped him because it would have given him the ability to switch to monocular vision, in which both eyes are used separately, and allowed him to focus on close up flat surfaces.

Claude Monet
Diagnosed with cataracts in 1912, Monet was recommended to undergo surgery. Cataracts are a progressive cloudiness of the lens inside the eye, producing blurred and dulled vision that can’t be corrected with spectacles. Claude Monet refused to undergo treatment and visual impact of his disorder is demonstrated in two paintings of the same scene: the Japanese footbridge over his garden’s lily pond. His first painting, painted ten years prior to his cataracts, is full of detail and subtle us of colour. The second painting, painted a year prior to his relenting to the surgery – shows musky and dark colour.

Francis Bacon
The works of 20th century British painter Francis Bacon are notorious for their power to unsettle. Neuroscientists have proposed that painter suffered from a rare neurological disorder called dysmorphopsia, which produces progressively changing and distorted perception. Bacon himself described his perception of faces as ever changing, with mouth and the head in constant motion.

Edger Degas
French artist Edgar Degas, 1834-1917, experienced progressive visual loss in the last 30 years of his life; this was concluded by Ophthalmologist Michael F Marmor in 2006, after he went through Degas correspondences. The disorder has not effect on Degas’s shading, colour and overall composition of the painting, but showed significant impact, as his paintings became coarse and lost refinement.

Distinguished mentions
Cezanne and Pissarro were myopic; which suggests the soft lines and vibrant colour found in their paintings. United States painters Mary Cassalt; 1844-1926 and Homer Martin; 1836-1897 suffered from cataracts. William Turner; 1775-1851 suffered from early, slight colour blindness and later cataracts. Rembrandt was speculated to have vision disorder.

A tricky path
A particular challenge to verify these speculations is that artists are free to represent the world in whatever fashion they see fit. But considering for one moment that these artists did actually suffer from these visual disorders then understanding the challenges they faced further illuminate the accomplishments they achieved.





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