Art Of Painting essay topics

You are welcome to search the collection of free essays and research papers. Thousands of coursework topics are available. Buy unique, original custom papers from our essay writing service.

198 results found, view free essays on page:

  • Movements Of Early Contemporary Art
    1,100 words
    contemporary art, the art of the late 20th cent. and early 21st cent., both an outgrowth and a rejection of modern art. As the force and vigor of abstract expressionism diminished, new artistic movements and styles arose during the 1960's and 70's to challenge and displace modernism in painting, sculpture, and other media. Improvisational and Dada-like styles employed in the early 1960's and thereafter by Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns had widespread influence, as did the styles of many ot...
  • Turners Paintings
    388 words
    Outline: Chose an artist such as Turner, David or Hunt and explain how that artists work fulfilled that eras definition of the moral purpose of art. Trent Trombley The purpose of Turners work was to establish a link between sublimity and understanding. Art reflects on the expanding nature of our society and world in general, it was with his paintings that he evoked such change. Even the very style in which he painted differed throughout his career. It is very apparent that he was a man not set b...
  • Upper Class And Low Class
    362 words
    Mystification In Berger's essay, he uses the term "mystification". Mystification is one way to set out describing the ways in which people perceive what they see. When people look at same painting or advertisement, they perceive and interpret differently. As John Berger says, "we are always looking at the relation between things and ourselves" (156). We see things differently from one another and in the beginning we see things, but without language and understanding, we cannot explain what it is...
  • Flower And Bird Painting
    501 words
    Oriental Art Oriental Art is very unique and interesting. It is based on life all around them, nature. In Hsu an-ho hu a pu classifies paintings in ten groups:" h Taoist and Buddhist (tao ship) "h Human affairs (jean wu) "h Places and other buildings (kung ship) "h Foreign tribes (fan t su) "h Dragons and fishes (lung yu) "h Landscapes (shan shut) "h Animals (cu show) "h Flowers and birds (hu a nino) "h Ink Bamboos (mo cu) "h Vegetables and fruits (su ku o) This religious art, including portraya...
  • Five Paintings
    460 words
    . You are capturing your impressions of a scene before you. In art, you are able to make something beautiful out of the ordinary. There is a relationship between artists and the world around them. The world is constantly changing but art will forever remain the same. The works in progress Les Demoiselles d' Avignon means "the young ladies of Avignon". It was painted by Pablo Picasso in 1907. The early sketch reveals that it originally had seven figures, five prostitutes, a sailor, and a medical ...
  • Painting Within Their Souls
    1,326 words
    ... thoughtful book. Girl In Hyacinth Blue - How different owners express feelings toward art Essay written by: bigshaggyArt renders the extraordinary brilliance of peoples' lives. Susan Vreeland's lovely Girl in Hyacinth Blue brings together an artfully constructed reversed chronological novel. A kind of contemporary hiding-place of a painting credited to Vermeer all the way back to the moment the work was fathered. The purpose of art is to provide a sense of grace and fulfillment to the heart ...
  • New Art By Rosenberg And Abstract Expressionism
    3,449 words
    On Art Theory As Art Whether it be writers, painters, sculptors, musicians, or photographers, artists all over the world have striven to show people their views of the world, of people, and even of the universe itself. Throughout history the creative urge of man to present to fellow men a different perspective or representation of life-or even the afterlife-has surfaced time and time again in the form of artwork. Sometimes it comes through genius and complexity, full of meaning and symbolism. Ot...
  • Comes Form Painting
    596 words
    Allen Sapp is a famous Indian artist. He was born in 1928 on the Red Pheasant Reserve near Battleford, Saskatchewan. He was raised and cared for by his grandmother, Maggie Soon ias because his mother died of tuberculosis. He was a sickly child who was often picked on by other children. He took great pleasure in painting and drawing, beginning at age eight. Sapp married and in 1960 his son David was born in a tuberculosis sanitarium where his wife was sick. In 1961 she got out and they moved to B...
  • Mucha's Art
    679 words
    Alphonse Mucha Alphonse Mucha was born in 1860 at Ivancice in Southern Moravia, Czechoslovakia. He lived in Paris from 1887 on, that is where most of his work was recognized as an illustrator. Mucha's major breakthrough in the world of art and international fame was in 1984 with his poster of the actress, Sarah Bernhardt. Mucha used her on numerous posters. Alphonse Mucha was known for his posters and art work of women, and commercial posters (with women). His work was always precise and always ...
  • New Paintings From Rembrandt
    1,367 words
    The Curious Life, Art, Fame, and Success of Rembrandt van Rijn Perhaps one of the most admired yet obscure artists in history is Rembrandt van Rijn. His inauspicious life significantly influenced his unique art style that was slightly controversial to the standard, classic baroque art of his time in the early to mid 1600's. Rembrandt was born to a destitute family on July 15, 1606, in Leiden, Netherlands. His future was limited in opportunities due to his lack of money to finance anything that m...
  • Post Impressionistic Style Of Painting
    604 words
    During the Modern Era of the late 19th century and the early 20th century, many artists were turning away from the idea of painting realistic images. Photography, having just been developed for public use a few decades earlier, made artists of the day focus less on painting as an precise copy of what is seen, as had been done for centuries. Since the Middle Ages, most artists painted exact representations of life. Starting in the late 1800's, though, many artists were starting to embrace the the...
  • Opposite Of Conceptual Art The Artist Looks
    437 words
    Art Paper Number One Balance- The definition in my words is all of the elements in the art come together to achieve unity. A good example is Paul C zanne's Basket of Apples -this has a nice blend of paints to achieve balance. It is aesthetically pleasing to the eye. Conception- Conception is the emotional idea that comes from the artist to make a work of art. A good example is Deboya's Que Hai Que Hacermos It shows a man being castrated by a bunch of soldiers it clearly shows the artist theme. C...
  • Real Life The Moon And Stars
    346 words
    The painting I have picked is Vincent Van Gogh's The Starry Night, which was done on oil canvas, in 1889. I'm not really familiar with Van Gogh's work, but this is one piece of work of his that stands out to me. Vincent Van Gogh's Starry Night is an excellent painting in which Van Gogh paints a picture that is colorful and descriptive. This painting can be described as puzzling and fascinating. It can signify a variety of moods, objects, and atmosphere. Artwork can be, and was, found around the ...
  • My Favorite Work Of Art
    562 words
    I went to the art museum and I really enjoyed it. I saw the art works as much as I could even though it was my third time; I think it's something that you can never get bored. In the art museum there was a statue at the entrance, which was showing the multi color culture of Denver, yellow, white, and black race. The building itself is a 28-sided, sculpture and designed by Gio Pont i of Italy (old roman) in collaboration of Denver. The works were the largest and most comprehensive collection of w...
  • Of Hopper's Paintings
    1,477 words
    Edward Hopper was born in the small Hudson River town of Nyack, in New York, on 22 July 1882. He lived in a middle-class family who owned a dry goods shop where he worked when he was a boy. By the time he was 17 he had decided to be an Artist, but his parents persuaded him to begin by studying commercial illustration, which they thought was a more secure career path to take. He began studying at the New York School of Illustrating, but a year later transferred to the New York School of Art where...
  • Monet's Painting
    1,128 words
    One sweltering summer day, as my mother and I were visiting the impressionism exhibit at the National Museum of Art in Washington DC, she turned to me and asked about my favorite piece of art. The impressionist artist Claude Monet immediately came into mind. He has been one of my favorite artists for my whole life. Monet's paintings radiate peace and harmony and allow the viewer to place themselves inside the scene and enjoy the sheer beauty of the setting. Monet's refreshing scenes have created...
  • Painting By Salvador Dali
    813 words
    The art world is a place where only a few can venture, a world where it seems the senile and mentally deranged get the spotlight. Salvador Dali was no different, expressing his imagination as revealed in his dreams. When you observe a painting by Salvador Dali you may ask yourself what could he have possibly been thinking of when created this image, or was he thinking? Maybe he was just letting the paintbrush flow across the paper, we may never know but we can choose to interpret. Salvador Dali'...
  • Keats Views Art
    564 words
    The Ode on a Grecian Urn squarely confronts the truth that art is not "natural", like leaves on a tree, but artificial. The Ode on a Grecian Urn squarely confronts the truth that art is not "natural", like leaves on a tree, but artificial as terms of pure, "natural", nonrepresentational music prolonged in time. Keats expresses his thoughts and feelings about creation, expression, audience, sensation, thought, beauty, truth, and the fine arts. The Urn is an experiment in thinking about art in ter...
  • Abstract Art
    1,303 words
    Abstract Expressionism Abstract Expressionism: Abstract Expressionism Essay, Research Paper Abstract Expressionism: Since the World War II the paintings' movement had gathered considerable momentum. The political realities of the time- from 1943 to early 1950's- the War, the Holocaust in Europe, the apparent threat of the world destruction by atomic bomb, the conservative reaction of McCarthyism in United States and even intensified hourly burly of city life-resulted in a movement called Abstrac...
  • March Of Liberty
    224 words
    Arnold Mesches uses a direct and outspoken type of art to present the work, Art In Public Places I. He is an abstract expressionist who's work has become less literal in the past few years. Mesches started exhibiting in 1945 with the support of his wife. Meshes has a very original way of making his work. He takes a very famous painting, paints it on the canvas, then he blends over it by scratching and scraping. Then he paints over the old one with one of his own. Thus, creating a whole new paint...

198 results found, view free essays on page: