This document summarizes key works from various art movements and periods that effectively use color, including Several Circles by Kandinsky, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte by Seurat, Icarus by Matisse, Black Venus by de Saint-Phalle, Starry Night by van Gogh, Impression: Sunrise by Monet, Plato and Aristotle by Raphael, Garden at Sainte-Adresse by Monet, and the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao by Gehry. The document discusses how each work uses color and techniques like chiaroscuro, fauvism, or impressionism to bring the images to life and evoke feelings
This document appears to be a slideshow presentation about different works of art throughout history. It includes slides on paintings by Van Gogh, sculptures by Brancusi, prehistoric cave paintings from the Chauvet cave in France, the Stonehenge monument in England, and contemporary artwork and installations by artists like Maya Lin, Ernst Haas, Tim Hawkinson, Audrey Flack, and Jim Hodges. The slideshow touches on artwork from a variety of time periods and cultures and seems aimed at providing examples of different types of art to help orient the viewer.
Provocative 16th Century Master EngravingsKevin Harney
ATMAN Studio is the art of Kevin Harney. This current series of Digital Clarity Reproductions was developed through a passion for the stunning beauty of 16th Century Master Engravers. The reproduction process requires extensive work to bring clarity to each original print. Colors are then added either to the background or etched lines to infuse a contemporary style to these classical and often provocative works.
Dada was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement characterized by a spirit of revolt against traditional artistic values. It arose from disillusionment after World War I and influenced later styles like Surrealism. Dadaists believed that reason and logic had led to war, and they used nonsensical techniques like chance and absurdity to subvert traditional art forms. Marcel Duchamp was a prominent Dadaist who created readymades by selecting mundane mass produced objects and exhibiting them as art, questioning concepts of art and beauty.
A blue acrobat 1929 by pablo picasso -artisooparkupton
This document provides information about Pablo Picasso's 1929 painting "A Blue Acrobat" including that it is an oil painting reproduction on canvas of Picasso's original surrealist work. Surrealism is described as a literary and art movement aimed at expressing imagination through dreams without rational or conventional constraints, taking on a lighter spirit than the preceding Dada movement.
- Diego Velázquez painted portraits of ordinary people like his studio assistant Juan de Pareja with the same dignity as portraits of noblemen. He also included soldiers in his painting Surrender of Breda.
- Later artists like Manet painted scenes of everyday life, like a waitress serving in a café.
- The Impressionists like Monet captured effects of light and atmosphere in paintings of landscapes and city scenes. Turner and Whistler's works pushed toward abstraction.
- Picasso and Duchamp experimented with collage and incorporating real objects into their works, questioning the boundaries between art and reality. This helped pave the way for more abstract and conceptual art.
The document provides information on surrealist artists such as Salvador Dali, Rene Magritte, and Frida Kahlo. It includes descriptions of some of their most famous paintings such as Dali's Lobster Telephone, Magritte's The False Mirror which depicts men hovering in bowler hats, and Kahlo's paintings The Two Fridas and The Dream. The surrealists were known for creating strange and unexpected images to challenge perceptions of reality.
Impressionism was an art movement that originated in Paris in the 1870s-1880s. Key characteristics included small brush strokes, emphasis on light and movement, and depictions of everyday subjects. The name came from Monet's painting Impression, Sunrise. Impressionism influenced other media like music and literature. Monet and other Impressionists faced criticism but their independent exhibitions brought them prominence. The document also provides brief biographies of Claude Monet and Edgar Degas, two influential Impressionist painters.
This document summarizes key works from various art movements and periods that effectively use color, including Several Circles by Kandinsky, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte by Seurat, Icarus by Matisse, Black Venus by de Saint-Phalle, Starry Night by van Gogh, Impression: Sunrise by Monet, Plato and Aristotle by Raphael, Garden at Sainte-Adresse by Monet, and the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao by Gehry. The document discusses how each work uses color and techniques like chiaroscuro, fauvism, or impressionism to bring the images to life and evoke feelings
This document appears to be a slideshow presentation about different works of art throughout history. It includes slides on paintings by Van Gogh, sculptures by Brancusi, prehistoric cave paintings from the Chauvet cave in France, the Stonehenge monument in England, and contemporary artwork and installations by artists like Maya Lin, Ernst Haas, Tim Hawkinson, Audrey Flack, and Jim Hodges. The slideshow touches on artwork from a variety of time periods and cultures and seems aimed at providing examples of different types of art to help orient the viewer.
Provocative 16th Century Master EngravingsKevin Harney
ATMAN Studio is the art of Kevin Harney. This current series of Digital Clarity Reproductions was developed through a passion for the stunning beauty of 16th Century Master Engravers. The reproduction process requires extensive work to bring clarity to each original print. Colors are then added either to the background or etched lines to infuse a contemporary style to these classical and often provocative works.
Dada was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement characterized by a spirit of revolt against traditional artistic values. It arose from disillusionment after World War I and influenced later styles like Surrealism. Dadaists believed that reason and logic had led to war, and they used nonsensical techniques like chance and absurdity to subvert traditional art forms. Marcel Duchamp was a prominent Dadaist who created readymades by selecting mundane mass produced objects and exhibiting them as art, questioning concepts of art and beauty.
A blue acrobat 1929 by pablo picasso -artisooparkupton
This document provides information about Pablo Picasso's 1929 painting "A Blue Acrobat" including that it is an oil painting reproduction on canvas of Picasso's original surrealist work. Surrealism is described as a literary and art movement aimed at expressing imagination through dreams without rational or conventional constraints, taking on a lighter spirit than the preceding Dada movement.
- Diego Velázquez painted portraits of ordinary people like his studio assistant Juan de Pareja with the same dignity as portraits of noblemen. He also included soldiers in his painting Surrender of Breda.
- Later artists like Manet painted scenes of everyday life, like a waitress serving in a café.
- The Impressionists like Monet captured effects of light and atmosphere in paintings of landscapes and city scenes. Turner and Whistler's works pushed toward abstraction.
- Picasso and Duchamp experimented with collage and incorporating real objects into their works, questioning the boundaries between art and reality. This helped pave the way for more abstract and conceptual art.
The document provides information on surrealist artists such as Salvador Dali, Rene Magritte, and Frida Kahlo. It includes descriptions of some of their most famous paintings such as Dali's Lobster Telephone, Magritte's The False Mirror which depicts men hovering in bowler hats, and Kahlo's paintings The Two Fridas and The Dream. The surrealists were known for creating strange and unexpected images to challenge perceptions of reality.
Impressionism was an art movement that originated in Paris in the 1870s-1880s. Key characteristics included small brush strokes, emphasis on light and movement, and depictions of everyday subjects. The name came from Monet's painting Impression, Sunrise. Impressionism influenced other media like music and literature. Monet and other Impressionists faced criticism but their independent exhibitions brought them prominence. The document also provides brief biographies of Claude Monet and Edgar Degas, two influential Impressionist painters.
1) The document discusses using augmented reality to create social events and experiences for large groups of people.
2) It proposes experiences like an augmented reality art exhibition with 20,000 participants or an outdoor cinema with virtual decors.
3) The goal is to overcome the invisibility of individual augmented reality experiences and use AR to connect people through shared augmented experiences.
The document describes a painting titled "Painter in his Studio" or "El Pintor en su Taller" by Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer. The painting depicts a painter in his studio along with symbols of art including a chandelier, trumpet, thick book, laurel wreath, and map of the Netherlands. Additional context is provided that the painting is housed at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
This document provides an overview of Module 4.2 of an art history course titled "Understanding Visual Culture". It includes reproductions and descriptions of artworks from the 15th-19th centuries by artists such as Titian, David, Monet, Picasso, Duchamp, Léger and Tinguely. It also includes two quotes about the nature of painting, one by Maurice Denis and one by Willem de Kooning in a 1962 interview.
The document provides a small sampling of graphic design work including an original 91"x163" vinyl graphic for a museum, an original globe and map artwork drawn in Adobe Illustrator, and an original watercolor portrait. The designer's work also includes logos, posters, and a web masthead original drawing to help businesses grow.
This document discusses major artistic movements between 1870-1900 in Europe and America. It summarizes Impressionism's focus on capturing fleeting moments through visible brushstrokes. Key Impressionist works by Monet, Renoir, and others are described. Post-Impressionism developed from Impressionism, with artists like Van Gogh, Seurat, and Cezanne examining form, color, and expression more systematically. Symbolism rejected realism in favor of conjured fantasy worlds. Art Nouveau drew from natural forms to create decorative arts. Major works representing these movements are briefly outlined.
The document introduces Hans-Peter Krohn, a Munich-based photographer. Krohn uses a technique called "lightpainting" to create abstract photographs. His work has been exhibited in German galleries and he is now looking to expand internationally. He provides samples of his lightpainting work and details his artistic process and body of work.
This document lists three influential modern artworks and their creators: Marcel Duchamp's 1912 painting Nude Descending a Staircase, Pablo Picasso's 1937 painting Guernica, and Pablo Picasso's 1907 painting Les Demoiselles d'Avignon.
As the photograph captured reality, art began to capture what was really there. The slide show attempts to capture the paradigm shifts in art from impressionism through surrealism. It is basically pretty pictures in the dark, with some hallmarks of the movements pointed out for students.
The document discusses the role and impact of photography. It notes how photography has become the standard for beauty by allowing people to possess imaginary pasts and spaces through photographs. Photography also aids tourism by certifying experiences, though it can limit experiences to only what is photogenic. The camera makes everyone a tourist in other people's realities and eventually their own. Later, the document discusses how photography proliferates consumerist lies through systems of misinformation by constructing tableaus of symbols and narratives to photograph for authenticity, regardless of falsity.
Istoria artei din 1870 pana in prezent (sc)VASILE Viorel
Pierre-Auguste Renoir was a French artist and founding member of the Impressionist movement. Some of his most famous works depicted scenes of middle class leisure, often featuring women and children. He is known for his use of rich color and seeking to capture light and movement. Renoir turned away from realistic rendering in academic art, instead focusing on effects of light and depicting modern life in the city and suburbs. Key Impressionist artists included Edouard Manet, Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, and Camille Pissarro.
Francisco Goya y Lucientes (1746-1828) was a Spanish painter who developed his own unique style that anticipated later artistic movements like Impressionism, Expressionism, and Surrealism. During his career, he painted tapestry cartoons and portraits for the Spanish royal family in bright colors. Later, he produced psychological portraits and paintings documenting the Spanish War of Independence, as well as satirical engravings. In his later years, Goya decorated the walls of his home with dark and disturbing "Black Paintings" after losing his hearing. He spent his final years in exile in France due to his liberal political views.
Technology has significantly changed the field of art over time. Van Gogh was one of the first artists to use paint in tubes, which allowed him to develop his signature thick and bright brush strokes. The invention of photography in the 1840s inspired genres like photojournalism. Advances like calculators and computers have transformed graphic design, animation, music, and other art forms. Today's digital tools offer artists new opportunities to create and share their work with broad audiences.
Alla Vovk (Oxford Brookes University): Spatiality of Augmented User InterfaceAugmentedWorldExpo
A talk from the Design Track at AWE USA 2018 - the World's #1 XR Conference & Expo in Santa Clara, California May 30- June 1, 2018.
Alla Vovk (Oxford Brookes University): Spatiality of Augmented User Interface
This talk will focus on what is a spatial interface and how people interact with the physical-digital environment in real workplaces. Intuitive things that are adoptions from the physical world and their combination with basic principles of human perception are implemented in AR training applications.
http://AugmentedWorldExpo.com
This document provides a list of book titles and descriptions for the second half of 2014 from Index Bok. Some of the titles included are Basic Poster, Cut Out For Colage, Just A Little Bok About Visual Poetry, Urban Marketplaces, Contemporary Portraits, Make Me Smile, Half And Half, and Basic Illustration. The document gives information for each book such as subject matter, author, page count, size, language, price, and availability date. It also includes short summaries describing the content and focus of each book.
The document provides information about experimental photography techniques including surrealism, photoshop techniques, tactile experiments on prints, Ger van Elk's surrealist work, adding paint and surface texture to photographs, tilt shift, overlaying images, montage, double/multiple exposure, scale and size manipulation, photographic sculpture, and color manipulation. It discusses the work of various artists who utilize experimental techniques like HDR, light painting, photoshop cloning, and constructed 3D landscapes.
The document provides background information on the Dada artistic movement that emerged during and after World War I in protest of militarism and Western culture. It discusses key Dada figures like Tristan Tzara and Jean Arp and their rejection of reason and aesthetics. It also covers Surrealism and figures associated with it like Max Ernst, Salvador Dali, and Joan Miro who incorporated dreamlike imagery and automatism. Andre Breton is discussed as a pioneer of Surrealism who emphasized tapping into the unconscious mind.
Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon- Kahee, Julia & Perus [2013/06]Perus Saranurak
Welcome to Modernity,
In 1907, Picasso publish Les Demoiselles d'Avignon which is the starting point of the most influential art movement of 20th century.
This presentation shows the art history of in the period of Modernism 20th century
Presented by Kahee, Julia & Perus
The document discusses the concept of appropriation art, which involves borrowing or copying elements from other works. Some key aspects covered include:
- Appropriation emerged in the 1960s and involves deliberately reproducing or copying parts of other works for new artistic expression.
- Notable artists who pioneered appropriation include Picasso, Duchamp, Warhol, Sherrie Levine, and Richard Prince.
- Postmodern appropriation questions ideas of originality and authorship in art, arguing that nothing is truly original given our lifetime of experiences with representations.
The document discusses different styles of realistic painting such as photorealism, hyperrealism, and trompe l'oeil. It provides examples of artists who worked in these styles like Richard Estes, Chuck Close, and Duane Hanson. Additionally, it proposes a framework called the PPP Test for evaluating quality in contemporary art based on how a work engages with past traditions, the present context, and a personal vision.
The document analyzes and summarizes four artworks:
1) Sophie Calle's "The Hotel - Room 47" photographs of a hotel room that tell the story of its absent occupants.
2) Marcel Duchamp's 1942 string installation at the "First Papers of Surrealism" exhibition that framed the artworks and criticized war.
3) Ryoji Ikeda's 2010 multimedia artwork "Test Pattern [n ̊3]" that converts data into flashing barcodes and audio to overwhelm viewers.
4) Michael Raedecker's 2004 painting "Brilliant Gloom" that depicts a house floating in space surrounded by bright lights above a dark landscape, creating a sense of
1) The author argues that we need new, original art that is inspired from within rather than being derivative or created to fit market demands.
2) The author was previously a painter influenced by modern art but became disillusioned as the art world descended into chaos and the idea that painting was dead took hold.
3) After a spiritual experience with Buddhist monks, the author realized they wanted to create transcendent, inspiring art that reveals beauty and connects viewers with deeper questions about reality. The author's new work is original and spiritually inspired rather than emulating other artists.
Artist portfolio anthea missy 2017 urban art graffiti street art female artistAnthea Missy
Anthea Missy – biographical facts
Anthea Missy started off painting around June 2014. With French nationality, she lives in Brussels and travels round the world to paint commissioned and unsolicited murals .
Her style originates in automatic writing and abstract curved lines. From there, she’s developed figurative characters inspired by her long stay in South East Asia back in 2015, a place where people understand the cuteness better than minimalist abstract art. Whether minimalist and quite nude, or flirting with pop asian figurative art, her style can be noticed and recognised distinctively. The vibe of her work is fresh and young and feels joy and enthusiasm for life, or for the most abstract works quite aerial and deep despite their minimalism. The artistic skills cover a wide range of techniques and medium: graffiti, muralism, street art, paste-ups, free hand, and stencils, from a very small scale up to monumentalism. Canvas and art on paper, ceramics and clothing.
The subjects covered in her art go from the simple appetite to be happy and expression of joy for life to engaged art activities. In 2015, she stayed in Cambodia for 9 months and created art in the Boeung Kak Art Lake where she met French activists who were leading a passive resistance to locals evictions due to economic and politic lobbies that had lead to the lake’ drowning earlier in 2000’s.
In 2016, she participated in Au Bord de l’Eau project in Brussels Laeken, and created a mural for the new social place, supported by Mattelart Art Fund, a crowdfunding and Port of Brussels.
‘ I like doing my art and people’.
The main characteristics of Anthea Missy’s work:
- STORY TELLING with campaign-like projects having social and collective roots.
- VERSATILITY of media used, places and contexts, subjects and themes, collaborators.
- HAPPENING & ENTERTAINMENT, not afraid to go from commissions to unsolicited acts as a natural art performer who goes bare face at day and night and documents her work with video and personal notes.
- FIGURATIVE ABSTRACTION with a signature organic style and a sense of positive/negative space and movement.
- AUTHENTICITY by keeping the lead on her productions and fuelling the artwork with her complete identity.
https://www.antheamissy.com/
1) The document discusses using augmented reality to create social events and experiences for large groups of people.
2) It proposes experiences like an augmented reality art exhibition with 20,000 participants or an outdoor cinema with virtual decors.
3) The goal is to overcome the invisibility of individual augmented reality experiences and use AR to connect people through shared augmented experiences.
The document describes a painting titled "Painter in his Studio" or "El Pintor en su Taller" by Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer. The painting depicts a painter in his studio along with symbols of art including a chandelier, trumpet, thick book, laurel wreath, and map of the Netherlands. Additional context is provided that the painting is housed at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
This document provides an overview of Module 4.2 of an art history course titled "Understanding Visual Culture". It includes reproductions and descriptions of artworks from the 15th-19th centuries by artists such as Titian, David, Monet, Picasso, Duchamp, Léger and Tinguely. It also includes two quotes about the nature of painting, one by Maurice Denis and one by Willem de Kooning in a 1962 interview.
The document provides a small sampling of graphic design work including an original 91"x163" vinyl graphic for a museum, an original globe and map artwork drawn in Adobe Illustrator, and an original watercolor portrait. The designer's work also includes logos, posters, and a web masthead original drawing to help businesses grow.
This document discusses major artistic movements between 1870-1900 in Europe and America. It summarizes Impressionism's focus on capturing fleeting moments through visible brushstrokes. Key Impressionist works by Monet, Renoir, and others are described. Post-Impressionism developed from Impressionism, with artists like Van Gogh, Seurat, and Cezanne examining form, color, and expression more systematically. Symbolism rejected realism in favor of conjured fantasy worlds. Art Nouveau drew from natural forms to create decorative arts. Major works representing these movements are briefly outlined.
The document introduces Hans-Peter Krohn, a Munich-based photographer. Krohn uses a technique called "lightpainting" to create abstract photographs. His work has been exhibited in German galleries and he is now looking to expand internationally. He provides samples of his lightpainting work and details his artistic process and body of work.
This document lists three influential modern artworks and their creators: Marcel Duchamp's 1912 painting Nude Descending a Staircase, Pablo Picasso's 1937 painting Guernica, and Pablo Picasso's 1907 painting Les Demoiselles d'Avignon.
As the photograph captured reality, art began to capture what was really there. The slide show attempts to capture the paradigm shifts in art from impressionism through surrealism. It is basically pretty pictures in the dark, with some hallmarks of the movements pointed out for students.
The document discusses the role and impact of photography. It notes how photography has become the standard for beauty by allowing people to possess imaginary pasts and spaces through photographs. Photography also aids tourism by certifying experiences, though it can limit experiences to only what is photogenic. The camera makes everyone a tourist in other people's realities and eventually their own. Later, the document discusses how photography proliferates consumerist lies through systems of misinformation by constructing tableaus of symbols and narratives to photograph for authenticity, regardless of falsity.
Istoria artei din 1870 pana in prezent (sc)VASILE Viorel
Pierre-Auguste Renoir was a French artist and founding member of the Impressionist movement. Some of his most famous works depicted scenes of middle class leisure, often featuring women and children. He is known for his use of rich color and seeking to capture light and movement. Renoir turned away from realistic rendering in academic art, instead focusing on effects of light and depicting modern life in the city and suburbs. Key Impressionist artists included Edouard Manet, Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, and Camille Pissarro.
Francisco Goya y Lucientes (1746-1828) was a Spanish painter who developed his own unique style that anticipated later artistic movements like Impressionism, Expressionism, and Surrealism. During his career, he painted tapestry cartoons and portraits for the Spanish royal family in bright colors. Later, he produced psychological portraits and paintings documenting the Spanish War of Independence, as well as satirical engravings. In his later years, Goya decorated the walls of his home with dark and disturbing "Black Paintings" after losing his hearing. He spent his final years in exile in France due to his liberal political views.
Technology has significantly changed the field of art over time. Van Gogh was one of the first artists to use paint in tubes, which allowed him to develop his signature thick and bright brush strokes. The invention of photography in the 1840s inspired genres like photojournalism. Advances like calculators and computers have transformed graphic design, animation, music, and other art forms. Today's digital tools offer artists new opportunities to create and share their work with broad audiences.
Alla Vovk (Oxford Brookes University): Spatiality of Augmented User InterfaceAugmentedWorldExpo
A talk from the Design Track at AWE USA 2018 - the World's #1 XR Conference & Expo in Santa Clara, California May 30- June 1, 2018.
Alla Vovk (Oxford Brookes University): Spatiality of Augmented User Interface
This talk will focus on what is a spatial interface and how people interact with the physical-digital environment in real workplaces. Intuitive things that are adoptions from the physical world and their combination with basic principles of human perception are implemented in AR training applications.
http://AugmentedWorldExpo.com
This document provides a list of book titles and descriptions for the second half of 2014 from Index Bok. Some of the titles included are Basic Poster, Cut Out For Colage, Just A Little Bok About Visual Poetry, Urban Marketplaces, Contemporary Portraits, Make Me Smile, Half And Half, and Basic Illustration. The document gives information for each book such as subject matter, author, page count, size, language, price, and availability date. It also includes short summaries describing the content and focus of each book.
The document provides information about experimental photography techniques including surrealism, photoshop techniques, tactile experiments on prints, Ger van Elk's surrealist work, adding paint and surface texture to photographs, tilt shift, overlaying images, montage, double/multiple exposure, scale and size manipulation, photographic sculpture, and color manipulation. It discusses the work of various artists who utilize experimental techniques like HDR, light painting, photoshop cloning, and constructed 3D landscapes.
The document provides background information on the Dada artistic movement that emerged during and after World War I in protest of militarism and Western culture. It discusses key Dada figures like Tristan Tzara and Jean Arp and their rejection of reason and aesthetics. It also covers Surrealism and figures associated with it like Max Ernst, Salvador Dali, and Joan Miro who incorporated dreamlike imagery and automatism. Andre Breton is discussed as a pioneer of Surrealism who emphasized tapping into the unconscious mind.
Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon- Kahee, Julia & Perus [2013/06]Perus Saranurak
Welcome to Modernity,
In 1907, Picasso publish Les Demoiselles d'Avignon which is the starting point of the most influential art movement of 20th century.
This presentation shows the art history of in the period of Modernism 20th century
Presented by Kahee, Julia & Perus
The document discusses the concept of appropriation art, which involves borrowing or copying elements from other works. Some key aspects covered include:
- Appropriation emerged in the 1960s and involves deliberately reproducing or copying parts of other works for new artistic expression.
- Notable artists who pioneered appropriation include Picasso, Duchamp, Warhol, Sherrie Levine, and Richard Prince.
- Postmodern appropriation questions ideas of originality and authorship in art, arguing that nothing is truly original given our lifetime of experiences with representations.
The document discusses different styles of realistic painting such as photorealism, hyperrealism, and trompe l'oeil. It provides examples of artists who worked in these styles like Richard Estes, Chuck Close, and Duane Hanson. Additionally, it proposes a framework called the PPP Test for evaluating quality in contemporary art based on how a work engages with past traditions, the present context, and a personal vision.
The document analyzes and summarizes four artworks:
1) Sophie Calle's "The Hotel - Room 47" photographs of a hotel room that tell the story of its absent occupants.
2) Marcel Duchamp's 1942 string installation at the "First Papers of Surrealism" exhibition that framed the artworks and criticized war.
3) Ryoji Ikeda's 2010 multimedia artwork "Test Pattern [n ̊3]" that converts data into flashing barcodes and audio to overwhelm viewers.
4) Michael Raedecker's 2004 painting "Brilliant Gloom" that depicts a house floating in space surrounded by bright lights above a dark landscape, creating a sense of
1) The author argues that we need new, original art that is inspired from within rather than being derivative or created to fit market demands.
2) The author was previously a painter influenced by modern art but became disillusioned as the art world descended into chaos and the idea that painting was dead took hold.
3) After a spiritual experience with Buddhist monks, the author realized they wanted to create transcendent, inspiring art that reveals beauty and connects viewers with deeper questions about reality. The author's new work is original and spiritually inspired rather than emulating other artists.
Artist portfolio anthea missy 2017 urban art graffiti street art female artistAnthea Missy
Anthea Missy – biographical facts
Anthea Missy started off painting around June 2014. With French nationality, she lives in Brussels and travels round the world to paint commissioned and unsolicited murals .
Her style originates in automatic writing and abstract curved lines. From there, she’s developed figurative characters inspired by her long stay in South East Asia back in 2015, a place where people understand the cuteness better than minimalist abstract art. Whether minimalist and quite nude, or flirting with pop asian figurative art, her style can be noticed and recognised distinctively. The vibe of her work is fresh and young and feels joy and enthusiasm for life, or for the most abstract works quite aerial and deep despite their minimalism. The artistic skills cover a wide range of techniques and medium: graffiti, muralism, street art, paste-ups, free hand, and stencils, from a very small scale up to monumentalism. Canvas and art on paper, ceramics and clothing.
The subjects covered in her art go from the simple appetite to be happy and expression of joy for life to engaged art activities. In 2015, she stayed in Cambodia for 9 months and created art in the Boeung Kak Art Lake where she met French activists who were leading a passive resistance to locals evictions due to economic and politic lobbies that had lead to the lake’ drowning earlier in 2000’s.
In 2016, she participated in Au Bord de l’Eau project in Brussels Laeken, and created a mural for the new social place, supported by Mattelart Art Fund, a crowdfunding and Port of Brussels.
‘ I like doing my art and people’.
The main characteristics of Anthea Missy’s work:
- STORY TELLING with campaign-like projects having social and collective roots.
- VERSATILITY of media used, places and contexts, subjects and themes, collaborators.
- HAPPENING & ENTERTAINMENT, not afraid to go from commissions to unsolicited acts as a natural art performer who goes bare face at day and night and documents her work with video and personal notes.
- FIGURATIVE ABSTRACTION with a signature organic style and a sense of positive/negative space and movement.
- AUTHENTICITY by keeping the lead on her productions and fuelling the artwork with her complete identity.
https://www.antheamissy.com/
This document provides an overview of the artworks and career of Vlatko Ceric. It describes his background creating algorithmic and computer-generated artworks printed on archival paper. It lists over a dozen series of his graphic artworks and one wood sculpture. It also outlines some of the public and commercial spaces that have displayed his art, including universities, companies, and residences. The document concludes with biographical information on Ceric, noting he generates art through custom computer programs and has exhibited internationally, with his works in various collections.
Serial Cut is a Spanish design studio founded in Madrid by Sergio del Puerto. It specializes in art direction for international advertising projects. The studio creates slick, bold graphic images using real sets and 3D elements. Typography plays an important role in their work. Serial Cut combines pop culture, luxury, and surrealism in their iconic images that are open to multiple interpretations. They have attracted high-profile clients like Toyota, Nike, and Sony.
This document provides an overview of the artworks created by Vlatko Ceric. It describes his graphics and sculpture series, which are digitally generated prints and a wood sculpture. It also lists the places his art has been displayed, including universities, companies, and apartments. The author creates algorithmic and software-based artworks using self-developed computer programs to transform ideas into images.
10/26/14, 11:31 AM
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Seeing the Value in Art
At the end of Chapter 2, we briefly mentioned the explosive career of Jean-Michel Basquiat after a
number of his graffiti-like paintings were exhibited in the 1981 New York/New Wave exhibit at P. S.
1, an alternative art gallery across the 59th Street Bridge from Manhattan. Henry Geldzahler, then
Cultural Commissioner for New York City, saw his paintings at P. S. 1 and “just flipped out.” Alauna
Heiss, founder of P. S. 1, recalls “standing in front of Jean-Michel’s work with a director of Philip
Morris. We were paralyzed. It was so obvious that he was enormously talented.”
By 1982, Basquiat was earning an average of about $4,000 a week by painting. Two years later,
at age 24, he became the first black artist to grace the cover of The New York Times Magazine. At
the time of his death, four months before his 28th birthday, the victim, according to the medical
examiner’s report, of “acute mixed drug intoxication (opiates–cocaine),” his paintings were selling
for about $30,000 each (normally a dealer keeps 50 to 60 percent of the sale price). Soon after his
death, the auction house Christie’s sold a 1981 canvas for $110,000. Now, 20 years since his
death, the current auction record for a Basquiat is $14.6 million for Untitled, a painting featuring a
figure with large hands. It sold at Sotheby’s in 2007. As an obituary ironically entitled “Banking on
Basquiat,” put it, “There’s no artist like a dead artist, some dealers are fond of saying.”
If these numbers seem staggering, it is worth remembering that the monetary value of works of
art is closely tied to the business of art, and, from a business point of view, art works are
commodities to be bought and sold like any others, ideally for profit. Sylvie Fleury’s Serie ELA 75/K
(Plumpity . . . Plump) ( Fig. 44 ) is a wry commentary on this fact. Here the art work is literally a
shopping cart, placed on a revolving pedestal and plated in 24K gold. Art, Fleury’s work implies, is
literally shopping.
Fig. 44 Sylvie Fleury, Serie ELA 75/K (Plumpity . . . Plump), 2000.
https://portal.phoenix.edu/content/ebooks/9780205677207-a-world-of-art-sixth-edition/jcr:content/images/03fig44.jpg
10/26/14, 11:31 AM
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Gold-plated shopping cart, plexiglas handle with vinyl text, rotating pedestal
(mirror, aluminum, motor). 32¾ × 37¾ × 21 in. Pedestal 12¼ × 39 in.
Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zürich, Switzerland.
And very high-end shopping, at that. The art market depends on the participation of wealthy
clients through their investment, ownership, and patronage. It is no accident, then, that the major
financial centers of the world also support the most prestigious art galleries, auction houses, and
museums of modern and contemporary art. Art galleries bring artists and collectors together. They
usually sign exclusive contracts with artists whose works they believe they can sell. Collectors may
purc.
The document discusses various sources that fantasy artists can draw from for ideas, including studying nature, using photographs, technical drawings, and the works of other artists. It emphasizes that artists should observe details closely in the natural world and in ordinary objects in order to find inspiration for imaginary pictures. The text also encourages experimenting with different techniques and taking inspiration from unexpected sources in order to generate new ideas.
The document discusses the discovery of the subconscious and its expression through Surrealism in Europe and Latin America. It provides background on Freud's theory of the subconscious and defines Surrealism. Key figures and works of the early European Surrealism movement such as Bosch, Blake, Goya, Rousseau, Chagall, and De Chirico are described. The development of Surrealism in Latin America is also mentioned.
‘WOW’ is a painting’s series where Chaos and Human condition meet in a surrealist process of creation. This series is influenced by two ideas: The painting “The Origin of the World” of Gustave Courbet and Congo the painter chimpanzee.
The document provides information about art and different art forms:
1. It defines art as human creative skills and imagination expressed visually, while fine art includes additional categories like film, photography, and conceptual art.
2. Taj Mahal is described as a type of late medieval art.
3. Plaster is defined as a art media like charcoal.
The document then discusses different art eras, styles, and mediums used in artworks. It provides tips on caring for art and copyrights as well as defining roles of art collectors and galleries.
This document provides an overview of different types of visual images and methods for analyzing images. It discusses still images like paintings, drawings, sculptures, and photographs as well as moving images like film and television. It outlines objective and subjective approaches to analyzing images, including analyzing the theme, technical aspects, and artistic elements, as well as considering social contexts and emotional reactions. Specific examples are provided of different genres of paintings like religious, historical, costumbrist, landscape, still life, and portrait works. Key elements of paintings and sculptures are defined for analyzing works, such as materials, techniques, composition, use of lines and shapes, colors, textures, and perspectives.
1. The document discusses many aspects of art including definitions of art, theories about art, the elements of art such as line, shape, color, and principles of design.
2. It examines how art serves purposes like religion, narrative, social commentary, and reflecting everyday life. Examples of famous artworks are provided to illustrate different types and styles.
3. The visual elements of art - line, shape, color, light, texture and space - are defined and different types discussed along with principles of unity, variety, balance, emphasis and others.
The artist Tacita Dean is preparing a major retrospective of her work at the Museo Tamayo in Mexico City. The exhibition includes 79 works from different periods of her career that explore concepts of materiality and intangibility through diverse mediums including film, photography, and drawings. Dean discusses the development of the exhibition from its inception two years ago, emphasizing her aim to champion the 16mm film medium. She describes key works in the show that capture the "uncapturable," investigate transient everyday moments, and allow viewers to luxuriate in the magic of film.
This document provides biographical information and an artistic dossier for Agostinho Manuel Bento de Oliveira. It includes details about his background, education, exhibitions from 2009-2011, awards, websites, press coverage, and images and descriptions of his artworks from various collections including "I Feel Love", "Voyeur", "Angel y Parejas", and "Poiesis, Living is Poetry". The artworks span multiple media and themes focused on relationships, voyeurism, and the transformative nature of artistic creation.
International Upcycling Research Network advisory board meeting 4Kyungeun Sung
Slides used for the International Upcycling Research Network advisory board 4 (last one). The project is based at De Montfort University in Leicester, UK, and funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
Discovering the Best Indian Architects A Spotlight on Design Forum Internatio...Designforuminternational
India’s architectural landscape is a vibrant tapestry that weaves together the country's rich cultural heritage and its modern aspirations. From majestic historical structures to cutting-edge contemporary designs, the work of Indian architects is celebrated worldwide. Among the many firms shaping this dynamic field, Design Forum International stands out as a leader in innovative and sustainable architecture. This blog explores some of the best Indian architects, highlighting their contributions and showcasing the most famous architects in India.
Discovering the Best Indian Architects A Spotlight on Design Forum Internatio...
PORTFOLIO Laure Perrin
1. LAURE PERRIN
PORTFOLIO
DESSINS ET PEINTURE
RÉSEAU
SERRES D’AUTEUIL
À REPOUSSE POILS
L’ÉLOGE DU POIL
TABU
QUE-SAIS-JE?
MARKETING MENSONGER
L’AUTRE
M
LES FAITS DU HASARD
TRAVAILLEURS DANS L’OMBRE
DADA
LOOP
LOOP
PACIFICA
MOU
FOSSILES INDUSTRIELS
TOUAREG
LA PETITE FILLE AUX ALUMETTES
NU
drawings and paintings
graphic design
drawing
publishing
photography
front credit
bookcover
fanzine
digital painting
photography
cultural poster
photography
moving poster
publishing
digital design
visual identity declination
typeface
experimental publishing
photography
illustrated tale
lifedrawings
3. L’AUTRE three steps creation of a chimeric
creature: drawings, sculpture, digital painting.
65x50cm
SERRES D’AUTEUIL pencil drawing
32,5x50cm
4. À REPOUSSE POIL publising about hairs, their
aesthetic dimension in art, mores and tabous
about them, and the ongoing revolution. Graphic
concept around the veil and softness.
65x50cm
6. Told by
F.W Murnau
R.J Flaherty
Directed by
F.W Murnau
Camera:
Floyd Crosby
Assistant directors:
Bill Bambridge
David Flaherty
Assistant directors:
Bill Bambridge
David Flaherty
Musical setting by:
Hugo Riesenfled
Musical setting by:
Hugo Riesenfled
The boy:
Matahi
TABU TABU
1
7
13
19
25
30
2
8
14
20
25
31
3
9
15
21
26
32
4
10
16
22
27
33
5
11
17
23
28
34
6
12
18
24
29
35
TABU storyboard and video (above mentioned
link) of a front credit for the dramatic
movie entitled Tabu, american movie released
by Friedricg Wilhelm Murnau
and Robert Flaherty in 1931.
TABU TABU
28
34
29
35https://vimeo.com/364337503
7. QUE SAIS-JE ? new image for the paperback
collection Que sais-je?
8. MARKETING MENSONGER teamwork for a fanzine denouncing the
shortcomings of lying marketing. Fanzine enhancing visual and
graphic experiments, and text content as well.
A3
9. L’AUTRE invention en trois étapes d’une créature chimérique:
croquis à la main, sculpture, puis peinture digitale.
A3
-M- photography for a cover artwork
for the french artist Matthieu Chedid
10. LES FAITS DU HASARD cultural poster for an
exhibition at the 104 in Paris
12. DADA moving poster (link mentioned above)
for an exhibition about dadaism at the Centre
Pompidou in Paris. Thought and animated
on the principle of the jeu de Taquin.
https://vimeo.com/364337959
14. LOOP complementary website for the publishing
mentioned above. It offers a sensorial and visual
experiment around the theater. Sounds, pictures,
surprises. An immersive experiment.