Wind in Paintings for a Breath of Fresh Air | DailyArt Magazine

Have you ever thought of the wind in a painting? How to capture something you can’t really see? It either reflects on the sitters or the elements of the landscape. Let’s look at a selection of paintings by various artists from different centuries and explore how they saw this invisible force of nature.

Waiting on a Balcony…

Francisco Goya, Majas on a Balcony, 1808

Francisco Goya, Majas on a Balcony, 1808

Wind in Paintings: Francisco Goya, Majas on a Balcony, 1808, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY, USA. Museum’s website.

There are two versions of this work and this one hosted by the Met since 1995 has been believed to be a copy. Nevertheless the iconography is the same. It shows two elegant courtesans (the “Maja“) taking a break on a balcony and watching the passersby. They are also accompanied by two sketchy masked men, most likely their “protectors.”

Victor Borisov-Musatov, On a Balcony, 1899

Victor Borisov-Musatov, On a Balcony, 1899

Wind in Paintings: Victor Borisov-Musatov, On a Balcony, 1899, Serpukhov Museum of History and Fine Arts, Serpukhov, Russia. Wikiart (public domain). 

…or on a Hammock…

Diego Rivera, The Hammock, 1956, Dolores Olmedo Museum

Diego Rivera, The Hammock, 1956, Dolores Olmedo Museum

Wind in Paintings: Diego Rivera, The Hammock, 1956, Dolores Olmedo Museum, Mexico City, Mexico. Artsy.

Diego Rivera, known for his communist ties, received medical treatment for cancer in Moscow but later didn’t make it onto the list of patients sent to a cure house. He therefore returned to Mexico where his old-time friend Dolores Olmedo invited him to her house in Acapulco. (A much better a place than Moscow for convalescence, I bet.) The house was located near La Quebrada, which was an ideal location for the painter who painted the spectacular beach and the bay at different times of the day. To kill his time, but also to express his gratitude for his friend’s hospitality, he portrayed Dolores Olmedo’s daughter along with a friend. (Notice the notebooks on the ground, somebody was supposed to study.)

…and When the Wind Finally Arrives…

Yves Tanguy, Wind, 1927

Yves Tanguy, Wind, 1927

Wind in Paintings: Yves Tanguy, Wind, 1927, private collection. Wikiart

Yves Tanguy decided to become a painter by chance. He saw a work by Giorgio de Chirico in one of the Parisian cafes and that was it. In 1924, he moved to Paris together with his friend and poet Jacques Prévert, as well as Marcel Duhamel. By 1925 the city became a hub for the Surrealist movement, after André Breton had welcomed Tanguy into the group. Tanguy didn’t have formal training in fine arts (he was a merchant and a soldier). However he quickly developed an original style and in 1927 had his first solo show at the Galerie Surréaliste in Paris. His style is distinctive showing landscapes with recurring various rock formations which Tanguy remembered from his time as a soldier in Africa.

…and Turns into a Tornado…

Thomas Cole, A Tornado in the Wilderness, 1835

Thomas Cole, A Tornado in the Wilderness, 1835

Wind in Paintings: Thomas Cole, A Tornado in the Wilderness, 1835, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, USA. Museum’s website.

Ever heard of Thomas Cole? Yes, he was the father of Hudson River School, the American Romantic movement in art from the 19th century. Born in the UK, he emigrated to the US with his family at the age of 17. First he lived in Ohio, then later moved to Philadelphia, and eventually settled in the state of New York. He was a self-taught painter since he was trained and worked as an engraver.

…That You Need Some Proper Help

Albrecht Durer, Four Angels Staying the Winds and Signing the Chosen

Albrecht Durer, Four Angels Staying the Winds and Signing the Chosen

Wind in Paintings: Albrecht Dürer, Four Angels Staying the Winds and Signing the Chosen, 1498, Staatliche Kunsthalle Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany. Wikimedia Commons (public domain).

What “chosen” are we talking about? In this woodcut we have a scene from the Book of Revelation in which at the end of times the Four Angels will come to calm the four winds (which are also symbols of the great empires of antiquity). Meanwhile another angel marks with the protective “seal of the living God” the foreheads of all the Christians (Rev. 7:1-3).

More from author

Related posts

Latest posts