Chuck Close, Maya Lin, and Andy Warhol were all influenced as children by their artist parents. As children all three artist had parents that influenced their art and taught them technique. Chuck Close, Maya Lin, and Andy Warhol all had different styles and used different materials. They have affected my view of art because Maya Lin has showed me that everything can be turned into art, Chuck Close has shown me that every little space can be utilized as something, and Andy Warhol has shown me that color and repetition adds movement to a piece. Maya Lin's Vietnam Veteran Memorial has moved many people by just looking at it. Andy Warhol was behind the Pop art movement, and Chuck Close helped create the inkjet printer.
In the fifty eight years
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All these pieces have different designs in them. His use of color has to be significant so one piece does not overshadow the other pieces. Chuck Close is from Monroe, Washington. He lived there until he went to college at the University of Washington. After college at the University of Washington he went to Yale for a Masters in Fine Arts. He now lives in New York City and Long Island. Close has horrible learning disabilities which made school extremely hard for him. Art was the one thing that he could do. When he was 11 he got sick, he in bed for almost a year and art was always something he did. Both of Chucks parents were artist and growing up he was surrounded by art. His use of color helped the development of the inkjet printer. Close uses oil paints and large canvas. In general his works are very intricate. There are made up of lots of little pieces to make one large painting. One famous painting by Close is of the former president Bill Clinton. It is a portrait of the former president. This work is of the former president. It is made up of lots of different pieces, the background is mostly blue and red shapes in different designs. Movement is a constant piece throughout this piece because all pieces have different colors and different shapes inside of them. The meaning behind this piece and what the artist is trying to tell us is all the small details about Clinton's face. This artwork influences my views on art because it shows all the different colors in one small
Among the first rock stars of the 50s was Chuck Berry. Chuck Berry gave the youth quick paced rhythms, exuberant and carefree audience execution, and verses that permitted the crowd to relate to the music. Chuck Berry availed all the components desired by the young society. In fact, in his music “Rock N Roll Music”, the youth could dance and embrace at the same time being unique from the music their parents had enjoyed. In 1950s, the civil rights movement had risen and sparkled much attention. The issue of race was consequently fixed to Chuck Berry and Rock and Roll. Therefore, supporters of the civil rights movement were significantly more eager to advance Rock and Roll, as a means for African American’s to communicate
These art pieces exemplify this Zeitgeist because they each show how the artist sees themselves. In the painting by Chuck Close, he creates a very realistic painting which is created by, “small dashes, dots of pigment, thumbprints, or applied pieces of colored paper.” Jean-Michel Basquiat’s painting is also representing how he envisions himself. This painting looks kind of demon or monster-like. When one compares these two paintings they can see how differently these artists portrayed
Whilst observing the capturing pieces of art at the Majorie Barrick Museum, I had encountered a piece that has truly grasped my attention. When we had the art tour guides guide us around the musuem to observe 3/4 specific pieces, I noticed they all were different with similar ties. They all had something unique about them, from the "graphite splatter" to the "thinned out chair leg" and the "fill in the vowels" worksheet found in a first grade work book. I've also noticed that art varies with age. If you ask a first grader to create art, we would most likely result in a piece of paper with splatters and stick figures, (yet there are a few youngsters with different mindsets), but what we don't know is that it has a certain meaning to them. Now
In a Chuck Close biography by A&E, the writer says, “Styles of art here like those by Jackson Pollock may have inspired style choices that he uses in his art.” In the video he mentions reading black and white magazines, and says it may be the reason he like to paint in hues of grey.
“The worst possible thing in the world can happen to you, and you will overcome it. You will be happy again.” This is a the quote of a very famous artist, Chuck Close, who suffered from diseases that made his life very hard, but there was one thing that kept him happy, that kept him going and that is art. Close was born July 5, 1940 in Monroe, Washington and is well known for his large scale, photo-realistic portrait paintings. He is a visual artist who used inventive techniques to paint the human face. He uses the grid method to divide the portraits that he’s painting into smaller units to keep them in proportion. While using the grid he thinks very methodically and precisely, every stroke he makes he can see the outcome or what part it plays in the bigger picture.
He was brimming with excitement as he dusted off a blank canvas and set it on a stand. He turned the lights up to their brightest. Carl worked with precision late into the night, listening to music and the rain pattering outside the whole time. He painted a park at sundown. The trees, lamps, and the ground were all standard colors easily perceived by the human eye, but the sky was bursting with multicolored cubes; a fantastical glimpse of Carl’s unique perspective. When he was finished he took a few steps back, scanned his work like any good artist, and finally nodded, pleased with his outrageously colored
Pablo Picasso was one of the brightest artist for his time and he has been credited with influencing many of the different directions that art went in the twentieth century. Picasso was said to influence styles of art like surrealism and co-invent cubism and not unlike artists before him, he drew inspiration from the great people of the time such as Freud or artists like Cézanne. Picasso was unique in the fact that his paintings represented what he wanted them to represent and through the freedom of interpretation, Picasso was able to influence those who saw his works. Picasso was such a different painter in his time because instead of focusing on the details and trying to make things perfectly realistic, he painted with a sort of freedom
Chuck Close is an american artist known for his realism portraits that are about 9 feet tall. He has faced many challenges in his life including dyslexia and eventually becomimg paralysed from the neck down. He believes that these challenges have made him a stronger person and artist. As he said, “Almost every decision I've made as an artist is an outcome of my particular learning disorders.”
Chuck Close is a Artist that had many problems in his life. Close has Dyslexia, which made him fail school when he was younger. Then he found his future in art at school. Later in life he got a kidney disease which made him have to stay in bed for almost a whole year. When he was in when he was having time with that problem his love for painting grew. Next, he graduated from Yale and got his MFA.
We can also see the use of black shades to create a hole at the bottom part of the rock. With his excellent use of colors, we can identify the good, healthy and green grass from the bad, unhealthy, brown grasses. Looking beyond the main focus of the painting, he uses colors to separate the sky from the land in the background creating a solid form of perspective on the painting. He also uses colors to create water forms as seen behind the young character. Now, for the sky, he uses shades of white to magnificently differentiate the thick clouds from the light ones. He also uses this to create a source to light to the whole area. All these put together creates a splendid, realistic and familiar atmosphere for the viewers to relate with.
It was there that he dabbled in new forms, styles, and materials and also produced some Pop art. Chuck Close spent quite a bit of time trying to find his artistic niche. In an interview with Ilka Scobie, Close explained that he had been doing big paintings “forever… In graduate school I made the biggest paintings. That is the only aspect of my work that hasn’t changed…” (3). Although Chuck Close experimented for a long time before he found his signature style, which seems to be a combination of a gridding process, abstract expressionism, and portraiture, it has turned into something very unique and appealing to the viewer. The time he took to figure out his personal style was certainly not wasted. Close explained that his inability to recognize faces (prosopagnosia) “may have inadvertently pushed me in the direction I’m working today—trying to scrutinize the faces of the people I know and love, and trying to figure out what they look like” (Smith 15). Chuck Close’s signature style depicts the faces of many different people in an abstract way. He uses a grid method and each square is “made form multiple small geometric forms” (Ravin, and Odell). His work is abstract and very large. Close’s paintings are remarkable, viewing them at an up close view or at a distance gives the viewer an entirely different experience. It is almost as if the viewer is looking at two separate pieces of
Chuck Close is well known for his art, but he is also known for overcoming his ailments and concerning his dreams of being an artist. In this paper I will discuss his early life,and his later years. Chuck Close is an abstract artist who has severe dyslexia, facial blindness and neuromuscular(affect the nerves that control your voluntary muscles also known as the ones your control). Chuck has many disabilities, but despite these listed and the ones not listed he still creates facial abstract artwork.
Chuck Close was born on July 5, 1940 in Monroe, WA. His parent are Leslie Durward Close, and Mildred Wagner Close. In his earlier years when he was in school he had learning disabilities and back then they didn't have any ways for treating these disabilities. the disability he had was dyslexia. Because of his dyslexia his teach thought he couldn't learn or that he evan wanted to learn. Chuck would create these paintings and then he showed his
Chuck Close is a modern American artist who has achieved success for his large-scale portraits. Yes, I would describe Close’s work as a form of language because it explored the established visual presentation from the portraits. The subject of his portraits has been drawn from himself, his family, and friends. His works explain that it has been driven by his lifelong learning difficulties. His portraits tell everything about his struggle to remember the faces while drawing. Also, the uses of the grid to break down every image that he paints into small incremental units showed that we could easily focus on each part of his paintings. I would consider this exploration of an artist at work as good and well deserving artworks in exploring the process.
Chuck Close is a artist that specializes in large scale, photorealistic portraits. His famous portraits like Shirley, Susan, Nat, and others are what makes him the artist that he is today, and you will notice his art is similar, whether it be watercolor, or photorealistic. His painting is what give him his 25 million dollar net worth that he has today.