Kehinde Wiley's Santos-Dumont -- The Father of Aviation II from "The World Stage: Brazil" series (2009) is a work of Baroque art in the sense that it expresses a dramatic scene that invites the viewer to participate in it. The eyes of the central subjects, for instance, gaze out at the viewer as though the viewer were the actual subject of the painting rather than the two dead black men whose eyes are fixed at the public. In this sense, the painting is a throwback to works like those of Rembrandt, the Dutch Baroque painter, who often included characters in his paintings whose eyes were turned towards the viewer as though the viewer were interrupting some important action by approaching the canvas. Baroque art grew out of the Catholic Church's response to the rise of Protestantism and wanted to emphasize a naturalistic and realistic point in realistic arts (Johnson 178). It also wanted to showcase dramatic works that emphasized the actual nature of mankind -- that it was fallen rather than born without the stain of Original Sin. Thus Baroque works typically highlighted the human rather than the ideal and the dramatic interplay through light or action...
This interplay is evident in Kehinde Wiley's painting, which depicts the effects of war on the black race -- an effect often overlooked in the social consciousness, which is more typically elitist.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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