Ideas and Forms in Art: Stories on Love, War & Industry, and Women: A Gould Center Passion ProjectMain MenuIdeas and Forms in Art: Stories on Love, War & Industry, and Womentitle pageGallery of ThemesLove: An IntroductionPsyche Revived by Cupid's KissLoveThe Kiss(es) Part 1The Kiss(es) Part 2War & Industry: An IntroductionGuernicaThe Burghers of CalaisY No Hai Remedio (And there’s nothing to be done)War SeriesThe Terror of WarBenin BronzesWomen: An IntroductionWoman 1Yellow Hickory Leaves with DaisyPreying MantraLe Demoiselles d'AvignonDior A/W 2020-2021 Fashion ShowSharecropperArt Can Be HardWorks Cited PageCamille Forteaeff0dff533715f55f73f25b3a8dbe544e019b63
1media/title image.jpg2021-01-22T15:36:30+00:00The Kiss(es) Part 211plain2021-12-04T00:41:06+00:00Fourth, Brancusi (1907) Thoughts: simple yet ambiguous. Also, why this shape? What does the symmetry of the man and woman mean?
Bonus Brancusi: Meme of The Kiss (1907) Fifth, Kooning (1925) Thoughts: Secretive. It’s dark but only in color. Are they under covers? Are these two women?
21st Century: Banksy (2004) Thoughts: Banksy is great. He got two birds with one stone. Kissing Coppers addresses homophobic spaces and stereotypes of Police Officers.
There are so many more versions of a kiss between two people. It’s an unbelievably common act of love, comfort, and connection. An action like that is what art loves to reflect. It’s one of the most powerful things people love to reflect on- it’s intimacy and time and feeling.