Ever heard of the paintings Fanny or Georgia? They are two paintings painted by Chuck Close. Fanny and Georgia have many similarities and differences. To start off with, both paintings have many things in common. For example, the both were done oil on canvas. furthermore, both of the portraits are based on family members in chuck's life. As well as, both portraits are done by the same artist. Together with, these paintings have been made with fingerprints. Along with, if you look both of these people have short hair. Last but not least, both of the people in these paintings are woman. However, these two painting also have many differences. Georgia was painted in color while, Fanny was painted in black and white. Georgia was painted in 1984
Pieces of Georgia by Jen Bryant is about a girl named Georgia, who is given a read journal. Like her mother, Georgia is quite the artist. She later receives a letter granting her a free membership to the Brandywine River Museum, and things begin to change. The quote "Books fall open, you fall in," shows that people connect to the story, and that the reader would want to put himself in the character's shoes to experience what she's been through.
Georgia O’Keeffe was born to the parents of Francis Calyxtus O’Keeffe and Ida (Totto) O’Keeffe on November 15, 1887 near Wisconsin. Georgia was the second oldest child and by the age of ten she knew she wanted to become an artist someday. Her first aspiration was doing abstracts. She was selective about what she painted, but often times she would paint to please others and not herself. Her paintings were thought of as sexual paintings because of the way they were drawn and painted in which she would say is one’s own opinion. Georgia O’Keeffe was best known for her flower canvas and southwestern landscapes. Her husband who is a famous photographer by the name of Alfred Stieglitz used to paint nice portraits of her. She was very fond of him, they both liked what each other did as far as how they were making ends meet, and he just didn’t want her to sell any of her paintings. He would often times tell people “No” so they wouldn’t buy any of her paintings because he wanted them all to himself. She had an interest in nature and used bright colors in her paintings.
Janie and Mrs. Mallard both lead distinctive lives due to their beliefs, environment and health. At an early age Janie married Logan Killicks because of her grandmother’s dying wish (Hurston, 15). Janie soon left Killicks and married Joes Starks a prosperous man who’s desire was to become rich and well known (Hurston, 29). Starks passed away and Janie married a younger man than her named Tea Cake (Hurston 116). Janie left her home town with Teacake and had the privilege to travel to new places and experience freedom, love and happiness (Hurston, 131). A hurricane arrived to the muck and Teacake was bitten by a dog with rabbis, Teacake tried to kill Janie, and in self-defense Janie killed Teacake. After Teacake’s death Janie was able to “pull
When the Cherokee Nation sued Georgia state they believed they were going to get justice. In some part during the ruling it was in their favor, they were named to be part of the United States and were Americans not Indians. The supreme court which was mostly ruled by Chief Justice John Marshall; had decided that they had no rights to any of their lands. They also denied them to self-govern because their lack of jurisdiction and they had no court power. Which the Cherokee people were against because they wanted to have full control of their land. It was their land they wanted to be able to do anything they wanted with it and set their own rules ruled. John Marshal disagreed with what they wanted to do and ruled his way. Which then led to Worcester V. Georgia. The verdict in this trial was that they could take away Cherokee land at any given time. They had made it clear that the land of Cherokee was not part of the United State; even though it should had been part of US territory. At the end, they could be forced to relocate and this
Our Town, written by Thornton Wilder, is one of the most performed plays in America. In this play, a number of characters with different roles and traits appear, and the roles range from doctor, student, undertaker, and housewife to a newspaper editor. The background of this play is a small one-stop town in New Hampshire, just across the Massachusetts line, and its name is Grover’s Corners. The main character I would like to focus on throughout this writing is Mrs. Gibbs, who is the mother of George Gibbs and Rebbeca Gibbs, and the wife of Dr. Gibbs. Even though she is nothing more than a common housewife, the role Mrs. Gibbs plays seems quite vital in this play. Her role is
Edgar Degas and Mary Cassatt, has similarities and differences. They both have the same subject matter but different in media. Degas and Cassatt both used gesture lines sketch like drawing. Both of the painters used pastel on paper. In addition, they used chalks of medium in the painting.
The characters though out the stories have similar traits even though they are depicted in different actions. Eva, from “The Found Boat” and Queenie, from “A&P” both contain a sexual ambiance. Eva is naked in front of the young man in the water while freely showing and expressing her sexuality. Queenie’s way of
What are characteristics of two women from different stories have in common. Each lady lived in different geographic area from one another, but both stories had shown the similar reflection of their lives style back to that early century. Miss. Emily from “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner was a single woman who grew up in a wealthy family and was the only child of Griesons. However, Emily was unlucky person. She did not enjoy her life that much as the family’s business was in trouble and the father died too soon. As he left her alone and with nothing, petty Emily was heartbroken and afraid to face with some of her father obligation. At that time, she also found the lover that people thought he could help her
Ernest Hemmingway wrote this novel about the love affair of an ambulance driver and a nurse during the Great War. Frederic Henry narrates the story of his life from the first-person point of view. (Cain) F. Scott Fitzgerald also wrote a novel about a torrid love affair between Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan. Both of these novels ended tragically. The similarities and differences between these two women love affairs can be broken down into three categories; who they were as women, who they were in their relationship, and the tragedies they both experience.
A Woman in Blue and a Beetle in Gold Many things can determine the differences between 2 paintings, so the two works by Yvonne Estrada and Steven R. Kutcher, are very different in many ways, very similar. These two paintings mostly differ in painter, and medium, but are similar in their use of color. They painters of these two works are very different, so different that Steven R. Kutcher wasn’t really the one who painted Sunrise No.1.
Lines, shape and composition are arranged in a baker-like fashion with cylindrical lines and elliptical shadows. Both Frida Kahlo and Wayne Theibaud use the same art mediums, oil on canvas and their compositions do not portray much movement, seeming more picture-esq, however both seem to be drawn from life rather than media.
Their individual perspectives in life ultimately shaped their education, experiences and overall point of view. This essay will outline the similarities and differences in subject matter, tone and imagery of these two artists’ bodies of work.
Both of these works have very similar narrators. By just reading the works, they seem very different because of who they killed and why, where and with whom they lived, and how they murdered their victims. But, by analyzing the two men, they become more and more alike. They both tell their stories in the first person and write from their jail cells. Each chose to reference an animal in their stories. The two men, both hide the corpses in the structures of the homes. Likewise, the narrators try to defend their sanity by logically justifying their horrific actions based on their mental states throughout the flashbacks of the events.
Both books were about love in some way. They both focus on a character who cares very deeply for a significant woman. Gatsby was obsessed over Daisy. Jim loved Antonia. The woman they loved had difficult lives, due to the fact that women's lives were set up to be made hard. They had to marry a man of decent wealth, or do slave work. These were most women's only choices. There were no jobs other than slave work for a woman, with only a few exceptions. Antonia was stuck doing slave work for years, while Daisy was with a horrible rich man for support.
Although these paintings were painted two hundred and seventeen years apart, they share some similar artistic qualities, but they are not so similar as to be indistinguishable from their own time period. Both Jan Steen and Vincent Van Gogh paint subjects around the table with hats and head coverings, a vanity that seems to stretch through both time periods and up to the modern era as well. The visual textures of both paintings are very similar as well. Each painting gives the illusion of a soft table covering and hard surroundings. In each painting the subjects are enjoying a vice, smoking in The Merry Family and Coffee in The Potato Eaters. The focal point of both paintings is similar too. In each the viewer’s attention is pulled to the table itself and is hastening to observe the people gathered around it. That seems to be where the similarities stop. Jan Steen uses a warm palette with a daytime natural lighting that plays across the painting from the window. In contrast, Van Gogh uses a cool palette and paints his scene at night using the whispering light of an overhead lantern.