Sunday, November 30, 2014

#3. My Unique Artistic Style

My Own Artistic Style

My Style of drawing and making art is in between of Linear & Realistic. Since I was 7 years old I liked watching Cartoons and Anime, being influenced by it, that’s when I start to draw using Ball-point pen, Gel-pen and Crayons as my coloring medium because I like using it to make fine line stroke. And I also do arts like turning spring wires into small sculptures when I was 13 years old.

Mythical creatures like Dragon and Robots are some of my drawings that I really liked because it represent my imagination. Currently I’m doing some concept designs and sketches as a hobby. My style of drawing is Representational Art.




Sunday, November 23, 2014

#2. Artist and Art


Leonardo da Vinci
Painting: Mona Lisa

Artist and Art

Leonardo da Vinci & Mona Lisa
     Leonardo da Vinci an Italian painter, draftsman, sculptor, architect, and engineer. And one of his paintings Mona Lisa or (Monna Lisa, La Gioconda in Italian; La Joconde in French) is a half-length portrait of a woman, which has been acclaimed as “the best known, the most visited, the most written about, the most sung about, the most parodied work of art in the world”. Mona Lisa thought to be a portrait of Lisa Gherardini, the wife of Francesco del Giocondo, is in oil on white Lombardy poplar panel, and is believed to have been painted between 1503 and 1506, when Leonardo da Vinci was living in Florence, and it now hangs in the Louvre, in Paris, where it remains an object of pilgrimage in the 21st century.

The Mona Lisa and its influence
     These signs of aging distract little from the painting’s effect. In its exquisite synthesis of sitter and landscape, the Mona Lisa set the standard for all future portraits. The painting presents a woman in half-body portrait, which has as a backdrop a distant landscape. Yet this simple description of a seemingly standard composition gives little sense of Leonardo’s achievement. The sensuous curves of the sitter’s hair and clothing, created through sfumato (use of fine shading), are echoed in the shapes of the valleys and rivers behind her. The sense of overall harmony achieved in the painting—especially apparent in the sitter’s faint smile—reflects Leonardo’s idea of the cosmic link connecting humanity and nature, making this painting an enduring record of Leonardo’s vision.

The Aesthetics of Mona Lisa
     Leonardo used a pyramid design to place the woman simply and calmly in the space of the painting. Her folded hands form the front corner of the pyramid. Her breast, neck and face glow in the same light that models her hands. The light gives the variety of living surfaces an underlying geometry of spheres and circles. Leonardo referred to a seemingly simple formula for seated female figure: the images of seated Madonna, which were widespread at the time. He effectively modified this formula in order to create the visual impression of distance between the sitter and the observer. The armrest of the chair functions as a dividing element between Mona Lisa and the viewer.
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Vincent Van Gogh
Painting: The Starry Night

Vincent Van Gogh and the Starry Night

     The Starry Night is an oil on canvas painting by the Dutch post-impressionist painter Vincent van Gogh. Painted in June, 1889, it depicts the view (with the notable addition of an idealized village) from the east-facing window of his asylum room at Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, just before sunrise. Although The Starry Night was painted during the day in Van Gogh's ground-floor studio, it would be inaccurate to state that the picture was painted from memory. The view has been identified as the one from his bedroom window, facing east, a view which Van Gogh painted variations of no fewer than twenty-one times, including The Starry Night. "Through the iron-barred window," he wrote to his brother, Theo, around 23 May 1889, "I can see an enclosed square of wheat . . . above which, in the morning, I watch the sun rise in all its glory.” Even given the large number of letters Van Gogh wrote, he said very little about The Starry Night. 

     As an artist devoted to working whenever possible from prints and illustrations or outside in front of the landscape he was depicting, the idea of painting an invented scene from imagination troubled Van Gogh.

     Arguably, it is this rich mixture of invention, remembrance, and observation combined with Van Gogh’s use of simplified forms, thick impasto, and boldly contrasting colors that has made the work so compelling to subsequent generations of viewers as well as to other artists. Inspiring and encouraging others is precisely what Van Gogh sought to achieve with his night scenes. When Starry Night over the Rhône was exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants, an important and influential venue for vanguard artists in Paris, in 1889, Vincent told Theo he hoped that it “might give others the idea of doing night effects better than I do.” The Starry Night, his own subsequent “night effect,” became a foundational image for Expressionism as well as perhaps the most famous painting in Van Gogh’s oeuvre.


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Sunday, November 16, 2014

#1. Arts Impact


“The history of arts and art of history”. The Impact of Arts in our society and culture makes our history more unique and more memorable. Arts in our history act as an evident that they use art to tell a story for us to see, new generation about the life and the event from the past. In Art History, we explore the basic elements and principles of art and its role in human history and the development of early culture. We look at how art impacted cultures from Paleolithic times to ancient Egypt and so on, and explore the factors that affect the analysis and interpretation of art. Creating art is an important part of experiencing life. It allows us the opportunity to express ourselves in a unique form. We begin in Prehistoric art as well as the art and architecture of the civilizations of early men. Historians usually consider works of art to be prehistoric if they were produced more than 5,000 years ago. However, it is important to note that not all societies and cultures developed at the same time in history.
 Ancient Egyptian Art
Lascaux, Paleolithic cave paintings
'Art for art's sake' – but not for many historians. The fine and decorative arts, their styles and iconography, have been mined for insight into the politics, religion and social obsessions of the past. Placing key images alongside the views of six contributors we continue the search.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                             -Alex Potts