Saturday, April 04, 2026

The Saturday Morning Post: Interpreting the Story is Up to the Viewer


The experts are always urging us to tell a story with our art. I think back to my language arts course my first year of high school, in sending a message there is the sender creating and encoding the message, transmitting the message, and the receiver decoding the message. The same message may have different meanings to different decoders. 

The painting above, to the gentleman's family, is a family portrait, an older man with his grandson (yes - grandson.) In the family home, it is a reminder of loved one's. Moved to the man's office, it sends a message of a devoted and happy family man, the kind of man you could trust. A connection between the generations of a family business. 

To those who know the rest of the story, the grandson was added to the painting four years after the portrait of his grandfather, after the death of the grandfather. These two people would have never been alive at the same time. A connection between generations, created in the mind of the artist. 

And yes, it is a grandson.  Babies and young children wearing diapers, were dressed in androgynous gowns until the early to mid 1900's. My father was born in 1927, and the earliest photos of him, were in gowns. The baby photos of my great uncles were all dressed this way. It was very practical way to dress a baby.  

12 comments:

  1. CGI of the previous century.

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    1. Should we paint more portraits?

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  2. I do believe that that is "John Tait and His Grandson" finished by Sir Henry Raeburn in about 1800. "...hanging between the two figures, the watch connects them and at the same time calls attention to the vast distance of time that separates them."

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    1. Could be, but that is not the point of the post.

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    2. What was the point of it?

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  3. Nice work by YP. I didn't know about this androgynous form of dressing very young children. I now wonder if it happened here or in England.

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  4. Interesting that they added the grandson after the grandfather's death. I'd never heard of that happening.

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    1. When I was writing this post, I was reading about the history of the Rip Van Winkle bourbon brand, it is the kind of thing they would have done to connect the generations for brand identity.

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  5. Interesting! Talk about revisionism!

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    1. Someplace deep in the archive is a photo of me as a toddler and one of my great grandfathers, the other one died shortly before I was born.

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  6. That's why I love art in a museum. One can always make up the story if we don't know it. Would be neat to learn the story and what was going on in the lives of an artist when they did a work.

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