3) Impressions then and now
A strange woman in the park
Where from do you get your inspiration? I prefer strolling along Chicago streets, and they whisper me new rhythm and lyrics. I write songs about what I see, and my friends say that they are easily understandable and everyone can find something close to them. One day I was walking along the park with a notebook in my hands, ready to write a few lines about what would impress me, when I noticed a strange woman. She was dressed in an unusual manner, not what we are used to. She looked very old-fashioned, and she was holding a parasol in her right hand. It was so striking that I looked everywhere to see a camera, because she seemed to be a heroine of a 19th century novel. But I didn’t find
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He reminded me a couple of facts about the author and his artwork:
• Impressionism appeared in France, and was named after Claude Monet’s masterpiece Impression, Sunrise.
• Impressionists were inspired by photography that was only gaining popularity. Photos were transmitting reality more accurately, and painters had to change their approach to depiction of various sceneries.
• Woman with a Parasol is a family portrait, showing Monet’s wife and their little son.
• There were a few paintings of the similar content, inspired by this masterpiece.
• This canvas proves that you can catch a perfect moment even if you are painting a simple scene from a family life.
One meeting with a strange lady helped me to recollect many facts about Impressionism, but I can’t say I loved it. I am good at writing lyrics, but I my painting skills are not so great. I can create an abstract picture, but careful depiction of all details in impressionistic way is too difficult to me. And I wonder, how many scenes, similar to other masterpieces I lost because of my inattention or ignorance? Really, art is everywhere, we just need to learn to notice
Both groups painted contemporary pieces, inspired by landscapes and modern life. Impressionists focused on the lighting, and the natural movement of the setting they were painting. They painted things en Plein air (in open air). In order to truly capture the essence of an image, they believed that you must be experiencing it firsthand. They started to break away from the Realist perspective, with the lack of dimension and modeling. Impressionist had a particular interest in capturing transitory moments in time. They used unique angles and thinner brush strokes to capture the visual element of being in motion. There was a bigger emphasis on the use of color in impressionist works. They used a technique in which they applied color to already wet paint, to develop the colors of the painting. This style of painting was a gateway for post- impressionism.
Race and gender have been the two most controversial topics in the media recently. After reading Harper Lee’s ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’, its very obvious that todays society & the society in the early 1930’s share many similarities. These similarities may not be to the same degree that they were back then, but they are still present and plaguing our generation, and will continue to plague the generation after us. The book is based in Maycomb, Alabama between 1933 & 1935. Traits of Race and gender inequality were displayed throughout the novel and match some conflict situations in the media today.
Next Odysseus and his men visit the Laestrygonians, giant cannibals, they eat Odysseus' scouts and drown all the ships except for Odysseus'.
Soltes (2011) discusses Cassatt’s, Woman and Child before a Washstand and Bowl (1889) and describes the tones of a delicate palate characteristic of Impressionist painting. He notes her brushwork is tighter than typical Impressionism and is similar to that of Degas, assuming their close relationship affected her artistic style as a painter. Her subject matter echoes the continuity of the Madonna and Christ child yet in a modern humanized version of an actual mother and child. Soltes (2011) regards Cassatt as:
“Painting today is pure intuition and luck and taking advantage of what happens when you splash the stuff down. “- Francis Bacon. However when I learnt more about history of art and the way each movement and happenings in the world inspired artist to make new works, I was able to see much more than just a canvas with random paints and sketches. The interesting part about this concept is that each piece of art could be interpreted in many different ways. In contemporary art there isn’t right and wrong, each of us view and find different meanings and connections with artworks.
Community Board 7 is made up of two neighborhoods Sunset Park and Windsor Terrace. Within Board 7 there are five over lapping zip codes that make up this community; 11215,11218,11219,11220, and 11232. The main areas that consist of Board 7 are 11218, 11220 and 11232. Zip code 11232 encompasses all of Greenwood Cemetery until 44th street, 11220 starts at 44th street until Bay Ridge Avenue, and 11218 includes all of Windsor Terrace and Kensington. Although community board 7 spans from 65th street to 17th street and from the Bay Ridge Canal to parts of Fort Hamilton Parkway, Sunset park spans from
“Painting picture by picture, I followed the impressions my eye took in at heightened moments. I painted only memories, adding nothing, no details that I did not see. Hence the simplicity of the paintings, their emptiness.” -Edvard Munch
The purpose of this essay is to fully employ all of the new observational skills that I have learned from the start of the semester to now. With that in mind, I was feeling very excited to use these new “abilities” as I was observing art. The San Diego Museum of Art was very interesting indeed, and I have never experienced art in such a way that is sort of hard to describe. The museum had paintings and galleries ranging from the Renaissance era all the way to the eighteenth century and even Impressionism and Post-Impressionism as well. However, my eyes instantly caught Henri Matisse’s painting, Bouquet, this painting had so many details, elements, and meanings as well as similar characteristics from past chapters that I have read this semester.
Context: This portrait is a painting of the first cousin of Mary Cassatt, Mrs. Mary Dickinson
Among the numerous paintings, sculptures and different art work presented, the impressionist paintings such as, The Seine at Vétheuil Circa and L'Estaque both intrigued and captured my attention. I have a personal admiration for simplicity and tranquility in which it’s presented in both of these paintings. I want to present,
The Impressionists sought to achieve a representation of spontaneous and direct reality, and they focused on capturing the effects of natural light on
“... from the classically executed lifelike bouquets, tempting you to reach for the petals that fell on a three-dimensional tablecloth, to a new and disturbing style in which the colors seemed to blaze with such intensity they destroyed the old lines, the old solidity, to make a vision like those states which I'm nearest my delirium and flowers grow before my eyes and crackle like the flames of lamps.” (Rice) (Background of Impressionism) The first impressionist artists of the 19th century started the most famous French painting revolution by challenging prevailing art standards for art relating to realism and naturalism due to the writings of Freud and Baudelaire the resulting art reflected the increasing belief that the
Art is delivered and delighted in by numerous individuals for some causes. Something that art does is stretch and build up our common aggregate photographic dialect. At the point when new visual thoughts are initially exhibited by the craftsman, they are regularly seen as stunning, and maybe even as unimaginable.
Claude Monet (1840-1926) was a french painter born in Paris, and considered the leader of the impressionism movement. His interest was painting in the open air and using various natural light, depending on the time of day to capture different sequences. Monet, from an early age, was inspired by the ocean and coastline of Northern France. The most interesting
For centuries artist along with society have placed an emphasis on meaning in a piece of art. Art has always consisted of subject matters, motifs and other pre-concieved ideas or thoughts about what one should use as their focal point in a work of art. The very definition of art though, is an appealing or attractive object created through any of the fine arts. Nowhere does it say that a work of art must have a concentration point. Not until the advent of abstract expressionism was the idea of “painting from the unconscious,”1 brought into the art scene.