Figures In The Painting essay topics
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Manet Painting
1,206 wordsEdouard Manet Before attempting to anaylse the significance of gender within Edouard Manet+s work entitled |A Bar atthe Folies-BergereX, one must first identify, and note, the somewhat colourful events which occurred within the artist life, and note the way in which they must have undoubtedly prejudiced his work. Born in France in 1832, Manet was raised by his parents Auguste and Eugenie-Desiree; a society couple, who's social standing resulted from Auguste+s successful career in the Ministry of...
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Black And Red Figure Techniques
1,011 wordsGreek Vase Painting In modern society, Greek pottery is considered an art which is regarded as much for its aesthetic splendor as its historical significance. However, the role of pottery in ancient Greek culture was far more functional as its primary use was for the transportation and storage of such liquids as water and wine (Encyclopedia Britannica). Due to the durability of the fired clay material, Greek pottery is the only remaining art form that allows us to explore the evolution of this a...
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Painting Of The Last Judgement
1,732 wordsMichelangelo Buonarroti. One of the greatest artists of all time. A man whose name has become synonymous with the word Masterpiece. The second of five brothers, Michelangelo was born on March 6, 1475 at Cap rese in Tuscany. His mother died young and when he was six he was placed with a wet nurse, in a family of stone cutters. His father realized how smart the boy was, he quickly put him in school, and there he learned and studied Latin. While at school he met Francesco Gran acci, who was six yea...
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Lady Meux And Gainsborough's Frances Duncombe
697 wordsTitle of Paper: fricke collection Grade Received on Report: B The Fricke Collection Lady Meux vs. Frances Duncombe Donated by the Fricke family is a collection housed on fifth avenue, ranging from sculptures and paintings, to furniture of renowned artists. Paintings in particular, such as, Whistler's, Lady Meux and Gainsborough's, Frances Duncombe, are classic examples of subtle yet provocative feminist portrayals. The initial impact of these illustrations is a combination of the surface imagery...
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Commission To Michelangelo
1,395 wordsMichelangelo de Buonarotti, a distinguished painter, sculptor, architect, and poet of Italy was born in 1475 in the territory of Arezzo, in Tuscany. His time was of a new age of enlightenment where artistic and inventive freedom was beginning to come back into the forefront, Michelangelo stands as the archetype of the Renaissance genius, with a talent that transcends time and continues to influence and inspire contemporary artists. Michelangelo grew up and was first exposed to stone carving, "he...
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Raphael's Virgin
1,168 wordsHistory of ART II 1. The Marriage of the Virgin a. Raphael b. 1504 c. In order to obtain a better understanding of this work, the artist, and the time period in which it was developed, it would be helpful to look at useful comparisons of both the work of this artist and other influential work that may have served as an inspiration to this particular piece. Raphael a very well known Renaissance painter was an artist who was able to combine the qualities of both Leonardo and Michelangelo to create...
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Light Figures Of The Painting
662 wordsMcGaharan 1 Jon McGaharan AP Art History Mrs. Johnston 1 December 1999 Botticelli, Sandro. Primavera. Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence. Mark Hardens Archive. By Mark Harden. Available web Botticellis masterpiece, Primavera, depicts a scene of slow moving grace in what appears to be a mythical garden. The actual subject of this masterpiece is unknown, but there are volumes of ideas concerning the purposes and meanings the painting could have. Despite the confusion the painting is widely admired an...
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Joe Bot And Untitled
853 wordsSome works might make viewers laugh out loud; others may provoke a smile while still others will probably induce no more than an un exhibited amusement, (SJMA The Lighter Side of Bay Area Figuration, 1). Susan Landauer says this in regards to the latest exhibit at the San Jose Museum of Art. The show offers a wide range of pieces from the technically proficient to the texturally interesting; all had a lighthearted quality. I found Joe Bot by Clayton Bailey and Untitled by Joan Brown to be two pa...
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Paintings Look
1,856 wordsComparing artwork from The Palace of the Legion of Honor Artwork illustrates what the mind holds and it is there for the mind to grasp. In which way, one may ask The artwork can carry many different interpretations as Leonardo states, in his comparison between poetry and painting from his undated manuscripts, ... your [the poet s] pen will be worn out before you can fully describe what the painter can demonstrate forthwith by the aid of his science, and your tongue will be parched with thirst an...
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Abakanowicz's Work
508 wordsMagdalena Abakanowicz Magdelana Abakanowicz was born in 1930 near Falenty, Poland. Between 1950 and 1954 she studied at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts, and sought to escape from the conventional art forms through weaving. This artist has gone through many significant artistic changes. From 1954-1960 she painted a series of large gouaches on paper and canvas. She described that feelings, "My medium will be a part of my self and painting is just a forerunner of my future". During the 1960's Abaka...
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15th Century The Theme Of The Annunciation
3,493 words14th and 15th Century Italian Art Theme Essay 'The Annunciation' Throughout the 14th and 15th century in Italian art there were common religious themes depicted by the artists. Prominent themes tended to be fixed around Christ and showed stories that had something to do with his life, before, during and after. Each painting was based on a section from the bible. In the 14th century it is the Florentine artist Giotto with his frescoes that adorn the Arena Chapel that narrate important sections of...
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My Personal Feelings About The Painting
1,064 wordsNow resident in France Tadeusz Jaroszynski work has always been pitched somewhere within his European roots and his years spent in South Africa. Born in Yugoslavia to Polish Finnish parents; Jaroszynski received his training as an artist in Helsinki where he also met his wife Karin. They subsequently relocated to South Africa in the late 1950's, where they carved out a unique artist's niche for themselves. Flooded with a gentle melancholia and nostalgia that is associated with the artists Easter...
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Shift In Picasso's Figurative Style
1,247 wordsArt and Society Introduction Each one of the artists I will discus have very different and individual styles. No artist will draw the human figure the same and there is no correct way of drawing the human figure either. An artist develops his / her style through imagination, feelings, or past experiences e.g. WWI and WWII. Over time styles change and a new way of drawing is discovered. Matisse, Picasso and Moore are my favourite three artists and all differ in their drawings of the human figure....
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Geometrical Figures Albrecht
1,673 wordsAlbrecht Durer was born in Nurembourg in May 21, 1471. His father, Albrecht Durer was a goldsmith, he had come from Germany to Nurembourg in 1455 and married Barbara Holper. Barbara's father was Albrecht's master. Albrecht was his father's third son. He was named Albrecht because of a family tradition which he has been the third representative so far. Albrecht had three brothers named Laszlo, Albrecht, and Ajtos. Albrecht was apprenticed to his father at the age of 13. His father introduced him ...
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True On His Nude Paintings
332 wordsAmedeo Modigliani (1884? 1920)? Born in Leghorn in Italy.? Essentially a painter but in 1906 he began to experiment with sculpture.? He worked in Paris for the nest 14 years? Had tuberculosis.? Took drugs and alcohol? Not really an artist of the 20th Century? He utilised post-impressionist delimitation of picture space and cubist restriction of colour.? He constructed portraits, nude, children studies, and sculptures of foreign people's heads.? The Cellist (as shown right) was done in 1909 and g...