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Pablo Picasso
Pablo Picasso – His Life and His Art
Pablo Ruiz y Picasso, painter, sculptor, and printmaker, was born in
Malaga Spain on October 25, 1881 and died on April 8, 1973.Today he is considered to be one of the most influential and successful artists in history.
Picasso contributed many things to 19th century and modern day art and his name is familiar to all those involved in the many different fields of art.
Throughout the seven decades that Picasso produced artwork he used many different types of media. In each piece of art he produced he searched for
new possibilities, invented images in them, and reflected events that were occurring in his world through his artwork. Picasso had many artistic
influences in his life, including CГ©zanne, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Between 1907 and 1914, Picasso collaborated with Georges Braque and together they produced a style known as Cubism. The period after World War I
indicated an apparent return to the art of realism for Picasso as seen in a pencil drawing of 1915, Portrait of Vollard. This small work foretold
Picasso's renewed curiosity in descriptive interpretation, which, for some time, ran parallel with cubism. During the 1920's, a growing sense of unease
was expressed through Picasso's work and a style shift started moving from Cubism to being closer to surrealism (an artistic movement of the early 20th
century that stressed fantasy and the subconscious mind).
Picasso's most well known painting of this time is from 1937, called
Guernica. (Grolier). In the last two decades of his life, Picasso became intrigued by earlier art. He based several paintings on works painters of the
1600's such as Rembrandt and Diego Velazquez, and the
French artists of the 1800's, such as Delacroix and Manet. Picasso tried to break down their work, recompose it, and became even bolder in his
methods and styles of painting (World Book).
Picasso influenced artwork of the late 19th and early 20th Century in many ways. He encouraged other artists the explore painting pictures in just one
basic colour or one certain colour grouping as most artists of the time painted in a wide spectrum of vibrant melodious colours or pastels. Picasso's
own exploration of this new idea was seen in
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Cradles Of Imminence Analysis
1.
According to the first chapter of the book, Cradles of Eminence, the parents of the four hundred eminent individuals discussed in the book are, "curious,
experimental, restless, seeking. They are physically driving, intellectually striving; they respect learning, and they love truth and sometimes beauty."
2.
According to the first chapter of the book, "there is no geographical center for giftedness, no racial or national or cultural monopoly." This means that
people of eminence could live in farms villages, and small towns. They could derive form the North, South, Midwest, East, and West in the United
States. They come from all over the world from Australia to Switzerland to Mexico to Africa. A minority comes from urban areas and even then... Show
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According to the first chapter of the book, the results from Anne Roe's study on the sixty–four "outstanding physical, social and biological scientists"
was that learning was highly valued in all their homes as was in the families of the Four Hundred. In addition, "generally, the fathers and mothers
showed overprotection and also firm control. These children also pursued their rather independent paths and followed their own particular interests
with more than usual intensity."
7.
According to the first chapter of the book, the siblings of the gifted usually follow in their sibling's footsteps career wise and intellectually wise. "The
same striving, driving parents who produce one child of extraordinary ability generally produce other children who are capable and intelligent." An
example of this is Pablo Casals, the cellist, whose brother became a musician and stayed in Spain when Pablo left due to his rejection of the Franco
government.
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Good Artists Copy : Great Artists Steal
"Good artists copy; great artists steal." Picasso
Master Picasso was famous for idea hunting in other artist studious while searching for inspirations and many of them had to hide their artwork
because Picasso would copy the idea and make it look better. Steve Jobs, Igor Stravinsky, and Picasso they all did it. As we say there is no need to
reinvent the wheel. For many years photography was not recognized as high art because there was no artist hand visible in the final image. It was
mechanical so even women could do it, and the middle class could afford it as well. There was nothing prestigious about it simple click, click.
However, many open–minded artists understood the power of that modern mechanical tool that captured light a camera. They were simply paying
attention to what was happening around them; first blurry photographs of car wheel in motion, frozen movement of the horse, ghostly double
exposures, camera saw the world differently than human eye. Picasso was one of the many artists who recognized the importance of the camera in
20th century and used it for his study of his subjects and to capture moments in his personal life.
"For Picasso, photos were very important in the sense that he was modern–he was not having models in his studio. He would do things by memory or
because he had books, newspaper, or photographs, as well as objects that he cherished," Ruiz–Picasso says.
Biographer, John Richardson, is a curator of the show "Picasso and & the Camera" in Gagosian
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The Art Of Paul Cezanne
Introduction Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso were both profoundly influenced by the art of Paul CГ©zanne, somewhat ironically since the latter is
reported to have been quite uncertain of his artistic contributions and anxious about his legacies (Merleau–Ponty, 1945). Picasso described CГ©zanne
as "my one and only master" ; while Matisse noted that "it is undoubtedly to CГ©zanne that I owe the most" . The Large Bathers was one of two
final paintings produced by CГ©zanne in 1906, the year of his death. At this stage Matisse had acquired a reputation as an upcoming artistic leader
via an exhibition in 1905 (Bio, n.d. #1); while Picasso was a 25 year old prodigy who had already secured lucrative patronage (Bio, n.d. #2). The three
paintings of interest must be considered in the context of their artists' evolution. To examine the relationship between the three paintings, I will first
briefly summarise the artistic trends of the day to provide context, then examine The Large Bathers. I will then compare and contrast Matisse's Bonheur
de Vivre and Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, both with The Large Bathers and with each other. Europe, 1906 The turn of a century brings with it
opportunities for reflection about the old and wonder about the new – along with both excitement and trepidation. At the entry to the twentieth century,
social and technological change were continuing at historically unprecedented pace. The signs and pressures of development were all around and
Europe was
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The Life and Art of Pablo Picasso Essay
Pablo Picasso, although usually known as just Picasso. His full name though is actually: Pablo Diego JosГ© Francisco de Paula Juan Nepomuceno
MarГa de los Remedios Cipriano de la SantГsima Trinidad Ruiz y Picasso. His signature is worth more than some of his paintings. In fact in some
restaurants he just drew a quick face and then signed it (when he was famous). He was one of the most well known people in the 20th century. He
was born in 25th of October 1881 in Malaga, Spain, and then died on the 8th of April 1973 Mougins, France. He was a: painter, drawing, sculpture,
print making, and ceramics.
He spawned four children, with three different women:
Paulo who was born on the 4th of February 1921, his full mane was Paul Joseph Picasso, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Rather than adopt the common name Ruiz, the young Picasso took the rarer name of his mother. An artistic prodigy, Picasso, at the age of 14,
completed the one–month qualifying examination of the Academy of Fine Arts in Barcelona in one day. From there he went to the Academy of San
Fernando in Madrid, returning in 1900 to Barcelona.
The years of 1901 to 1904 were known as the "blue period" because of the blue tonality of Picasso's paintings. During this period, he would spend
his days in Paris studying the masterworks at the Louvre and his nights enjoying the company of fellow artists at cabarets. 1905 and 1906 marked a
radical change in color and mood for Picasso. He became fascinated with the acrobats, clowns and wandering families of the circus world. He started to
paint in subtle pinks and greys, often highlighted with brighter tones. This was known as his "rose period." In 1907, Picasso painted "Les Demoiselles
d'Avignon," considered the watershed picture of the twentieth century, and met Georges Braque, the other leading artist of the Cubist movement.
Cubism was equally the creation of Picasso and Braque and from 1911 to 1913, the two men were in frequent contact.
In 1917, Picasso did the set and costume design for Serge Diaghilev's ballet "Parade." For Picasso the 1920's were years of rich artistic exploration
and great productivity. Picasso continued to design theater sets and painted
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Guernica a Paint by Pablo Ruiz Picasso
Picasso: Guernica " I paint objects as I think them, not as I see them." These are the words of the wise Pablo Ruiz y Picasso, a famous and talented
artist in the 19th and 20th century. Many have crowned him the most influential artist of his time. Many of his works including Les Demoiselles
d'Avignon, Ma Jolie, and Girl Before a Mirror have set the tone for many artists to follow after. However, Guernica was one of his most famous of
his pieces, painting a nearly perfect emotional picture of what was happening during these times of despair. Guernica, one of his many contributions to
the art world, will be described first in purely formal terms, and then a comparison and evaluation of three different critiques will be made. Pablo Ruiz y
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The bull's tail forms the image of a flame with smoke rising from it. Behind the bull, a bird with upstretched head and neck, wide–open beak, and
outstretched wings stands fluttering on a table. A white stripe cuts through the gray form of the bird, whose shape and size in the scale of the
picture correspond to those of a goose. On the ground is a head that has no body. The mouth and eyes are wide open. The mouth seems to scream in
agony and the eyes are wide opened in terror. Directly behind the head is an outstretched arm with fingers look like claws. Another severed arm in
front still clenched a sword and a flower sprout out of the fist. In the center of the picture, a horse is displayed in a twisting movement. The horse
appeared to have been hurt with its mouth opened wide braying in agony and the tongue protrudes out of its mouth. One of the horse's front legs is on
a kneeling position whereas the other legs struggling to stand up (Fisch, 1983). On the right–hand side of the picture a woman stretches her neck and
head in a wide arch. Her bosom bared and her right arms hangs limply down and her left arm touching her swollen left knee. She seemed to be
dragging her injured left leg as she sadly looked up. In the extreme right, a woman seemed to be floating in mid–air or falling with her arm extended in
the air and face turned towards the sky. She seemed helpless and is crying for help. A very large female being, whose right arm is thrust out far in front
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La Guernica By Pablo Picasso
Jessica Arteaga
Analysis Paper
22 Julio, 2016
R. Alves
La Guernica
Pablo Picasso's piece titled La Guernica painted using oil paint on canvas. This piece was made in 1937 as a representation of the bombing on the
Basque town of Guernica in Spain during the Spanish Civil War. The horrors of war are shown through his eyes and point of view of what he thought
and believed at that time. Picasso was possibly the most influential artist of the twentieth century, he influence many of the styles of painting used
during this time. Many artist know who he was and respected his ways and creations.
Pablo Picasso was born in the southern part of Spain, in a town called Malaga on October 25th, 1881. He was given the name Pablo Ruiz y Picasso
but decided to only use his mother's last name (Picasso) because it sounded more interesting, unique and fun to pronounce. Picasso was very
artistic as a child and started painting at a young age. He began his career as a classical painter, painting landscapes and portraits but he didn't
really enjoy this style of painting. He wanted to evolve and express himself in different ways from what we can see now from all his artwork. (NAME,
YEAR) When Picasso was 14 years old, he moved to Barcelona, Spain and he applied to the city's most respected school of fine arts. The school only
accepted seniors with lots of experience but ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
(NAME, YEAR) Cubism was one of the most influential visual arts style from the early 20th century. His painting "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" shows
Cubism a new style of revolutionary movement. After that many artist further developed the concept and made it better than before. Picasso was
considered radical in his work – he was a painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist and stage
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Beauty And Eroticism In Titian's Venus Of Urbino
Unquestionably, there is no universal notion of beauty or ugliness. The definition of the term is as ever–changing as our tastes both depending on the
period and world culture. European artists and philosophers dominated (and still dominate) a grand percentage of the art world and thus their
Eurocentric views on what is deemed beautiful or ugly, became the norm but it does not fit the conventions in the rest of the world. A piece such
as Titian's Venus of Urbino is viewed as a timeless masterpiece when it sits on the throne of exclusion in the art world. Eroticism is evident in the
painting, in fact, it recalls the marital obligations of the woman towards her husband. The erotic allegory is even clearer in the representation of
Venus, goddess of love, as a sensual and exquisite woman who stares at the viewer, who cannot ignore her beauty. The light and the warm color of
Venus' body contrasts with the background and dark cushions, further highlight the eroticism itself. Even though this painting was revolutionary in its
time, with Venus directing her gaze to the viewer, it is still considered a nude (versus naked), there is a sense of innocence in her corporal language,
even as she is cupping herself in an attempt to cover her nude body. Thanks to the good use of color and its contrasts, as well as the subtle play of
meanings and allusions, Titian achieves the goal of representing the perfect Renaissance woman who, like Venus, becomes a symbol of love, beauty and
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Essay on Pablo Casals: Internationally Renowned Cellist
Pablo Casals: Internationally Renowned Cellist
Pablo Casals (sometimes called his original name Pau Carlos Salvidor
Defillo De Casals) was one of, if not, the greatest cellists in history.
Casals is easily recognized as one of the master soloists of classical music and he has many accomplishments in his many years as a public figure that
have made him internationally renowned.
Casals was born in Vendrell, Spain on December 29, 1876. He received his very first music lessons from his father (a music teacher), on theviolin. A
four years after that, at the age of twelve, Casals realized he would much rather play the cello instead, and begin lessons with that instrument. After nine
years of study on the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Soon Casals began a great deal of touring across Europe and the
Americas, making his fresh, new style increasingly more and more popular.
Because of his popularity, at the time, the solo cellist performer became a very highly thought of occupation. After his long tour, Casals met and then
joined up with two other famous and acclaimed French performers. These were the violinist Jacques Thibaud and the pianist Alfred Cortot. Together,
these three became a trio that gained international fame as they began touring again for a long period of time.
Casals began his second career as a conductor in 1908. Then in the year 1919, he founded and he subsidized the "Orquestra Pau Casals" in
Barcelona. This was designed specifically to help young talented, and struggling musicians.
The next Occupation that casals took was composing. Doing this, he wrote the famous "El Pesebre" (The Manager), which is still listened to widely in
Spain, even today. Casals wrote and preformed many other pieces of music that are commonly taught in music school in Spain, today.
Being an ardent opponent of Fascism, Casals exiled himself from Spain.
He did this in a protest against the regime of Frincisco Franco. For a time, he even stopped performing altogether.
After this long exile, in the 1950's Casals began being active in music again and he organized and ran many series of musical festivals in
France and Puerto Rico. In
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The Most Prominent Artists Of Spain
Over the years, Spain has produced many significant figures. From sports, to politics, many renowned people have had their meager beginnings in this
eastern European country. Some of the greatest, however, were the artists. Not only did Spaniards create beautiful paintings, but they also birthed
entirely new sects in the art culture. Although innumerable world famous painters have been Spanish, three of the most prominent artists were Diego
de VelГЎzquez, Francisco Goya, and Pablo Picasso. The first of these great painters was Diego de VelГЎzquez. Born in Seville, Spain, in 1599,
VelГЎzquez possessed great talent in the realm of art. His parents recognized this, and at the young age of eleven, he was apprenticed to Francisco
Pacheco, a talented local artist. For the next six years, VelГЎzquez studied under this man, learning the trade, and perfecting the style of Pacheco
himself. Here VelГЎzquez learned to look to nature for inspiration and enlightenment, a value which he held close throughout his whole career, which
is evident in his paintings. In 1617, after his six years of apprenticeship were completed, VelГЎzquez set up his own studio, in which he painted
primary religious works and portraits, but also bodegones, portrayals of kitchens. A year later, Pacheco offered his daughter, Juana, as a wife for
VelГЎzquez. Now the son–in–law of his greatest teacher, VelГЎzquez pursued a career as a religious painter. After painting a portrait of the
Count–Duke of Olivares, he gained
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An Examination of Modernism with Reference to Several...
The terms 'modern', 'modernity' and 'modernism' are commonly used to specify a break in history, marking a definition between the present and the
past, between the fashionable and the out of date, and carry as part of their meaning an almost criticism of tradition. By calling himself a 'modernist',
the artist is instantly free to work on a clean plate, without the limitations of tradition with its set of rules or its fixed criteria.
It is commonly thought that the Modernist movement was only properly established during the late nineteenth Century, being triggered by ground
breaking developments in the areas of science, technology and the economic market. Art was suddenly discovered to be an increasingly useful tool in
science, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Perhaps this idea is more easily understood when in relation to our social plane today, with it?s emphasis on instant joy and fun morality, which in turn
create a confusion between self–realization and basic self–gratification. In today?s pop cult we are imprisoned by a grave contradiction in society. On
the one hand, advertising and marketing have immersed us into a life of compulsive consumption, and we are led to believe that happiness can
easily be paid for at a beauty centre or purchased in a bottle of aromatic bath salts?on the other, we are also expected to work day in and day out, in
order to keep up the organised business corporations that make these products, and are wanted to accept delayed self–gratification. This contradiction
between expected lifestyles have caused us to become ?straight? during the day, and ?party–animals? during the night, placing a strong contrasting
emphasis on time, between the fear of boredom, and the pressure of deadlines.
This idea of time, closely related with the view of art as both pay and display, are among the prime factors that constitute the artistic style called
?Kitsch?, which in turn is one of the most typical products of modernism, because it is in this type of art that this conflict of modernity is openly
confronted. Whilst representing the triumph of the principle of immediacy (instant access, immediate
effect,
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Biography Of Pablo Picasso 's Les Demoiselles D ' Avignon
Pablo Picasso's Les Demoiselles D'Avignon is considered by many to be a revolutionary breakthrough in the history of modern art. Demoiselles is a
"great manifesto of modernist painting" as Picasso had abandoned all known form of traditional art, a radical break from the Western tradition that very
much led to the Cubism movement (Bishop, 2002). What made Demoiselles revolutionary was that "in it Picasso broke away from the two central
characteristics of European painting since the Renaissance: the classical norm for the human figure, and the spatial illusionism of one–point
perspective" (Fry, 1966). Cubism had "destroyed [...] the realist conventions for three–dimensional perspective which had been dominant in art since
the Renaissance" (Butler, 2010). While generally credited as the first Cubist painting, art historians such as John Golding have argued that it was only a
"starting point for the history of Cubism" (1958). Indeed, the picture predicates key characteristics of Cubism like the distortion and break down of
objects and figures into distinct shapes, rather than being itself a Cubist painting. This analysis will concentrate on the elements of Cubism in
Demoiselles and how it led to the movement.
While Picasso's Demoiselles is not a true Cubist work, it was nonetheless a major step towards Cubism. It features nude figures and background that
are so distorted they seem to forgo any spatial depth. The softness of classical female bodies are restructured by Picasso into
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Pablo Neruda’s “I’m Explaining a Few Things” in Connection...
Through their separate mediums of writing, poetry and literature, both Neruda and Allende both achieve a common goal of criticizing the actions of
certain militant forces, past or present, within there country of living. In Neruda's "I'm explaining a Few Things", the Civil Spanish war, sparked by
the forceful and bloody overtake of the current, fair republican government by the Faschist general Fransisco Franco, is the topic of Neruda's disgust
and criticism. The "burning" and "devouring" manner of Franco's revolt changed his political opinion concerning his fondness for the communistic
ideals and history tells he realigned with the Republican Party. This same general theme persists in Allende's House of Spirits as she criticizes the...
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Stones that the dry thistle would bite on and spit out." Esteban Trueba's eventual shift in character due to the violence seen by the military force of
his beloved Conservative party in House of Spirits models after the shift in political alignment Neruda suffers after witnessing the blood shed of the
innocent by the Faschists against the democratic Republicans. Both Neruda and Esteban realize that their current party is wrong in their doings,
Neruda noting to "come and see the blood in the streets. Come and see the blood in the streets!" Colloquial statements and questions such as "You are
going to ask", "I'll tell you the news", and even the title of the poem "I'm explaining a few things" represent Nerudas very personal and emotional
stance on the blood–filled civil war. Such personal statements as "Eh, Rafel? Fredrico, do you remember from under the ground..." and "come and see
the blood in the streets" reiterate Neruda's personal involvement and feelings revolving the civil war. It is clear he wrote this poem from a personal
standpoint, writing of his own personal afflictions caused by the Franco revolt, and not from a observant and unbiased standpoint. The obvious personal
disgust for the "Treacherous
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For Whom The Bell Tolls Essay example
There are many themes that can be associated with the novel, For Whom the Bell Tolls. The story has love, hate, rivalry, duty, war, and several more
topics of concern. However, war plays the most important role among all of the possible themes. There is war all around the characters, but it is not
limited to battles or physical wars. Wars appear between ideologies, guerrilla band members, beliefs, inner emotions, and decisions. In For Whom the
Bell Tolls, Hemingway shows, through war, an example of a ВЎВ°goodВЎВ± man.
After joining Pablo, Robert Jordan constantly is at odds with Pablo. The two are very different from each other in tactics and attitudes. The differences
show how Robert Jordan has the leadership qualities that make him capable ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
All through the course of the story, Pablo is insecure, deceitful, disloyal, and unsteady, while Robert Jordan remains competent, honest, and steady.
Robert Jordan shows the qualities of what a ВЎВ°goodВЎВ± man should be.
Through the love affair between Robert Jordan and Maria, Robert JordanВЎВЇs sense of duty and responsibility towards his commitment to oppose the
fascists becomes apparent. The love between Maria and Robert Jordan becomes stronger as they make love and spend time with each other. They feel
as though they were a part of each other; together, they feel as one. Robert Jordan mentions that she has become a reason for him to want to live. He
believes that death during the mission would be in vain because he would be losing Maria who is the most valuable thing in his life. However, he
continues to follow the plan because it is his duty. Rather than selfishly thinking of what he wanted for himself, he acted upon his commitment to the
Republic against the fascists.
At the point where Robert Jordan really mattered, he proved that he was a good man. Though he is angry, frustrated, and in anguish, he realized that he
had succeed in his mission. He had to overcome strong emotions after losing some of his equipment to Pablo and thinking about losing Maria. In the
morning of the attack, Robert says, ВЎВ°But the pain,ВЎВ± (p.378). Later
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History Of Latin Americ The Infamous Spanish Phrase
Edio Garcia
December 6, 2015
History of Latin America Final Essay "Plata o Plomo," the infamous Spanish phrase that translates to, silver or lead, "money or bullet". An infamous
line used by the most powerful drug lord ever that offered the options of either taking a bribe or murder to get things done in his way. Pablo Emilio
Escobar Gaviria, drug lord, kingpin, murderer, narco–terrorist, a loving father, hero and a savior for the poor people. Depending on whom you ask,
Pablo was either a good guy, a bad guy, or both. Pablo was the boss of a billion dollarCocaine Empire who murdered and bribed the police so that he
could export cocaine to The United States. Regardless of his violent actions and his psychopathic attitude, Pablo was a ... Show more content on
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This soon moved into street scams and other crimes, including selling contraband cigarettes, selling fake tickets for the lottery and stealing cars.
Which has lead up to his illegal entrepreneurship that made make him among one of the richest man that has lived. "He was the seventh on the
Forbes's list of the top billionaires of the world at the age of 28." The crimes continued with Escobar, he made his way on top of one of the most
infamous drug exporting Medellin Cartel in our history being one of the main exporters in the United States exporting about fifteen tons of cocaine
in a single day. His team (Medellin Cartel) spending about two thousand and five hundred dollars on rubber bands to tie up all of their money that
was coming in coming in from the cocaine enterprise. While Escobar was still 22, he met up with the local smuggler, Alvaro Pietro. Pietro was
making millions during the time that he worked under Alvaro. Pablo, smuggling drugs across the city until he came across the leader of the Medellin
leader where he got in an argument with the local drug lord, bigger then Alvaro and killed him which led to his takeover of the Medellin gang.
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Paris Was Becoming The World 's Hub For Art Innovators
Beginning towards the end of the nineteenth century, Paris was becoming the world's hub for art innovators; a place that is widely regarded as the
birthplace of modern art. Artists of all disciplines, from sculptors to musicians, made their way to this city to pursue their passions in a community of
like–minded and passionate individuals. These artists came from all over the world, in a time before the world was made flat with commercial aviation.
Once they arrived, they often found themselves in suboptimal living conditions, sometimes even lacking running water. Despite these obstacles,
Montmartre, a hillside neighborhood on the north bank of Paris, managed to draw an impressive artistic crowd, and would eventually foster the birth of
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This type of artistic suppression was happening all over the world in varying degrees. It drove many artists out of their homelands to places that were
more accepting of their artistic expression. Although Kandinsky didn't find himself in the company of the cubists of Montmartre, his story
demonstrates the artistic atmosphere of the world at the time. Many artists were eager to find a haven where they could freely express themselves in
the company of like–minded individuals, and to many of them, that place was Montmartre. Although there were certainly critics of modern artists
within Paris itself, their general response to the artistic pioneers was more akin to arrogant dismissal as opposed to the outright suppression of
places such as Russia. Another factor to consider is the somewhat overlooked economic theory of knowledge spillover. As described by Jane Jacobs
in the 1960's, it explains the obscure rise of particular industries in certain cities. This concept seeks to prescribe a name to the process of like–minded
individuals who live together in a community sharing ideas with each other in casual conversations and various other exchanges. Some examples
include the steel industry of Pittsburgh, the technology industry of San Francisco, and more pertinently, the art industry in Paris at the turn of the
twentieth century. The theory claims that innovations arise most quickly in areas
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Song Analysis: We Didn’t Start the Fire by Billy Joel Essay
Every song has a story to tell, and some contain hidden stories or lessons, while others are completely blatant. In Billy Joel's song, "We Didn't Start
the Fire," he does not hesitate to be very obvious with what he tries to prove, which is how all of the events in his song contribute to one large fire. I
chose to remediate Joel's song because it spoke to me with historical context. When researching the song, I read a majority of the history behind it and
decided to reflect upon it in a visual picture collage, combining a majority of the elements he mentions with pictures––all circled around a fire in the
middle. I decided to also make red–dyed cupcakes reflecting the fire Joel speaks of and ice them with a flame, yet placing an X over it, ... Show more
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Not all collages involve all of those elements, but any one of those can be used by itself. I found "by adding a 'collage' an artist can change the nature
of what he or she is creating, providing a new dimension for a work of art" (Stern 1).
A collage, in my opinion, is a great way to grasp the concept of Joel's song. Collages allow the viewer to see the art from a different point of view,
and "seeing" a song can help the person to actually see what Joel was trying to prove. In this project, I used pictures of almost every historical
perspective he mentioned in his song, and circled all of those elements around a picture of a flame in the middle. I chose to do this because the
flame is the ultimate theme of the song, and all of the events and people he is singing about contribute to the large fire that begins to grow due to
all of these events combined. Along with placing the flame in the center, I matted it on an orange paper, unlike any of the other pictures, to help it
stand out, since it is the main theme of the song. For those who have a difficult time learning without pictures, this is a great way for them to see all
of the aspects of Joel's song together on one page. As well as making a collage, I also made cupcakes to help
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Analysis Of The Book ' Fierce Invalids Home From Hot...
As we read through this story we become aware of Switters' contradictory nature, rather than eschewing this trait he embraces it. He is a CIA agent
who hates the government. He is a pacifist who carries a gun and so on. Switters and his grandmother, Maestra, come up with six qualities that denote
the wisdom; they may or may not be required for wisdom, but they certainly drive Tom Robbins's writing style. GOOD INTRO
When talking about wisdom to someone unaware of the process to OF becoming wise, one may say that wisdom is knowing all there is to know
about life; another may say that wisdom is having ultimate knowledge and insight through experience. I personally agree with Tom Robbins when he
describes the six qualities needed for wisdom.
For instance, in the novel Fierce Invalids Home From Hot Climate, Switters, a rogue CIA agent, is confined to the physical and potentially spiritual
elevation of a borrowed wheelchair by the curse of a reclusive South American shaman. This particular event occurs early on in the novel and is a
perfect example of spirituality. Both Switters and his acquaintance R. Potney Smithe had spells cast upon them. The shaman, End–of–Time explained
what he had done, but neither of the men could truly believe or understand what had been done. So to test the spell Smithe touches Switters'S penis and
falls to the ground, stone cold, dead. Switters couldn't comprehend the reality of dying from some superstitious taboo. So from that day on he resides
in a
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Mexico’s War on Drugs Essay
Every day the U.S. border patrol has to constantly keep an eye out for the smuggling of drugs by Mexican Cartels. There has been much violence due
to this drug problem that has left many people near the border killed and is allowing more criminals to obtain these weapons. A lot of this attention
goes to the U.S. because many of the weapons utilized in the "drug war" are U.S. made and is interfering with trading relations amongst both the U.S.
and Mexico. With this current violent situation in Mexico this has transformed the flow of weapons to an even larger scale.
During the mid–2000's former President of Mexico Felipe Calderon announced his war on the cartels and led to a crackdown against these
organizations, along with assistance with ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
markets. Before drugs would be smuggled on a major scale, Mexico would supply alcohol to the U.S. when alcohol was prohibited. It was not until
the early 1970's when drug smugglers began to distribute drugs on a larger scope.
During the early 1990's Colombia being one of the biggest exporters of narcotics in history, led by Pablo Escobar, who had a wide range of organized
crime affiliations throughout Latin America. Pablo Escobar was a Colombian drug lord and he smuggled narcotics all the way to South Florida as
when authorities tried to capture him. One of Pablo Escobar's most important alliances was that of the Mexican–based traffickers. Escobar knew that
this was an important trade route because of its geography and how it would be easier to smuggle the narcotics into the United States. This allowed a
smuggling partnership between both countries and Mexico was to eventually lead their own drug based trafficking system with the help of Pablo
Escobar. From the distributed drugs, cartels would take a certain amount of profit, and would use that money to bribe Mexican officials. By bribing
Mexican officials it was insured that if smugglers were to be arrested they would either be let go, the case would be dropped or taking action against a
rival smuggling group by giving away information about the rival's plan to carry
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Pablo Picasso Guernic Importance Of The Work
Luigi Vittatoe
Professor Rockford Sansom
HUM1021 Integrated Arts
October 14, 2015
Pablo Picasso Guernica
Importance of the work
From a patron's point of view, Guernica is a powerful tool that shows the absolute power of art in society. It displays a sign of relevance in the use of
art to communicate serious matters and helpful ideas. Most people may view artwork as things for entertainment; some have been quoted to say artists
are crazy, somewhat lazy. It should be appreciated and understood clearly that the artists are people of sound mind who sees things in the environment
and chose to articulate critical human issues using their creativity.
Picasso; the artist, seemed to be bound by many challenges in his life, just like any other person. He was tortured by the brutal civil wars that were in
his motherland (Spain). The political wrangles went overboard and transformed into brutal killings. The forces from the Republicans that were loyal to
the ruling new government went embattled by the fascist coup that was organized by General Franco. Contrary to his promises of stability and
prosperity in Spain, Franco delivered abundant destructions and deaths.
Guernica is thus important work at the time when it was created. Should we say it is up to date? Of course yes. The prevailing at that time required a
candid and brave way to say enough is enough to the atrocities that were engulfing Spain. Picasso chose the initiative although after being disturbed for
almost three months by
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Africa's Influence on Western Art Essay
Africa's Influence on Western Art
During the mid 19th century up until the Great War of 1914, European countries began to heavily colonize and come into contact with African nations.
This was called "new imperialism". During this contact, European culture was influenced by Africa. The influence of the African people can be seen in
the European society of the time. In the 19th and 20th centuries, modern artists embraced African art for its lack of pretension or formal qualities. In
the latter part of the 19th century, the "scramble for Africa," consolidated at the Berlin Conference, divided the terrain of the African continent among
the numerous European contenders. Fourteen countries were represented by a plethora of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Germans claimed Namibia and Tanzania, and Spain was rationed Equatorial Guinea.
South of the Sahara Desert, there were three distinct types of societies; nomadic tribes in the desert and steppe regions, sedentary farming cultures
located in the savanna and "rain–forest fringe" areas, and the ancient sophisticated kingdoms of Nigeria and the Guinea coast. All three sectors of the
African society had different art traditions. However, all three were similar in certain aspects. These aspects being the similar attention to
craftsmanship, a general use of non–permanent materials, use of geometric abstraction, and religious orientation.
Religion was at most often marked in masks and sculpture. Masks were used in many ritual ceremonies to embody spiritual forces. Geometric and
naturalistic shapes were combined to represent a recognizable human face. As part of the daily ritualistic routine, families would often present offerings
to cult figures, full–body images kept in homes as insurance of protection. The decorative arts, especially in textiles and in the ornamentation of
everyday tools, were a vital art in nearly all African cultures. Wood was one of the most frequently used materials—often embellished by clay,
shells, beads, ivory, metal, feathers, and shredded raffia.
As the contact between Europeans and Africans grew, parts of African culture assimilated into that of the Europeans. Europeans would bring home
treasures found in Africa on
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A New Brand Of Democracy
Demiri 1Albulena DemiriProfessor FeldmanHUMN 110123 April 2016Pablo Picasso: Trailblazing ArtistIn 1907, less than a decade into the new
century, the world was undergoing considerableand marked social upheaval. There was a desire for a new brand of democracy, where the
people(especially women) wanted a greater say in how they were governed, but there were considerableefforts to try and maintain the status quo.
Subsequently, the world seemed like it was in chaos.This schizophrenic perspective is highlighted by the major events that occurred in 1907.In Russia,
the second Duma opens and Russian troops disperse 40,000 demonstrators. InGermany, a conservative coalition takes over the Reichstag against the
threat of a socialistgovernment. The... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
("Pablo Picasso and His Paintings") Many people, such as ourtextbook author Sayre, have indicated this work was notorious, and "an assault on
the idea ofpainting as it had always been understood." (454) But it's for this exact reason that I, personally,don't care much for the work.To me, the
beauty of art is in how an artist captures the subject and highlights aperspective. When the subject is symbolized and represented so abstractly, it
provides a verydifferent perspective and I don't care for it. In many ways, I'm like many of the viewers of LesDemoiselles d 'Avignon, who were
disturbed by the work. (Sayre 454) However, I appreciatewhat Picasso was able to do, and understand the rationale. It's just not my taste.Picasso
clearly saw art in a different way. His emphasis was to view art less from theliteral perspective of what we see, to what these symbols represent. His
radical departure fromtraditional European painting made it appear as though the art world had collapsed on release ofLes Demoiselles d 'Avignon. He
abandoned known form and representation, resulting in what'sbeen called the most innovative painting in modern art history. ("Pablo Picasso and
HisPaintings")One of the steps he took to
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Drug Use And Distribution Is An International Epidemic,
Drug use and distribution is an international epidemic, and each country adapts to the introduction of drugs differently. Unfortunately, when thinking of
Colombia one is automatically consumed with thoughts of a drug epidemic and horrific violence. This is because Colombia has been the host of some
of the world's most notorious and violent drug distributing organizations. The drug trade in this country is a severe problem not only on a social and
economic level, but also on the health of the entire country. The rise of drug distribution in Colombia during the 1980s directly impacted the country's
economic, social, and political systems. And the rise of drug awareness worldwide during this era was directly affected by the violence in this ... Show
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Also, remote plantations that were once used to produce coffee were easily transformed into plantations for cocaine manufacturing. The well
being of the people began to decline in most of the regions of Colombia because local food production was halted since most of the fields used for
food production were converted to fields for drug cultivation. Also, at this time most businesses in Colombia began to lose their legitimacy because
they were purchased by drug distributors in order to be used as locations to launder the money made from selling drugs. In the early 1980s the
drug of choice for drug traffickers shifted from marijuana to cocaine as drug traffickers began using their profits from marijuana to fund the
expensive cocaine trade. In fact, Colombia is estimated to be responsible for 43% of global cocaine production, which brings about 10 million
dollars into the country annually. This helped to raise the country's GDP, and provided jobs for the poor. Though, extreme violence and murder also
became a source of income for some because they would be hired by drug distributors as sicarios, which are paid assassins, in order to attack rivals
and instil fear into the society. The overall quality of life began to decline in Colombia because of the effects of drug distribution in society. Cocaine
dealers were wealthy, extremely dangerous, and hard to infiltrate. Which made it difficult to prevent
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The Drug Of A Drug Lord
Violence. Money. Drugs. Power. These are the factors that are a part of being a drug lord. In Colombia there were many drug lords, but the most
powerful one was Pablo Escobar. In fact, he was one of the most powerful drug lords in history. He was so powerful that he controlled the empire of
the drug dealing in Colombia. He was such a notorious drug lord that no other drug lord would even consider trying to compete with him. Over the
course of his adult life, Escobar made billions of dollars, he also killed an excessive amount of people, and bribed many politicians, making him one
of the most dangerous drug lords of all time.
Escobar was born in Rionegro, Colombia on December 1st, 1949. Rionegro is a small city that is located approximately 26 miles away from
Medellin. He was the third of seven children (3 girls and 4 boys). Roberto, Gloria, Pablo, Agermiro, Alba, Luz, Luis. His mother Hermilda De los
Dolores was an elementary school teacher and his father Abel de Jesus Escobar was an agriculturist according to George Jung. Pablo had always
been driven by his ambitions, when he was just young men, Escobar would tell his folks and family, he would be president of Colombia one day
according, to the author who wrote the article of the about education website. Escobar started his crime life at a very young age when he still attended
school. He would steal tombstones and later sell them in the black market. His criminal career started by buying and selling stolen goods,
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Louis Vauxcelles 's The Exhibition Of Braque
Louis Vauxcelles's mocked the exhibition of Braque's paintings calling them "little cube paintings" effectively naming the movement largely led by
Picasso and Braque Cubism. This name does indeed describe a majority of Picasso and Braques' paintings well, at least in the visual sense. However,
it must be noticed that the pieces completed by Picasso and Braque were not simple or little in meaning. Cubism was an entirely new way of doing art.
The method of realism that had largely dominated the art since the Renaissance was ignored by Cubist artists. This break from tradition was supposed
to help the artists represent their feelings and ideas in a new way, which gave them a better understanding of the world around them. It is also argued ...
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Braque provides an example of this technique in Bottle and Fishes completed between 1910–1912. In this piece, the image has been shattered and then
pieced back together but in a way that which the objects represented are hardly recognizable. To add to the difficulty of recognizing objects, Braque
made the piece largely monochromatic, with greys and blacks in a majority of the piece. It is important to note that although both Braque and Picasso
experimented with the fragmentation of objects in their pieces, they cannot be considered abstract. For example, although difficult to first understand
Bottle and Fishes can be interpreted. The shape of the bottleneck orients the viewer as to where the base of the bottle ends. After this is understood, the
shapes of the fish become apparent. Therefore, it is through the juxtaposition of objects that are more clearly represented to those that are not that these
pieces are understood through. In other terms the bottleneck can be known as the signifier as to what the piece is trying to signify.
The next stage of Cubism is known Synthetic Cubism. It is in this stage of their work that Braque and Picasso more thoroughly explore the same
ideas being discussed by Saussure. Glass and Bottle of Suze was made by Picasso in November of 1912 at the beginning of the synthetic stage of
Cubism. The piece is a collage made from pasted paper, gouache,
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Tonight I Can Write By Pablo Neruda
1 / 5
Batool Alhalwachi 10N Page 1
Mr. Ali Alshehab
English
23 November 2016
Tonight I Can Write... "Tonight I can write..." is one of the best poems written by the great Pablo Neruda. He was known as a poet when he was 10
years old. He wrote in many different styles, including passionate love poems such this chosen poem. This is one of the greatest poem I've ever
came across. Pablo really expressed his love and feelings towards his no longer loved one. Reading this poem showed me how loyal and strong he is
as well as remembering all the memories whether they were a happy memories or sad ones. This poem also shows the reader from the beginning, how
their relationship was kind of great and then how things got escalated quickly and the conflict that he was fighting between himself when he couldn't
forget her. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The poem begins with a statement which is repeated 3 times throughout the poem in line 1, 5 and 11 which created rhythm. This helps the reader to
come back to that phrase and be able to fully understand the depth of what the writer is feeling.
Next, when the writer said "The night is shattered and the blue stars shiver in the distance", he used imagery which is when words are used to create
visual images. In this line, the writer creates an image of the night's sky in readers mind and describes them as far away. These
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The Contributions Of Pablo Picasso Essay
Pablo Picasso, a standout amongst the most perceived figures of the twentieth century workmanship who co–made such styles as Cubism and
Surrealism, was additionally among most imaginative, persuasive, and productive specialists ever. He was conceived Pablo Ruiz Picasso on
October 6, 1881, in Malaga, Spain. He was the principal offspring of Jose Ruiz y Blasco and Maria Picasso y Lopez. His dad was a craftsman and
educator of workmanship at the School of Fine Arts, furthermore a caretaker of historical center in Malaga, Spain. Picasso started contemplating
workmanship under his dad 's tutelage, proceeded at the Academy of Arts in Madrid for a year, and went on his bright investigations of the new
skylines. He went to Paris in 1901 and found the earth helpful for his analyses with new workmanship styles. Gertrude Stein, Guillaume Apollinaire,
and AndrГ© Breton were among his companions and authorities. Always redesigning his style from the Blue Period, to the Rose Period, to the
African–affected Period, to Cubism, to Realism and Surrealism he was a pioneer with a hand in each workmanship development of the twentieth
century. He made some gentler and neo–great works of art amid his collaboration with the Russian Ballet of Sergei Diaghilev in Paris. In 1917
Picasso joined the Russian Ballet on visit in Rome, Italy. There he experienced passionate feelings for Olga Khokhlova, an established ballet performer
from the Russian honorability (her dad was a General to the Russian
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Pablo Casal Research Paper
Pablo Casals is remembered as one of the greatest cello players and composers of the twentieth century. Pablo was born in Spain in 1876 he lived
with his parents who were also very dedicated to music. Pablo's father was a church organist and would play to Pablo when he was an infant. By
the time he was the age of four he had successfully learned how to play the piano and at age five he joined the church choir his father played for.
When Pablo was ten years old he could already play the piano, violin, and organ. He had helped his father compose several pieces through out the
years. Pablos parents continuously argued about his future career, his father wanted him to study carpentry but his mother would not hear of it. His
mother enrolled him... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The translation is " I am black but comely, daughters of Jerusalem. Therefor, the king delighted in me, and brought me into his chamber and said unto
me: arise my love and come, for lo, the winter is past, the rain is over and gone, the flowers appear on the earth, the time of pruning is come.
Alleluia!" published by New York tetramusic Corp in 1966. When researching I did not find one piece of information of where and why Nigra sum
was written if I were to guess I would guess that the song is not about him but about how he feels other people are treated or putting the listener
/ audience to see the world through someone else
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Representations Of Diego VelпїЅzquez's Las Meninas
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1
of 3
ZOOM
Have you ever wondered why artists make different variants of their fellow designers work? The incident I will be telling you about is when Pablo
Picasso made 58 renditions of Diego VelГЎzquez's painting 'Las Meninas.' This is a very unique piece of art that has been well known in the art
industry for the different variations that were made of it. In my essay I will be giving a description of the original piece of art, talking about why he
made 58 depictions of 'LasMeninas' and what they consisted of, as well as comparing and contrasting the authentic paintingto the modified ones. As we
look at the original painting we see several girls huddled around a princess. In the background we see Diego VelГЎzquez examining the women as he
begins to paint. I believe that VelГЎzquez was trying to illustrate that without the help of lower class individuals the princess or any person in power
couldn't be successful. One reason I believe this is because SeГ±or VelГЎzquez's title of the painting, 'The ladies in waiting.' This is the english
translation of the Spanish words 'Las Meninas.' Although the main character seems to be the princess the maids are included in the title and his picture
which to me shows their significance. I think he created this painting because he wanted to explain something that he felt was important in a piece of
art. I believe this is because of what he centered the piece around. His painting made clear that he was trying to show the
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Public Art Essay
Public Art "Any drawn line that speaks about identity, dignity, and unity is art," (Chaz Bojorquey) is a statement that I agree with. Art is perceived
differently from all people based on their culture, religion, personal taste, and many other factors. I believe that as long as what has been created is
meaningful to either the creator or even to somebody that is viewing it, it should be considered art. Art in the public is a very controversial subject
that brings up the important question of, "Should public art be considered as real art," personally I think that it should be. I believe that the difference
between art that is placed in a gallery and art that is visible by a community is the fact that what is acceptable in a gallery... Show more content on
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Another possibly positive outcome of art in the public could be the affect that it may have on the younger generations. If children are being raised
in a community where they can see art on a daily basis then I believe it will have a positive effect on their lives by allowing them to learn how to
appreciate art and what it has to offer. Art being in the public is also a way to grant people, who do not have enough money to enjoy the luxury of
going to a gallery, the pleasure of seeing something aesthetically appealing on a regular basis. It also makes a town more interesting to visit; no
one wants to visit a town with not much excitement. I once went to an art festival in Baltimore, Maryland, where they had green marbles ground
up and put into the black top roads. This sight alone made my heart race and made this town more exciting. For towns that may have tourism it
could be a way to attract to coming there or maybe even staying. Art can also be a controversial at the same time. There are many people who
express their idea of art in a way that, in my opinion, should not be seen by the public. For example, many people consider paintings of naked
women to be art, as do I, but I do not think it is appropriate for a painting of that nature to become a piece of public art. Another example is people
who use profanity in their art. Swearing is not appropriate for a child to see painted on the side of their neighborhood buildings. The thing
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Analysis Of The Postman
Next is Antonio Skarmeta. He was the author of the novel The Postman. He published many novels, plays and stories, and created a text with
Neruda as a character. Allende's rise and fall is the historical background and he tells the story of the son of a fisherman, Mario Jimenez, who loves
poetry and Neruda's poems. The story tells Mario Jimenez, a fictional postman, who befriends the real life poet Pablo Neruda. The story begins in
1969, in the little village of Isla Negra, off the coast of Chile. The Postman was published in 1985. In 1970, Salvador Allende was the world's first
democrat and Marxist president. He progressed the extensive program of nationalization and radical social reform. He reigned only for three years and
was ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Next is Roberto Bolano, a homosexual writer and photographer. He was born in Chile in 1955 but moved to Mexico with his family at the age of
15. He dropped out of school and decided he would be a poet. In 1973, he was inspired by Salvador Allende's victory in Chile, so he decided to
return to Chile. He ended up arrested and imprisoned for several days, and released only because two guards remembered him as a former
schoolmate and sneaked him out. Then he only stayed in Chile for a few months and left Chile for the rest of his life. He made his home in
Mexico, Spain and Europe. His work is inseparable between the relationship of life and literature. He intertwines the danger of life and literature.
For example, in the story of "Mauricio ("The Eye") Silva, "Mauricio Silva, also known as "The Eye," always tried to avoid violence, even at the
risk of being considered a coward, but violence, real violence, is unaboidable..." (106); and the story ended with saying that "The Eye" was so upset
and weeping uncontrollably. The "Eye" probably signifies someone who "sees" things in life. Throughout the story, it depicts Mauricio going through
a lot trials and tribulation. He witnesses and observes sufferings everywhere he trods, from Chile to Mexico to India to the brothel and Berlin.
Injustice and violence seem to be twisted in all direction and at every turn. For instance, on a trip to India The Eye rescued two young boys,
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Black Hawk Down Essay
Black Hawk Down A Story Of Modern War
Mark Bowden is a teacher, columnist for Atlantic Monthly, playwright, and a writer. His book Black Hawk Down A Story of Modern War a world
wide bestseller that spent more than a year in the New York Times bestseller list and was a finalist for the National Book Award. Bowden also worked
on the script for Black Hawk Down, a film version of the book, directed by Ridley Scott. Bowden is also the writer of the bestseller Killing Pablo
The Hunt for the World's Greatest Outlaw in 2001, which tells the story of the hunt for Colombian drug lord billionaire Pablo Escobar. He is the
author of Doctor Dealer published in 1987, Bringing the Heat made in1994, Our Finest Day made in 2002, and also Finders Keepers ... Show more
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troops on a hopeless humanitarian mission pulled out of Mogadishu, Somalia. A few Americans realize that during this mission, U.S. troops had
the most continuous and gruesome battle fought by American's since the Vietnam War. The afternoon of October 3rd, 1993, soldiers of Task Force
Ranger, and Delta Force were sent to capture two lieutenants of a rebel Somalian warlord and return to base. This mission was supposed to take 30
min, but instead, the soldiers were pinned down in the middle of Mogadishu market and in a desperate effort of kill or be killed. For about 20 hours,
U.S. soldiers created a bloody firefight that resulted in 19 American fatalities and the death of 1000 Somali fighters. Black Hawk Down tells the story
of that desperate battle, from all angles of the war.
An external conflict is the U.S army trying to help the people of Somalia from the vicious militia warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid without any help
from their allies. Another external conflict is the hostages that were taken by the Somali Militia and held out for ransom. An internal Conflict is the
extreme heat making it harder for the U.S to get around without dehydration. Another internal conflict is death because you can never tell when it will
happen and to whom.
Bowden shows the gruesome effect of war by not covering up any of the details that he has learned from his sources that were in the war (found in the
back of
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The Starry Night By Vincent Van Gogh
The Starry Night, 1889 is a painting by Vincent Van Gogh while he was in an Asylum at Saint Remy de Provence. It portrays the view of the sunrise
and the small village from the east facing window in Van Gogh's room.
The Starry Night is one of Van Gogh's finest works, displayed in the Museum ofModern Art, New York since 1941. Van Gogh during his stay at the
Asylum, is where he began producing some of his well–known paintings of his career, and The Starry Night is one of them. He was permitted with a
ground floor studio which he produced his paintings, but The Starry Night was the view he saw from his room which he stayed in but because he
painted downstairs in the studio he was permitted with, so some of The Starry Night was painted from memory. When Van Gogh, was painting The
Starry Night which had a more powerful, emotional impact than his other works due to the attacks, and emotional breakdowns, he was going through
during his stay at the Asylum. The Starry Night is more about Van Gogh's imagination because at his stay in the Asylum, when he had wrote a letter to
his brother Theo which said ''through the iron–barred window. I can see an enclosed square of wheat...above which in the morning, I watch the sun
rise in all its glory''. As stated in the letter by Van Gogh to his brother where he talks about the iron–barred window, which is not in the painting and is
the main focus because of how he says ''Square of wheat...'' which shows he only saw parts of things separated by the
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Leo Steinberg Flatbed Picture Plane Analysis
In the late 1950s, Rauschenberg began to make the groundbreaking works he dubbed Combines. These works inspired Leo Steinberg's theorization of
the "flatbed picture plane." This term was posited in his essay "Reflections on the State of Criticism." The essay's first manifestation was as a lecture
given at the Museum of Modern Art in March 1968, and was subsequently published in Artforum in 1972. Notably, it was also the title essay in
Steinberg's book Other Criteria: Confrontation with Twentieth–Century Art, of 1972. Steinberg's notion of the flatbed picture plane has several facets.
This picture plane relies on the actual flatness of the painting's surface, the horizontality of the work's construction and reception, an interaction between
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Unlike canvas or paper, printing stones and plates can only be worked on while they are flat. The weight of the lithography stones, the acid bath of
etchings, and the carving of woodcuts do not allow for any other orientation. Furthermore, presses are always kept horizontal; any other orientation
would not create enough pressure to transfer the image to paper. Rauschenberg's affinity for lithography (I am suggesting) is foreshadowed in his
Combines as well as in his early indexical works. In fact, it can be asserted that critical concerns like the flatbed and the index better suit his lithographs
than his other
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Review Of George Braque 's ' The Artist Who Painted Their...
Clarissa Kirsch–Downs
Dr. Conaty
ARTH 150
8 December 2015
Cubism
In art history 150, we are learning about different artworks and the strategies of the artist who painted their artwork. I selected my artwork because of
the funky style and mystery behind the painting itself. It's very unordinary and makes one think about what it could possibly be but after analyzing
and understanding the title, then one can determine what the artwork is. My response to it was, 'I have to write about this artwork' and I had that
response because it was very unique to me and we learned about cubism in class which overall determined my motivation to write about it. My
painting is The Table by George Braque. The artist uses lines all over his artwork so it can draw the viewer's eyes. There are many directional lines
to indicate the table in the painting. The directional lines are horizontal starting from the middle and brings my eyes down to the bottom of the table
where the legs are. There are jagged and wavy lines throughout the painting to show the shape of the different shapes and these lines also bring your
eyes to the bottom of the table legs. The lines, like wavy, horizontal and jagged lines, all overlap each other to show the different shapes on top of the
table in an avant–garde way because one may think there are multiple tables, but it is different contours because of the lines that connect it. The lines
are helpful to a viewer who is looking at artwork The Table, because their eyes
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Pablo Picasso 's Influence On Art
Pablo Picasso
On of the greatest artist in the entire existence of man, in my opinion, in Pablo Picasso. His work is recognized throughout the world, where these
works are on display in some of the most visited museums in the world, where millions of people visit annually. The works are of art so sought out,
that people spend millions of their money to get them for themselves. Picasso lived for almost 100 years, and in that time created tens of thousands of
different works of art. He and Georges Braque are the creators of cubism, which was a completely different type of art for its time.
Pablo Ruiz Picasso was born October 25, 1881 in the city of MГЎlaga, Spain on the Mediterranean Sea. His parents, JosГ© Ruiz Blasco and Maria
Picasso, were both from Spain. His father from northern Spain and his mother from Picasso's birthplace. It was not unusual for people to take both
parents family names. At the time of Picasso's birth, his was was an art teacher in MГЎlaga, which obviously greatly influenced Picasso. It was when
the family moved to Barcelona when Picasso was 15 years old and his father took a job as a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts that really
blossomed his interest in painting. He was an exceptional artist at a very young age, as displayed in A Man In a Cap, 1895 (Picasso, Pg. 14). He
painted this painting when he was only 14 years old, and it depicts a beggar on the street. I particularly like this because he painted something that
caught his eye as a young boy.
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Midterm Pop Culture Critique : Narcos
Luis Garcia Sociology 101 Professor Gomez 10/26/2017 Midterm Pop Culture Critique: Narcos One of the most famous American gangsters of
all–time, Al Capone, also known as "Scarface," was a highly–recognized Mafioso (a member of a... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Narcos is a gritty gangster drama series based on the true story of Colombia's infamously violent and powerful drug cartels during the 1980's and
1990's. "Good people and bad people" are terms interchangeably used in this TV show and when deviance is depicted in the Narcos show, it is not
only the criminals departing from the usual or accepted standards from society but also political and government officials are as much deviant as the
Narcos themselves. I will also argue that this show uplifts toxic masculinity which is socially–constructed attitudes that describe the masculine gender
role as violent, unemotional, sexually aggressive, and how toxic masculinity ruins society and men through the examples displayed from the show.
Pablo Escobar, when speaking on deviance once said, "[A]ll empires are created of blood and fire". I agree with what Escobar said, because all
empires have their positives, but at the same time many, if not all are built upon bloodshed and do we critique when great empires take over another
country and the way they go about that with raping, torture or other means of submission? Deviance plays a big role in everything that has to do with
building a great nation or a world–wide cartel. When deviance is depicted on the Narcos show, some of the deviance is noted by government officials.
The Narcos show demonstrates how many officials of the Colombian police department deviated and departed
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Pablo Picasso And George Braque
1. Pablo Picasso and George Braque founded cubism in the early 20th century in Paris. It was an artwork to be considered as the first radical
approach in expressing visual reality. According to Cubist, any perception of an object was a composite of simultaneous and different perspectives.
Cubism tries to help one understand the world around them in a different way by changing their perspective on a certain subject. It is an approach of
art where a painter takes a real life object and changes it in a completely different way to the way he or she views it in there mind and how they
perceive it. Cubism used geometric shapes to replace traditional forms. An example of this type of art form is Picasso's 1907 painting, Les Demoiselles
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
One of the most famous Surrealists was the Spaniard Salvadore Dali, who subverted the sense of reality in his painting by using near photographic
detail in presenting a fantastic and irrational world. One of his most famous artworks was "the persistence of memory". It represented that time was
fluid. What motivated him to draw this picture was the Brie cheese that was melting in front of him while he was having a picnic.
2. Technological achievements created a second stage of the Industrial Revolution that transformed the human environment and led people to believe
that their material progress would improve world conditions and solve all human problems. The invention of electricity was a major new form of
energy that proved to be of great value since it could be easily converted into other forms of energy, such as heat, light, and motion, and moved
relatively effortlessly through space by means of transmitting wires. In 1910, hydroelectric power stations and coal–fired steam–generating plants
enabled entire districts to be tied into s ingle power distribution system that provided a common source of power for homes, shops, and industrial
enterprises. Electricity procreated a whole series of innovative products such as the incandescent filament lamp. This opened homes and cities to
illumination by electric
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay about Cubism
Pablo Picasso
Pablo Picassso was probably the most famous artist of the twentieth century. During his artistic career he created a large body of work that consisted of
sculptures, prints and ceramics, while experimenting with several different materials. Today Picasso is known as one the forefathers of the artistic
movement known as Cubism.
Pablo Picasso was born on October twenty–fifth 1881, in Malaga, Spain, to Jose Ruiz and Maria Picasso. Rather than adopt the common name of his
father, Picasso took the more unique last name of his mother as his own. "An artistic prodigy, Picasso at the age of fourteen, completed the one
month qualifying examination of the Academy of Fine Arts inBarcelona in one day." as stated by ( ). ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This change in Picasso's work became known as his " Rose Period" as stated by ( ).
Picasso went on to meet George Braque, whom is also regarded as one of the forefathers of the Cubist movement. During this period in his artistic
career, Picasso created the portrait of Manuel Pallares.
To create this work of art Picasso chose to use oil as his medium of choice. What is so fascinating about the painting is his application of the medium.
Picasso uses the brush and or palette knife to create a cross hatch effect throughout the painting. Picasso chose to use neutral tones to describe the mood
of the painting. The figure of Manuel Pallares is shown in a three–quarters view within the composition. The deliberate positioning of the figure leads
the viewer to believe that Manuel was not someone of importance. His wardrobe also lets the viewer know that he is an average person.
Picasso's treatment of the details is very representational of the Cubist style. Sharp lines and a vast array of contrasting shapes and colors emphasize
the creases of the suit jacket. This same attention to detail is present in the mustache and the background as well.
On the other hand, Picasso's treatment of the Manuel's face is quite different. Picasso uses softer shapes to fine the attitude of Manuel. The blandness
of the face leads one to assume that Manuel was a man of peace in a world of chaos. The background also suggests that he is a man that is completely
involved with his
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Pablo Picasso

  • 1. Pablo Picasso Pablo Picasso – His Life and His Art Pablo Ruiz y Picasso, painter, sculptor, and printmaker, was born in Malaga Spain on October 25, 1881 and died on April 8, 1973.Today he is considered to be one of the most influential and successful artists in history. Picasso contributed many things to 19th century and modern day art and his name is familiar to all those involved in the many different fields of art. Throughout the seven decades that Picasso produced artwork he used many different types of media. In each piece of art he produced he searched for new possibilities, invented images in them, and reflected events that were occurring in his world through his artwork. Picasso had many artistic influences in his life, including CГ©zanne, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Between 1907 and 1914, Picasso collaborated with Georges Braque and together they produced a style known as Cubism. The period after World War I indicated an apparent return to the art of realism for Picasso as seen in a pencil drawing of 1915, Portrait of Vollard. This small work foretold Picasso's renewed curiosity in descriptive interpretation, which, for some time, ran parallel with cubism. During the 1920's, a growing sense of unease was expressed through Picasso's work and a style shift started moving from Cubism to being closer to surrealism (an artistic movement of the early 20th century that stressed fantasy and the subconscious mind). Picasso's most well known painting of this time is from 1937, called Guernica. (Grolier). In the last two decades of his life, Picasso became intrigued by earlier art. He based several paintings on works painters of the 1600's such as Rembrandt and Diego Velazquez, and the French artists of the 1800's, such as Delacroix and Manet. Picasso tried to break down their work, recompose it, and became even bolder in his methods and styles of painting (World Book). Picasso influenced artwork of the late 19th and early 20th Century in many ways. He encouraged other artists the explore painting pictures in just one basic colour or one certain colour grouping as most artists of the time painted in a wide spectrum of vibrant melodious colours or pastels. Picasso's own exploration of this new idea was seen in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Cradles Of Imminence Analysis 1. According to the first chapter of the book, Cradles of Eminence, the parents of the four hundred eminent individuals discussed in the book are, "curious, experimental, restless, seeking. They are physically driving, intellectually striving; they respect learning, and they love truth and sometimes beauty." 2. According to the first chapter of the book, "there is no geographical center for giftedness, no racial or national or cultural monopoly." This means that people of eminence could live in farms villages, and small towns. They could derive form the North, South, Midwest, East, and West in the United States. They come from all over the world from Australia to Switzerland to Mexico to Africa. A minority comes from urban areas and even then... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... According to the first chapter of the book, the results from Anne Roe's study on the sixty–four "outstanding physical, social and biological scientists" was that learning was highly valued in all their homes as was in the families of the Four Hundred. In addition, "generally, the fathers and mothers showed overprotection and also firm control. These children also pursued their rather independent paths and followed their own particular interests with more than usual intensity." 7. According to the first chapter of the book, the siblings of the gifted usually follow in their sibling's footsteps career wise and intellectually wise. "The same striving, driving parents who produce one child of extraordinary ability generally produce other children who are capable and intelligent." An example of this is Pablo Casals, the cellist, whose brother became a musician and stayed in Spain when Pablo left due to his rejection of the Franco government. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Good Artists Copy : Great Artists Steal "Good artists copy; great artists steal." Picasso Master Picasso was famous for idea hunting in other artist studious while searching for inspirations and many of them had to hide their artwork because Picasso would copy the idea and make it look better. Steve Jobs, Igor Stravinsky, and Picasso they all did it. As we say there is no need to reinvent the wheel. For many years photography was not recognized as high art because there was no artist hand visible in the final image. It was mechanical so even women could do it, and the middle class could afford it as well. There was nothing prestigious about it simple click, click. However, many open–minded artists understood the power of that modern mechanical tool that captured light a camera. They were simply paying attention to what was happening around them; first blurry photographs of car wheel in motion, frozen movement of the horse, ghostly double exposures, camera saw the world differently than human eye. Picasso was one of the many artists who recognized the importance of the camera in 20th century and used it for his study of his subjects and to capture moments in his personal life. "For Picasso, photos were very important in the sense that he was modern–he was not having models in his studio. He would do things by memory or because he had books, newspaper, or photographs, as well as objects that he cherished," Ruiz–Picasso says. Biographer, John Richardson, is a curator of the show "Picasso and & the Camera" in Gagosian ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. The Art Of Paul Cezanne Introduction Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso were both profoundly influenced by the art of Paul CГ©zanne, somewhat ironically since the latter is reported to have been quite uncertain of his artistic contributions and anxious about his legacies (Merleau–Ponty, 1945). Picasso described CГ©zanne as "my one and only master" ; while Matisse noted that "it is undoubtedly to CГ©zanne that I owe the most" . The Large Bathers was one of two final paintings produced by CГ©zanne in 1906, the year of his death. At this stage Matisse had acquired a reputation as an upcoming artistic leader via an exhibition in 1905 (Bio, n.d. #1); while Picasso was a 25 year old prodigy who had already secured lucrative patronage (Bio, n.d. #2). The three paintings of interest must be considered in the context of their artists' evolution. To examine the relationship between the three paintings, I will first briefly summarise the artistic trends of the day to provide context, then examine The Large Bathers. I will then compare and contrast Matisse's Bonheur de Vivre and Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, both with The Large Bathers and with each other. Europe, 1906 The turn of a century brings with it opportunities for reflection about the old and wonder about the new – along with both excitement and trepidation. At the entry to the twentieth century, social and technological change were continuing at historically unprecedented pace. The signs and pressures of development were all around and Europe was ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. The Life and Art of Pablo Picasso Essay Pablo Picasso, although usually known as just Picasso. His full name though is actually: Pablo Diego JosГ© Francisco de Paula Juan Nepomuceno MarГa de los Remedios Cipriano de la SantГsima Trinidad Ruiz y Picasso. His signature is worth more than some of his paintings. In fact in some restaurants he just drew a quick face and then signed it (when he was famous). He was one of the most well known people in the 20th century. He was born in 25th of October 1881 in Malaga, Spain, and then died on the 8th of April 1973 Mougins, France. He was a: painter, drawing, sculpture, print making, and ceramics. He spawned four children, with three different women: Paulo who was born on the 4th of February 1921, his full mane was Paul Joseph Picasso, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Rather than adopt the common name Ruiz, the young Picasso took the rarer name of his mother. An artistic prodigy, Picasso, at the age of 14, completed the one–month qualifying examination of the Academy of Fine Arts in Barcelona in one day. From there he went to the Academy of San Fernando in Madrid, returning in 1900 to Barcelona. The years of 1901 to 1904 were known as the "blue period" because of the blue tonality of Picasso's paintings. During this period, he would spend his days in Paris studying the masterworks at the Louvre and his nights enjoying the company of fellow artists at cabarets. 1905 and 1906 marked a radical change in color and mood for Picasso. He became fascinated with the acrobats, clowns and wandering families of the circus world. He started to paint in subtle pinks and greys, often highlighted with brighter tones. This was known as his "rose period." In 1907, Picasso painted "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon," considered the watershed picture of the twentieth century, and met Georges Braque, the other leading artist of the Cubist movement. Cubism was equally the creation of Picasso and Braque and from 1911 to 1913, the two men were in frequent contact. In 1917, Picasso did the set and costume design for Serge Diaghilev's ballet "Parade." For Picasso the 1920's were years of rich artistic exploration and great productivity. Picasso continued to design theater sets and painted ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Guernica a Paint by Pablo Ruiz Picasso Picasso: Guernica " I paint objects as I think them, not as I see them." These are the words of the wise Pablo Ruiz y Picasso, a famous and talented artist in the 19th and 20th century. Many have crowned him the most influential artist of his time. Many of his works including Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, Ma Jolie, and Girl Before a Mirror have set the tone for many artists to follow after. However, Guernica was one of his most famous of his pieces, painting a nearly perfect emotional picture of what was happening during these times of despair. Guernica, one of his many contributions to the art world, will be described first in purely formal terms, and then a comparison and evaluation of three different critiques will be made. Pablo Ruiz y ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The bull's tail forms the image of a flame with smoke rising from it. Behind the bull, a bird with upstretched head and neck, wide–open beak, and outstretched wings stands fluttering on a table. A white stripe cuts through the gray form of the bird, whose shape and size in the scale of the picture correspond to those of a goose. On the ground is a head that has no body. The mouth and eyes are wide open. The mouth seems to scream in agony and the eyes are wide opened in terror. Directly behind the head is an outstretched arm with fingers look like claws. Another severed arm in front still clenched a sword and a flower sprout out of the fist. In the center of the picture, a horse is displayed in a twisting movement. The horse appeared to have been hurt with its mouth opened wide braying in agony and the tongue protrudes out of its mouth. One of the horse's front legs is on a kneeling position whereas the other legs struggling to stand up (Fisch, 1983). On the right–hand side of the picture a woman stretches her neck and head in a wide arch. Her bosom bared and her right arms hangs limply down and her left arm touching her swollen left knee. She seemed to be dragging her injured left leg as she sadly looked up. In the extreme right, a woman seemed to be floating in mid–air or falling with her arm extended in the air and face turned towards the sky. She seemed helpless and is crying for help. A very large female being, whose right arm is thrust out far in front ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. La Guernica By Pablo Picasso Jessica Arteaga Analysis Paper 22 Julio, 2016 R. Alves La Guernica Pablo Picasso's piece titled La Guernica painted using oil paint on canvas. This piece was made in 1937 as a representation of the bombing on the Basque town of Guernica in Spain during the Spanish Civil War. The horrors of war are shown through his eyes and point of view of what he thought and believed at that time. Picasso was possibly the most influential artist of the twentieth century, he influence many of the styles of painting used during this time. Many artist know who he was and respected his ways and creations. Pablo Picasso was born in the southern part of Spain, in a town called Malaga on October 25th, 1881. He was given the name Pablo Ruiz y Picasso but decided to only use his mother's last name (Picasso) because it sounded more interesting, unique and fun to pronounce. Picasso was very artistic as a child and started painting at a young age. He began his career as a classical painter, painting landscapes and portraits but he didn't really enjoy this style of painting. He wanted to evolve and express himself in different ways from what we can see now from all his artwork. (NAME, YEAR) When Picasso was 14 years old, he moved to Barcelona, Spain and he applied to the city's most respected school of fine arts. The school only accepted seniors with lots of experience but ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... (NAME, YEAR) Cubism was one of the most influential visual arts style from the early 20th century. His painting "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" shows Cubism a new style of revolutionary movement. After that many artist further developed the concept and made it better than before. Picasso was considered radical in his work – he was a painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist and stage ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Beauty And Eroticism In Titian's Venus Of Urbino Unquestionably, there is no universal notion of beauty or ugliness. The definition of the term is as ever–changing as our tastes both depending on the period and world culture. European artists and philosophers dominated (and still dominate) a grand percentage of the art world and thus their Eurocentric views on what is deemed beautiful or ugly, became the norm but it does not fit the conventions in the rest of the world. A piece such as Titian's Venus of Urbino is viewed as a timeless masterpiece when it sits on the throne of exclusion in the art world. Eroticism is evident in the painting, in fact, it recalls the marital obligations of the woman towards her husband. The erotic allegory is even clearer in the representation of Venus, goddess of love, as a sensual and exquisite woman who stares at the viewer, who cannot ignore her beauty. The light and the warm color of Venus' body contrasts with the background and dark cushions, further highlight the eroticism itself. Even though this painting was revolutionary in its time, with Venus directing her gaze to the viewer, it is still considered a nude (versus naked), there is a sense of innocence in her corporal language, even as she is cupping herself in an attempt to cover her nude body. Thanks to the good use of color and its contrasts, as well as the subtle play of meanings and allusions, Titian achieves the goal of representing the perfect Renaissance woman who, like Venus, becomes a symbol of love, beauty and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Essay on Pablo Casals: Internationally Renowned Cellist Pablo Casals: Internationally Renowned Cellist Pablo Casals (sometimes called his original name Pau Carlos Salvidor Defillo De Casals) was one of, if not, the greatest cellists in history. Casals is easily recognized as one of the master soloists of classical music and he has many accomplishments in his many years as a public figure that have made him internationally renowned. Casals was born in Vendrell, Spain on December 29, 1876. He received his very first music lessons from his father (a music teacher), on theviolin. A four years after that, at the age of twelve, Casals realized he would much rather play the cello instead, and begin lessons with that instrument. After nine years of study on the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Soon Casals began a great deal of touring across Europe and the Americas, making his fresh, new style increasingly more and more popular. Because of his popularity, at the time, the solo cellist performer became a very highly thought of occupation. After his long tour, Casals met and then joined up with two other famous and acclaimed French performers. These were the violinist Jacques Thibaud and the pianist Alfred Cortot. Together, these three became a trio that gained international fame as they began touring again for a long period of time. Casals began his second career as a conductor in 1908. Then in the year 1919, he founded and he subsidized the "Orquestra Pau Casals" in Barcelona. This was designed specifically to help young talented, and struggling musicians. The next Occupation that casals took was composing. Doing this, he wrote the famous "El Pesebre" (The Manager), which is still listened to widely in Spain, even today. Casals wrote and preformed many other pieces of music that are commonly taught in music school in Spain, today. Being an ardent opponent of Fascism, Casals exiled himself from Spain. He did this in a protest against the regime of Frincisco Franco. For a time, he even stopped performing altogether. After this long exile, in the 1950's Casals began being active in music again and he organized and ran many series of musical festivals in France and Puerto Rico. In
  • 10. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. The Most Prominent Artists Of Spain Over the years, Spain has produced many significant figures. From sports, to politics, many renowned people have had their meager beginnings in this eastern European country. Some of the greatest, however, were the artists. Not only did Spaniards create beautiful paintings, but they also birthed entirely new sects in the art culture. Although innumerable world famous painters have been Spanish, three of the most prominent artists were Diego de VelГЎzquez, Francisco Goya, and Pablo Picasso. The first of these great painters was Diego de VelГЎzquez. Born in Seville, Spain, in 1599, VelГЎzquez possessed great talent in the realm of art. His parents recognized this, and at the young age of eleven, he was apprenticed to Francisco Pacheco, a talented local artist. For the next six years, VelГЎzquez studied under this man, learning the trade, and perfecting the style of Pacheco himself. Here VelГЎzquez learned to look to nature for inspiration and enlightenment, a value which he held close throughout his whole career, which is evident in his paintings. In 1617, after his six years of apprenticeship were completed, VelГЎzquez set up his own studio, in which he painted primary religious works and portraits, but also bodegones, portrayals of kitchens. A year later, Pacheco offered his daughter, Juana, as a wife for VelГЎzquez. Now the son–in–law of his greatest teacher, VelГЎzquez pursued a career as a religious painter. After painting a portrait of the Count–Duke of Olivares, he gained ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. An Examination of Modernism with Reference to Several... The terms 'modern', 'modernity' and 'modernism' are commonly used to specify a break in history, marking a definition between the present and the past, between the fashionable and the out of date, and carry as part of their meaning an almost criticism of tradition. By calling himself a 'modernist', the artist is instantly free to work on a clean plate, without the limitations of tradition with its set of rules or its fixed criteria. It is commonly thought that the Modernist movement was only properly established during the late nineteenth Century, being triggered by ground breaking developments in the areas of science, technology and the economic market. Art was suddenly discovered to be an increasingly useful tool in science, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Perhaps this idea is more easily understood when in relation to our social plane today, with it?s emphasis on instant joy and fun morality, which in turn create a confusion between self–realization and basic self–gratification. In today?s pop cult we are imprisoned by a grave contradiction in society. On the one hand, advertising and marketing have immersed us into a life of compulsive consumption, and we are led to believe that happiness can easily be paid for at a beauty centre or purchased in a bottle of aromatic bath salts?on the other, we are also expected to work day in and day out, in order to keep up the organised business corporations that make these products, and are wanted to accept delayed self–gratification. This contradiction between expected lifestyles have caused us to become ?straight? during the day, and ?party–animals? during the night, placing a strong contrasting emphasis on time, between the fear of boredom, and the pressure of deadlines. This idea of time, closely related with the view of art as both pay and display, are among the prime factors that constitute the artistic style called ?Kitsch?, which in turn is one of the most typical products of modernism, because it is in this type of art that this conflict of modernity is openly confronted. Whilst representing the triumph of the principle of immediacy (instant access, immediate effect, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Biography Of Pablo Picasso 's Les Demoiselles D ' Avignon Pablo Picasso's Les Demoiselles D'Avignon is considered by many to be a revolutionary breakthrough in the history of modern art. Demoiselles is a "great manifesto of modernist painting" as Picasso had abandoned all known form of traditional art, a radical break from the Western tradition that very much led to the Cubism movement (Bishop, 2002). What made Demoiselles revolutionary was that "in it Picasso broke away from the two central characteristics of European painting since the Renaissance: the classical norm for the human figure, and the spatial illusionism of one–point perspective" (Fry, 1966). Cubism had "destroyed [...] the realist conventions for three–dimensional perspective which had been dominant in art since the Renaissance" (Butler, 2010). While generally credited as the first Cubist painting, art historians such as John Golding have argued that it was only a "starting point for the history of Cubism" (1958). Indeed, the picture predicates key characteristics of Cubism like the distortion and break down of objects and figures into distinct shapes, rather than being itself a Cubist painting. This analysis will concentrate on the elements of Cubism in Demoiselles and how it led to the movement. While Picasso's Demoiselles is not a true Cubist work, it was nonetheless a major step towards Cubism. It features nude figures and background that are so distorted they seem to forgo any spatial depth. The softness of classical female bodies are restructured by Picasso into ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Pablo Neruda’s “I’m Explaining a Few Things” in Connection... Through their separate mediums of writing, poetry and literature, both Neruda and Allende both achieve a common goal of criticizing the actions of certain militant forces, past or present, within there country of living. In Neruda's "I'm explaining a Few Things", the Civil Spanish war, sparked by the forceful and bloody overtake of the current, fair republican government by the Faschist general Fransisco Franco, is the topic of Neruda's disgust and criticism. The "burning" and "devouring" manner of Franco's revolt changed his political opinion concerning his fondness for the communistic ideals and history tells he realigned with the Republican Party. This same general theme persists in Allende's House of Spirits as she criticizes the... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Stones that the dry thistle would bite on and spit out." Esteban Trueba's eventual shift in character due to the violence seen by the military force of his beloved Conservative party in House of Spirits models after the shift in political alignment Neruda suffers after witnessing the blood shed of the innocent by the Faschists against the democratic Republicans. Both Neruda and Esteban realize that their current party is wrong in their doings, Neruda noting to "come and see the blood in the streets. Come and see the blood in the streets!" Colloquial statements and questions such as "You are going to ask", "I'll tell you the news", and even the title of the poem "I'm explaining a few things" represent Nerudas very personal and emotional stance on the blood–filled civil war. Such personal statements as "Eh, Rafel? Fredrico, do you remember from under the ground..." and "come and see the blood in the streets" reiterate Neruda's personal involvement and feelings revolving the civil war. It is clear he wrote this poem from a personal standpoint, writing of his own personal afflictions caused by the Franco revolt, and not from a observant and unbiased standpoint. The obvious personal disgust for the "Treacherous ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. For Whom The Bell Tolls Essay example There are many themes that can be associated with the novel, For Whom the Bell Tolls. The story has love, hate, rivalry, duty, war, and several more topics of concern. However, war plays the most important role among all of the possible themes. There is war all around the characters, but it is not limited to battles or physical wars. Wars appear between ideologies, guerrilla band members, beliefs, inner emotions, and decisions. In For Whom the Bell Tolls, Hemingway shows, through war, an example of a ВЎВ°goodВЎВ± man. After joining Pablo, Robert Jordan constantly is at odds with Pablo. The two are very different from each other in tactics and attitudes. The differences show how Robert Jordan has the leadership qualities that make him capable ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... All through the course of the story, Pablo is insecure, deceitful, disloyal, and unsteady, while Robert Jordan remains competent, honest, and steady. Robert Jordan shows the qualities of what a ВЎВ°goodВЎВ± man should be. Through the love affair between Robert Jordan and Maria, Robert JordanВЎВЇs sense of duty and responsibility towards his commitment to oppose the fascists becomes apparent. The love between Maria and Robert Jordan becomes stronger as they make love and spend time with each other. They feel as though they were a part of each other; together, they feel as one. Robert Jordan mentions that she has become a reason for him to want to live. He believes that death during the mission would be in vain because he would be losing Maria who is the most valuable thing in his life. However, he continues to follow the plan because it is his duty. Rather than selfishly thinking of what he wanted for himself, he acted upon his commitment to the Republic against the fascists. At the point where Robert Jordan really mattered, he proved that he was a good man. Though he is angry, frustrated, and in anguish, he realized that he had succeed in his mission. He had to overcome strong emotions after losing some of his equipment to Pablo and thinking about losing Maria. In the morning of the attack, Robert says, ВЎВ°But the pain,ВЎВ± (p.378). Later ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. History Of Latin Americ The Infamous Spanish Phrase Edio Garcia December 6, 2015 History of Latin America Final Essay "Plata o Plomo," the infamous Spanish phrase that translates to, silver or lead, "money or bullet". An infamous line used by the most powerful drug lord ever that offered the options of either taking a bribe or murder to get things done in his way. Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria, drug lord, kingpin, murderer, narco–terrorist, a loving father, hero and a savior for the poor people. Depending on whom you ask, Pablo was either a good guy, a bad guy, or both. Pablo was the boss of a billion dollarCocaine Empire who murdered and bribed the police so that he could export cocaine to The United States. Regardless of his violent actions and his psychopathic attitude, Pablo was a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This soon moved into street scams and other crimes, including selling contraband cigarettes, selling fake tickets for the lottery and stealing cars. Which has lead up to his illegal entrepreneurship that made make him among one of the richest man that has lived. "He was the seventh on the Forbes's list of the top billionaires of the world at the age of 28." The crimes continued with Escobar, he made his way on top of one of the most infamous drug exporting Medellin Cartel in our history being one of the main exporters in the United States exporting about fifteen tons of cocaine in a single day. His team (Medellin Cartel) spending about two thousand and five hundred dollars on rubber bands to tie up all of their money that was coming in coming in from the cocaine enterprise. While Escobar was still 22, he met up with the local smuggler, Alvaro Pietro. Pietro was making millions during the time that he worked under Alvaro. Pablo, smuggling drugs across the city until he came across the leader of the Medellin leader where he got in an argument with the local drug lord, bigger then Alvaro and killed him which led to his takeover of the Medellin gang. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Paris Was Becoming The World 's Hub For Art Innovators Beginning towards the end of the nineteenth century, Paris was becoming the world's hub for art innovators; a place that is widely regarded as the birthplace of modern art. Artists of all disciplines, from sculptors to musicians, made their way to this city to pursue their passions in a community of like–minded and passionate individuals. These artists came from all over the world, in a time before the world was made flat with commercial aviation. Once they arrived, they often found themselves in suboptimal living conditions, sometimes even lacking running water. Despite these obstacles, Montmartre, a hillside neighborhood on the north bank of Paris, managed to draw an impressive artistic crowd, and would eventually foster the birth of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This type of artistic suppression was happening all over the world in varying degrees. It drove many artists out of their homelands to places that were more accepting of their artistic expression. Although Kandinsky didn't find himself in the company of the cubists of Montmartre, his story demonstrates the artistic atmosphere of the world at the time. Many artists were eager to find a haven where they could freely express themselves in the company of like–minded individuals, and to many of them, that place was Montmartre. Although there were certainly critics of modern artists within Paris itself, their general response to the artistic pioneers was more akin to arrogant dismissal as opposed to the outright suppression of places such as Russia. Another factor to consider is the somewhat overlooked economic theory of knowledge spillover. As described by Jane Jacobs in the 1960's, it explains the obscure rise of particular industries in certain cities. This concept seeks to prescribe a name to the process of like–minded individuals who live together in a community sharing ideas with each other in casual conversations and various other exchanges. Some examples include the steel industry of Pittsburgh, the technology industry of San Francisco, and more pertinently, the art industry in Paris at the turn of the twentieth century. The theory claims that innovations arise most quickly in areas ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Song Analysis: We Didn’t Start the Fire by Billy Joel Essay Every song has a story to tell, and some contain hidden stories or lessons, while others are completely blatant. In Billy Joel's song, "We Didn't Start the Fire," he does not hesitate to be very obvious with what he tries to prove, which is how all of the events in his song contribute to one large fire. I chose to remediate Joel's song because it spoke to me with historical context. When researching the song, I read a majority of the history behind it and decided to reflect upon it in a visual picture collage, combining a majority of the elements he mentions with pictures––all circled around a fire in the middle. I decided to also make red–dyed cupcakes reflecting the fire Joel speaks of and ice them with a flame, yet placing an X over it, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Not all collages involve all of those elements, but any one of those can be used by itself. I found "by adding a 'collage' an artist can change the nature of what he or she is creating, providing a new dimension for a work of art" (Stern 1). A collage, in my opinion, is a great way to grasp the concept of Joel's song. Collages allow the viewer to see the art from a different point of view, and "seeing" a song can help the person to actually see what Joel was trying to prove. In this project, I used pictures of almost every historical perspective he mentioned in his song, and circled all of those elements around a picture of a flame in the middle. I chose to do this because the flame is the ultimate theme of the song, and all of the events and people he is singing about contribute to the large fire that begins to grow due to all of these events combined. Along with placing the flame in the center, I matted it on an orange paper, unlike any of the other pictures, to help it stand out, since it is the main theme of the song. For those who have a difficult time learning without pictures, this is a great way for them to see all of the aspects of Joel's song together on one page. As well as making a collage, I also made cupcakes to help ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Analysis Of The Book ' Fierce Invalids Home From Hot... As we read through this story we become aware of Switters' contradictory nature, rather than eschewing this trait he embraces it. He is a CIA agent who hates the government. He is a pacifist who carries a gun and so on. Switters and his grandmother, Maestra, come up with six qualities that denote the wisdom; they may or may not be required for wisdom, but they certainly drive Tom Robbins's writing style. GOOD INTRO When talking about wisdom to someone unaware of the process to OF becoming wise, one may say that wisdom is knowing all there is to know about life; another may say that wisdom is having ultimate knowledge and insight through experience. I personally agree with Tom Robbins when he describes the six qualities needed for wisdom. For instance, in the novel Fierce Invalids Home From Hot Climate, Switters, a rogue CIA agent, is confined to the physical and potentially spiritual elevation of a borrowed wheelchair by the curse of a reclusive South American shaman. This particular event occurs early on in the novel and is a perfect example of spirituality. Both Switters and his acquaintance R. Potney Smithe had spells cast upon them. The shaman, End–of–Time explained what he had done, but neither of the men could truly believe or understand what had been done. So to test the spell Smithe touches Switters'S penis and falls to the ground, stone cold, dead. Switters couldn't comprehend the reality of dying from some superstitious taboo. So from that day on he resides in a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Mexico’s War on Drugs Essay Every day the U.S. border patrol has to constantly keep an eye out for the smuggling of drugs by Mexican Cartels. There has been much violence due to this drug problem that has left many people near the border killed and is allowing more criminals to obtain these weapons. A lot of this attention goes to the U.S. because many of the weapons utilized in the "drug war" are U.S. made and is interfering with trading relations amongst both the U.S. and Mexico. With this current violent situation in Mexico this has transformed the flow of weapons to an even larger scale. During the mid–2000's former President of Mexico Felipe Calderon announced his war on the cartels and led to a crackdown against these organizations, along with assistance with ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... markets. Before drugs would be smuggled on a major scale, Mexico would supply alcohol to the U.S. when alcohol was prohibited. It was not until the early 1970's when drug smugglers began to distribute drugs on a larger scope. During the early 1990's Colombia being one of the biggest exporters of narcotics in history, led by Pablo Escobar, who had a wide range of organized crime affiliations throughout Latin America. Pablo Escobar was a Colombian drug lord and he smuggled narcotics all the way to South Florida as when authorities tried to capture him. One of Pablo Escobar's most important alliances was that of the Mexican–based traffickers. Escobar knew that this was an important trade route because of its geography and how it would be easier to smuggle the narcotics into the United States. This allowed a smuggling partnership between both countries and Mexico was to eventually lead their own drug based trafficking system with the help of Pablo Escobar. From the distributed drugs, cartels would take a certain amount of profit, and would use that money to bribe Mexican officials. By bribing Mexican officials it was insured that if smugglers were to be arrested they would either be let go, the case would be dropped or taking action against a rival smuggling group by giving away information about the rival's plan to carry ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Pablo Picasso Guernic Importance Of The Work Luigi Vittatoe Professor Rockford Sansom HUM1021 Integrated Arts October 14, 2015 Pablo Picasso Guernica Importance of the work From a patron's point of view, Guernica is a powerful tool that shows the absolute power of art in society. It displays a sign of relevance in the use of art to communicate serious matters and helpful ideas. Most people may view artwork as things for entertainment; some have been quoted to say artists are crazy, somewhat lazy. It should be appreciated and understood clearly that the artists are people of sound mind who sees things in the environment and chose to articulate critical human issues using their creativity. Picasso; the artist, seemed to be bound by many challenges in his life, just like any other person. He was tortured by the brutal civil wars that were in his motherland (Spain). The political wrangles went overboard and transformed into brutal killings. The forces from the Republicans that were loyal to the ruling new government went embattled by the fascist coup that was organized by General Franco. Contrary to his promises of stability and prosperity in Spain, Franco delivered abundant destructions and deaths. Guernica is thus important work at the time when it was created. Should we say it is up to date? Of course yes. The prevailing at that time required a candid and brave way to say enough is enough to the atrocities that were engulfing Spain. Picasso chose the initiative although after being disturbed for almost three months by ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Africa's Influence on Western Art Essay Africa's Influence on Western Art During the mid 19th century up until the Great War of 1914, European countries began to heavily colonize and come into contact with African nations. This was called "new imperialism". During this contact, European culture was influenced by Africa. The influence of the African people can be seen in the European society of the time. In the 19th and 20th centuries, modern artists embraced African art for its lack of pretension or formal qualities. In the latter part of the 19th century, the "scramble for Africa," consolidated at the Berlin Conference, divided the terrain of the African continent among the numerous European contenders. Fourteen countries were represented by a plethora of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Germans claimed Namibia and Tanzania, and Spain was rationed Equatorial Guinea. South of the Sahara Desert, there were three distinct types of societies; nomadic tribes in the desert and steppe regions, sedentary farming cultures located in the savanna and "rain–forest fringe" areas, and the ancient sophisticated kingdoms of Nigeria and the Guinea coast. All three sectors of the African society had different art traditions. However, all three were similar in certain aspects. These aspects being the similar attention to craftsmanship, a general use of non–permanent materials, use of geometric abstraction, and religious orientation. Religion was at most often marked in masks and sculpture. Masks were used in many ritual ceremonies to embody spiritual forces. Geometric and naturalistic shapes were combined to represent a recognizable human face. As part of the daily ritualistic routine, families would often present offerings to cult figures, full–body images kept in homes as insurance of protection. The decorative arts, especially in textiles and in the ornamentation of everyday tools, were a vital art in nearly all African cultures. Wood was one of the most frequently used materials—often embellished by clay, shells, beads, ivory, metal, feathers, and shredded raffia. As the contact between Europeans and Africans grew, parts of African culture assimilated into that of the Europeans. Europeans would bring home treasures found in Africa on ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. A New Brand Of Democracy Demiri 1Albulena DemiriProfessor FeldmanHUMN 110123 April 2016Pablo Picasso: Trailblazing ArtistIn 1907, less than a decade into the new century, the world was undergoing considerableand marked social upheaval. There was a desire for a new brand of democracy, where the people(especially women) wanted a greater say in how they were governed, but there were considerableefforts to try and maintain the status quo. Subsequently, the world seemed like it was in chaos.This schizophrenic perspective is highlighted by the major events that occurred in 1907.In Russia, the second Duma opens and Russian troops disperse 40,000 demonstrators. InGermany, a conservative coalition takes over the Reichstag against the threat of a socialistgovernment. The... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... ("Pablo Picasso and His Paintings") Many people, such as ourtextbook author Sayre, have indicated this work was notorious, and "an assault on the idea ofpainting as it had always been understood." (454) But it's for this exact reason that I, personally,don't care much for the work.To me, the beauty of art is in how an artist captures the subject and highlights aperspective. When the subject is symbolized and represented so abstractly, it provides a verydifferent perspective and I don't care for it. In many ways, I'm like many of the viewers of LesDemoiselles d 'Avignon, who were disturbed by the work. (Sayre 454) However, I appreciatewhat Picasso was able to do, and understand the rationale. It's just not my taste.Picasso clearly saw art in a different way. His emphasis was to view art less from theliteral perspective of what we see, to what these symbols represent. His radical departure fromtraditional European painting made it appear as though the art world had collapsed on release ofLes Demoiselles d 'Avignon. He abandoned known form and representation, resulting in what'sbeen called the most innovative painting in modern art history. ("Pablo Picasso and HisPaintings")One of the steps he took to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Drug Use And Distribution Is An International Epidemic, Drug use and distribution is an international epidemic, and each country adapts to the introduction of drugs differently. Unfortunately, when thinking of Colombia one is automatically consumed with thoughts of a drug epidemic and horrific violence. This is because Colombia has been the host of some of the world's most notorious and violent drug distributing organizations. The drug trade in this country is a severe problem not only on a social and economic level, but also on the health of the entire country. The rise of drug distribution in Colombia during the 1980s directly impacted the country's economic, social, and political systems. And the rise of drug awareness worldwide during this era was directly affected by the violence in this ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Also, remote plantations that were once used to produce coffee were easily transformed into plantations for cocaine manufacturing. The well being of the people began to decline in most of the regions of Colombia because local food production was halted since most of the fields used for food production were converted to fields for drug cultivation. Also, at this time most businesses in Colombia began to lose their legitimacy because they were purchased by drug distributors in order to be used as locations to launder the money made from selling drugs. In the early 1980s the drug of choice for drug traffickers shifted from marijuana to cocaine as drug traffickers began using their profits from marijuana to fund the expensive cocaine trade. In fact, Colombia is estimated to be responsible for 43% of global cocaine production, which brings about 10 million dollars into the country annually. This helped to raise the country's GDP, and provided jobs for the poor. Though, extreme violence and murder also became a source of income for some because they would be hired by drug distributors as sicarios, which are paid assassins, in order to attack rivals and instil fear into the society. The overall quality of life began to decline in Colombia because of the effects of drug distribution in society. Cocaine dealers were wealthy, extremely dangerous, and hard to infiltrate. Which made it difficult to prevent ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. The Drug Of A Drug Lord Violence. Money. Drugs. Power. These are the factors that are a part of being a drug lord. In Colombia there were many drug lords, but the most powerful one was Pablo Escobar. In fact, he was one of the most powerful drug lords in history. He was so powerful that he controlled the empire of the drug dealing in Colombia. He was such a notorious drug lord that no other drug lord would even consider trying to compete with him. Over the course of his adult life, Escobar made billions of dollars, he also killed an excessive amount of people, and bribed many politicians, making him one of the most dangerous drug lords of all time. Escobar was born in Rionegro, Colombia on December 1st, 1949. Rionegro is a small city that is located approximately 26 miles away from Medellin. He was the third of seven children (3 girls and 4 boys). Roberto, Gloria, Pablo, Agermiro, Alba, Luz, Luis. His mother Hermilda De los Dolores was an elementary school teacher and his father Abel de Jesus Escobar was an agriculturist according to George Jung. Pablo had always been driven by his ambitions, when he was just young men, Escobar would tell his folks and family, he would be president of Colombia one day according, to the author who wrote the article of the about education website. Escobar started his crime life at a very young age when he still attended school. He would steal tombstones and later sell them in the black market. His criminal career started by buying and selling stolen goods, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Louis Vauxcelles 's The Exhibition Of Braque Louis Vauxcelles's mocked the exhibition of Braque's paintings calling them "little cube paintings" effectively naming the movement largely led by Picasso and Braque Cubism. This name does indeed describe a majority of Picasso and Braques' paintings well, at least in the visual sense. However, it must be noticed that the pieces completed by Picasso and Braque were not simple or little in meaning. Cubism was an entirely new way of doing art. The method of realism that had largely dominated the art since the Renaissance was ignored by Cubist artists. This break from tradition was supposed to help the artists represent their feelings and ideas in a new way, which gave them a better understanding of the world around them. It is also argued ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Braque provides an example of this technique in Bottle and Fishes completed between 1910–1912. In this piece, the image has been shattered and then pieced back together but in a way that which the objects represented are hardly recognizable. To add to the difficulty of recognizing objects, Braque made the piece largely monochromatic, with greys and blacks in a majority of the piece. It is important to note that although both Braque and Picasso experimented with the fragmentation of objects in their pieces, they cannot be considered abstract. For example, although difficult to first understand Bottle and Fishes can be interpreted. The shape of the bottleneck orients the viewer as to where the base of the bottle ends. After this is understood, the shapes of the fish become apparent. Therefore, it is through the juxtaposition of objects that are more clearly represented to those that are not that these pieces are understood through. In other terms the bottleneck can be known as the signifier as to what the piece is trying to signify. The next stage of Cubism is known Synthetic Cubism. It is in this stage of their work that Braque and Picasso more thoroughly explore the same ideas being discussed by Saussure. Glass and Bottle of Suze was made by Picasso in November of 1912 at the beginning of the synthetic stage of Cubism. The piece is a collage made from pasted paper, gouache, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Tonight I Can Write By Pablo Neruda 1 / 5 Batool Alhalwachi 10N Page 1 Mr. Ali Alshehab English 23 November 2016 Tonight I Can Write... "Tonight I can write..." is one of the best poems written by the great Pablo Neruda. He was known as a poet when he was 10 years old. He wrote in many different styles, including passionate love poems such this chosen poem. This is one of the greatest poem I've ever came across. Pablo really expressed his love and feelings towards his no longer loved one. Reading this poem showed me how loyal and strong he is as well as remembering all the memories whether they were a happy memories or sad ones. This poem also shows the reader from the beginning, how their relationship was kind of great and then how things got escalated quickly and the conflict that he was fighting between himself when he couldn't forget her. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poem begins with a statement which is repeated 3 times throughout the poem in line 1, 5 and 11 which created rhythm. This helps the reader to come back to that phrase and be able to fully understand the depth of what the writer is feeling. Next, when the writer said "The night is shattered and the blue stars shiver in the distance", he used imagery which is when words are used to create visual images. In this line, the writer creates an image of the night's sky in readers mind and describes them as far away. These ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. The Contributions Of Pablo Picasso Essay Pablo Picasso, a standout amongst the most perceived figures of the twentieth century workmanship who co–made such styles as Cubism and Surrealism, was additionally among most imaginative, persuasive, and productive specialists ever. He was conceived Pablo Ruiz Picasso on October 6, 1881, in Malaga, Spain. He was the principal offspring of Jose Ruiz y Blasco and Maria Picasso y Lopez. His dad was a craftsman and educator of workmanship at the School of Fine Arts, furthermore a caretaker of historical center in Malaga, Spain. Picasso started contemplating workmanship under his dad 's tutelage, proceeded at the Academy of Arts in Madrid for a year, and went on his bright investigations of the new skylines. He went to Paris in 1901 and found the earth helpful for his analyses with new workmanship styles. Gertrude Stein, Guillaume Apollinaire, and AndrГ© Breton were among his companions and authorities. Always redesigning his style from the Blue Period, to the Rose Period, to the African–affected Period, to Cubism, to Realism and Surrealism he was a pioneer with a hand in each workmanship development of the twentieth century. He made some gentler and neo–great works of art amid his collaboration with the Russian Ballet of Sergei Diaghilev in Paris. In 1917 Picasso joined the Russian Ballet on visit in Rome, Italy. There he experienced passionate feelings for Olga Khokhlova, an established ballet performer from the Russian honorability (her dad was a General to the Russian ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Pablo Casal Research Paper Pablo Casals is remembered as one of the greatest cello players and composers of the twentieth century. Pablo was born in Spain in 1876 he lived with his parents who were also very dedicated to music. Pablo's father was a church organist and would play to Pablo when he was an infant. By the time he was the age of four he had successfully learned how to play the piano and at age five he joined the church choir his father played for. When Pablo was ten years old he could already play the piano, violin, and organ. He had helped his father compose several pieces through out the years. Pablos parents continuously argued about his future career, his father wanted him to study carpentry but his mother would not hear of it. His mother enrolled him... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The translation is " I am black but comely, daughters of Jerusalem. Therefor, the king delighted in me, and brought me into his chamber and said unto me: arise my love and come, for lo, the winter is past, the rain is over and gone, the flowers appear on the earth, the time of pruning is come. Alleluia!" published by New York tetramusic Corp in 1966. When researching I did not find one piece of information of where and why Nigra sum was written if I were to guess I would guess that the song is not about him but about how he feels other people are treated or putting the listener / audience to see the world through someone else ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Representations Of Diego VelпїЅzquez's Las Meninas Page 1 of 3 ZOOM Have you ever wondered why artists make different variants of their fellow designers work? The incident I will be telling you about is when Pablo Picasso made 58 renditions of Diego VelГЎzquez's painting 'Las Meninas.' This is a very unique piece of art that has been well known in the art industry for the different variations that were made of it. In my essay I will be giving a description of the original piece of art, talking about why he made 58 depictions of 'LasMeninas' and what they consisted of, as well as comparing and contrasting the authentic paintingto the modified ones. As we look at the original painting we see several girls huddled around a princess. In the background we see Diego VelГЎzquez examining the women as he begins to paint. I believe that VelГЎzquez was trying to illustrate that without the help of lower class individuals the princess or any person in power couldn't be successful. One reason I believe this is because SeГ±or VelГЎzquez's title of the painting, 'The ladies in waiting.' This is the english translation of the Spanish words 'Las Meninas.' Although the main character seems to be the princess the maids are included in the title and his picture which to me shows their significance. I think he created this painting because he wanted to explain something that he felt was important in a piece of art. I believe this is because of what he centered the piece around. His painting made clear that he was trying to show the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Public Art Essay Public Art "Any drawn line that speaks about identity, dignity, and unity is art," (Chaz Bojorquey) is a statement that I agree with. Art is perceived differently from all people based on their culture, religion, personal taste, and many other factors. I believe that as long as what has been created is meaningful to either the creator or even to somebody that is viewing it, it should be considered art. Art in the public is a very controversial subject that brings up the important question of, "Should public art be considered as real art," personally I think that it should be. I believe that the difference between art that is placed in a gallery and art that is visible by a community is the fact that what is acceptable in a gallery... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Another possibly positive outcome of art in the public could be the affect that it may have on the younger generations. If children are being raised in a community where they can see art on a daily basis then I believe it will have a positive effect on their lives by allowing them to learn how to appreciate art and what it has to offer. Art being in the public is also a way to grant people, who do not have enough money to enjoy the luxury of going to a gallery, the pleasure of seeing something aesthetically appealing on a regular basis. It also makes a town more interesting to visit; no one wants to visit a town with not much excitement. I once went to an art festival in Baltimore, Maryland, where they had green marbles ground up and put into the black top roads. This sight alone made my heart race and made this town more exciting. For towns that may have tourism it could be a way to attract to coming there or maybe even staying. Art can also be a controversial at the same time. There are many people who express their idea of art in a way that, in my opinion, should not be seen by the public. For example, many people consider paintings of naked women to be art, as do I, but I do not think it is appropriate for a painting of that nature to become a piece of public art. Another example is people who use profanity in their art. Swearing is not appropriate for a child to see painted on the side of their neighborhood buildings. The thing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Analysis Of The Postman Next is Antonio Skarmeta. He was the author of the novel The Postman. He published many novels, plays and stories, and created a text with Neruda as a character. Allende's rise and fall is the historical background and he tells the story of the son of a fisherman, Mario Jimenez, who loves poetry and Neruda's poems. The story tells Mario Jimenez, a fictional postman, who befriends the real life poet Pablo Neruda. The story begins in 1969, in the little village of Isla Negra, off the coast of Chile. The Postman was published in 1985. In 1970, Salvador Allende was the world's first democrat and Marxist president. He progressed the extensive program of nationalization and radical social reform. He reigned only for three years and was ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Next is Roberto Bolano, a homosexual writer and photographer. He was born in Chile in 1955 but moved to Mexico with his family at the age of 15. He dropped out of school and decided he would be a poet. In 1973, he was inspired by Salvador Allende's victory in Chile, so he decided to return to Chile. He ended up arrested and imprisoned for several days, and released only because two guards remembered him as a former schoolmate and sneaked him out. Then he only stayed in Chile for a few months and left Chile for the rest of his life. He made his home in Mexico, Spain and Europe. His work is inseparable between the relationship of life and literature. He intertwines the danger of life and literature. For example, in the story of "Mauricio ("The Eye") Silva, "Mauricio Silva, also known as "The Eye," always tried to avoid violence, even at the risk of being considered a coward, but violence, real violence, is unaboidable..." (106); and the story ended with saying that "The Eye" was so upset and weeping uncontrollably. The "Eye" probably signifies someone who "sees" things in life. Throughout the story, it depicts Mauricio going through a lot trials and tribulation. He witnesses and observes sufferings everywhere he trods, from Chile to Mexico to India to the brothel and Berlin. Injustice and violence seem to be twisted in all direction and at every turn. For instance, on a trip to India The Eye rescued two young boys, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Black Hawk Down Essay Black Hawk Down A Story Of Modern War Mark Bowden is a teacher, columnist for Atlantic Monthly, playwright, and a writer. His book Black Hawk Down A Story of Modern War a world wide bestseller that spent more than a year in the New York Times bestseller list and was a finalist for the National Book Award. Bowden also worked on the script for Black Hawk Down, a film version of the book, directed by Ridley Scott. Bowden is also the writer of the bestseller Killing Pablo The Hunt for the World's Greatest Outlaw in 2001, which tells the story of the hunt for Colombian drug lord billionaire Pablo Escobar. He is the author of Doctor Dealer published in 1987, Bringing the Heat made in1994, Our Finest Day made in 2002, and also Finders Keepers ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... troops on a hopeless humanitarian mission pulled out of Mogadishu, Somalia. A few Americans realize that during this mission, U.S. troops had the most continuous and gruesome battle fought by American's since the Vietnam War. The afternoon of October 3rd, 1993, soldiers of Task Force Ranger, and Delta Force were sent to capture two lieutenants of a rebel Somalian warlord and return to base. This mission was supposed to take 30 min, but instead, the soldiers were pinned down in the middle of Mogadishu market and in a desperate effort of kill or be killed. For about 20 hours, U.S. soldiers created a bloody firefight that resulted in 19 American fatalities and the death of 1000 Somali fighters. Black Hawk Down tells the story of that desperate battle, from all angles of the war. An external conflict is the U.S army trying to help the people of Somalia from the vicious militia warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid without any help from their allies. Another external conflict is the hostages that were taken by the Somali Militia and held out for ransom. An internal Conflict is the extreme heat making it harder for the U.S to get around without dehydration. Another internal conflict is death because you can never tell when it will happen and to whom. Bowden shows the gruesome effect of war by not covering up any of the details that he has learned from his sources that were in the war (found in the back of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. The Starry Night By Vincent Van Gogh The Starry Night, 1889 is a painting by Vincent Van Gogh while he was in an Asylum at Saint Remy de Provence. It portrays the view of the sunrise and the small village from the east facing window in Van Gogh's room. The Starry Night is one of Van Gogh's finest works, displayed in the Museum ofModern Art, New York since 1941. Van Gogh during his stay at the Asylum, is where he began producing some of his well–known paintings of his career, and The Starry Night is one of them. He was permitted with a ground floor studio which he produced his paintings, but The Starry Night was the view he saw from his room which he stayed in but because he painted downstairs in the studio he was permitted with, so some of The Starry Night was painted from memory. When Van Gogh, was painting The Starry Night which had a more powerful, emotional impact than his other works due to the attacks, and emotional breakdowns, he was going through during his stay at the Asylum. The Starry Night is more about Van Gogh's imagination because at his stay in the Asylum, when he had wrote a letter to his brother Theo which said ''through the iron–barred window. I can see an enclosed square of wheat...above which in the morning, I watch the sun rise in all its glory''. As stated in the letter by Van Gogh to his brother where he talks about the iron–barred window, which is not in the painting and is the main focus because of how he says ''Square of wheat...'' which shows he only saw parts of things separated by the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Leo Steinberg Flatbed Picture Plane Analysis In the late 1950s, Rauschenberg began to make the groundbreaking works he dubbed Combines. These works inspired Leo Steinberg's theorization of the "flatbed picture plane." This term was posited in his essay "Reflections on the State of Criticism." The essay's first manifestation was as a lecture given at the Museum of Modern Art in March 1968, and was subsequently published in Artforum in 1972. Notably, it was also the title essay in Steinberg's book Other Criteria: Confrontation with Twentieth–Century Art, of 1972. Steinberg's notion of the flatbed picture plane has several facets. This picture plane relies on the actual flatness of the painting's surface, the horizontality of the work's construction and reception, an interaction between ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Unlike canvas or paper, printing stones and plates can only be worked on while they are flat. The weight of the lithography stones, the acid bath of etchings, and the carving of woodcuts do not allow for any other orientation. Furthermore, presses are always kept horizontal; any other orientation would not create enough pressure to transfer the image to paper. Rauschenberg's affinity for lithography (I am suggesting) is foreshadowed in his Combines as well as in his early indexical works. In fact, it can be asserted that critical concerns like the flatbed and the index better suit his lithographs than his other ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Review Of George Braque 's ' The Artist Who Painted Their... Clarissa Kirsch–Downs Dr. Conaty ARTH 150 8 December 2015 Cubism In art history 150, we are learning about different artworks and the strategies of the artist who painted their artwork. I selected my artwork because of the funky style and mystery behind the painting itself. It's very unordinary and makes one think about what it could possibly be but after analyzing and understanding the title, then one can determine what the artwork is. My response to it was, 'I have to write about this artwork' and I had that response because it was very unique to me and we learned about cubism in class which overall determined my motivation to write about it. My painting is The Table by George Braque. The artist uses lines all over his artwork so it can draw the viewer's eyes. There are many directional lines to indicate the table in the painting. The directional lines are horizontal starting from the middle and brings my eyes down to the bottom of the table where the legs are. There are jagged and wavy lines throughout the painting to show the shape of the different shapes and these lines also bring your eyes to the bottom of the table legs. The lines, like wavy, horizontal and jagged lines, all overlap each other to show the different shapes on top of the table in an avant–garde way because one may think there are multiple tables, but it is different contours because of the lines that connect it. The lines are helpful to a viewer who is looking at artwork The Table, because their eyes ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Pablo Picasso 's Influence On Art Pablo Picasso On of the greatest artist in the entire existence of man, in my opinion, in Pablo Picasso. His work is recognized throughout the world, where these works are on display in some of the most visited museums in the world, where millions of people visit annually. The works are of art so sought out, that people spend millions of their money to get them for themselves. Picasso lived for almost 100 years, and in that time created tens of thousands of different works of art. He and Georges Braque are the creators of cubism, which was a completely different type of art for its time. Pablo Ruiz Picasso was born October 25, 1881 in the city of MГЎlaga, Spain on the Mediterranean Sea. His parents, JosГ© Ruiz Blasco and Maria Picasso, were both from Spain. His father from northern Spain and his mother from Picasso's birthplace. It was not unusual for people to take both parents family names. At the time of Picasso's birth, his was was an art teacher in MГЎlaga, which obviously greatly influenced Picasso. It was when the family moved to Barcelona when Picasso was 15 years old and his father took a job as a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts that really blossomed his interest in painting. He was an exceptional artist at a very young age, as displayed in A Man In a Cap, 1895 (Picasso, Pg. 14). He painted this painting when he was only 14 years old, and it depicts a beggar on the street. I particularly like this because he painted something that caught his eye as a young boy. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Midterm Pop Culture Critique : Narcos Luis Garcia Sociology 101 Professor Gomez 10/26/2017 Midterm Pop Culture Critique: Narcos One of the most famous American gangsters of all–time, Al Capone, also known as "Scarface," was a highly–recognized Mafioso (a member of a... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Narcos is a gritty gangster drama series based on the true story of Colombia's infamously violent and powerful drug cartels during the 1980's and 1990's. "Good people and bad people" are terms interchangeably used in this TV show and when deviance is depicted in the Narcos show, it is not only the criminals departing from the usual or accepted standards from society but also political and government officials are as much deviant as the Narcos themselves. I will also argue that this show uplifts toxic masculinity which is socially–constructed attitudes that describe the masculine gender role as violent, unemotional, sexually aggressive, and how toxic masculinity ruins society and men through the examples displayed from the show. Pablo Escobar, when speaking on deviance once said, "[A]ll empires are created of blood and fire". I agree with what Escobar said, because all empires have their positives, but at the same time many, if not all are built upon bloodshed and do we critique when great empires take over another country and the way they go about that with raping, torture or other means of submission? Deviance plays a big role in everything that has to do with building a great nation or a world–wide cartel. When deviance is depicted on the Narcos show, some of the deviance is noted by government officials. The Narcos show demonstrates how many officials of the Colombian police department deviated and departed ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Pablo Picasso And George Braque 1. Pablo Picasso and George Braque founded cubism in the early 20th century in Paris. It was an artwork to be considered as the first radical approach in expressing visual reality. According to Cubist, any perception of an object was a composite of simultaneous and different perspectives. Cubism tries to help one understand the world around them in a different way by changing their perspective on a certain subject. It is an approach of art where a painter takes a real life object and changes it in a completely different way to the way he or she views it in there mind and how they perceive it. Cubism used geometric shapes to replace traditional forms. An example of this type of art form is Picasso's 1907 painting, Les Demoiselles ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... One of the most famous Surrealists was the Spaniard Salvadore Dali, who subverted the sense of reality in his painting by using near photographic detail in presenting a fantastic and irrational world. One of his most famous artworks was "the persistence of memory". It represented that time was fluid. What motivated him to draw this picture was the Brie cheese that was melting in front of him while he was having a picnic. 2. Technological achievements created a second stage of the Industrial Revolution that transformed the human environment and led people to believe that their material progress would improve world conditions and solve all human problems. The invention of electricity was a major new form of energy that proved to be of great value since it could be easily converted into other forms of energy, such as heat, light, and motion, and moved relatively effortlessly through space by means of transmitting wires. In 1910, hydroelectric power stations and coal–fired steam–generating plants enabled entire districts to be tied into s ingle power distribution system that provided a common source of power for homes, shops, and industrial enterprises. Electricity procreated a whole series of innovative products such as the incandescent filament lamp. This opened homes and cities to illumination by electric ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40. Essay about Cubism Pablo Picasso Pablo Picassso was probably the most famous artist of the twentieth century. During his artistic career he created a large body of work that consisted of sculptures, prints and ceramics, while experimenting with several different materials. Today Picasso is known as one the forefathers of the artistic movement known as Cubism. Pablo Picasso was born on October twenty–fifth 1881, in Malaga, Spain, to Jose Ruiz and Maria Picasso. Rather than adopt the common name of his father, Picasso took the more unique last name of his mother as his own. "An artistic prodigy, Picasso at the age of fourteen, completed the one month qualifying examination of the Academy of Fine Arts inBarcelona in one day." as stated by ( ). ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This change in Picasso's work became known as his " Rose Period" as stated by ( ). Picasso went on to meet George Braque, whom is also regarded as one of the forefathers of the Cubist movement. During this period in his artistic career, Picasso created the portrait of Manuel Pallares. To create this work of art Picasso chose to use oil as his medium of choice. What is so fascinating about the painting is his application of the medium. Picasso uses the brush and or palette knife to create a cross hatch effect throughout the painting. Picasso chose to use neutral tones to describe the mood of the painting. The figure of Manuel Pallares is shown in a three–quarters view within the composition. The deliberate positioning of the figure leads the viewer to believe that Manuel was not someone of importance. His wardrobe also lets the viewer know that he is an average person. Picasso's treatment of the details is very representational of the Cubist style. Sharp lines and a vast array of contrasting shapes and colors emphasize the creases of the suit jacket. This same attention to detail is present in the mustache and the background as well. On the other hand, Picasso's treatment of the Manuel's face is quite different. Picasso uses softer shapes to fine the attitude of Manuel. The blandness of the face leads one to assume that Manuel was a man of peace in a world of chaos. The background also suggests that he is a man that is completely involved with his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...