History painting

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    Edgar Degas once stated, “A painting requires a little mystery, some vagueness, and some fantasy. When you always make your meaning perfectly plain you end up boring people” (Frank). Degas style of painting reflects this quotation from him. He keeps a yearning within the audience to understand the true meaning of his paintings. The mystery of his paintings is part of the reason that he is popular. This paper will discuss the painting The Interior, and why it fits the mystery of Degas. Hilaire-Germain-Edgar

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    Frida Kahlo Analysis

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    virus. She used pain, passion, bold and vibrant colors in her paintings. Her paintings were so good that Mexico celebrates her because she paid attention to the Mexican and indigenous culture. She loved to paint about her lifetime and her physical and emotional pain.She was described as a surrealist painter, which is an artist who adds to the movement in art and literature which releases creativity. Some of her self-portrait paintings include the ‘Frieda and Diego Rivera’, the ‘Henry Ford Hospital’

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    Le Grande Quai Analysis

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    Cooper January 8, 2016 Le Havre: Le Grande Quai The work I choose was Le Havre: Le Grande Quai, by Maurice de Vlaminck. The artwork was created in 1906 during the “Modern Architecture” era and the “Expressionist Movement” (Saint Louis Art Museum). The painting was created on location at the port of Le Havre in northwestern France (Maurice De Vlaminck). The artwork was created on a medium of oil on canvas, utilizing the primary colors along with white for contrast. Scaling of the work is proportional or

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    an artist most commonly known in relation to the advent of modernist art, is credited with introducing such painterly techniques as producing flatness in painting, and, a layering down of hues (alla prima). He is regarded as the father of modernité, having many written works have been produced as supplements, responses or studies of his paintings and influences in art—three of which I present as subjects of scrutiny in this paper: the Painter of Modern Life by French poet and essayist Charles Baudelaire

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    visual language; I like most learn and make judgments off of what is visually catching and the artists are intending this to happen. Art has been an imperative part of every society and can be seen in just about every aspect of our culture. Over time history has unmistakably demonstrated that art is more than what is perceptible by the each individual’s senses; however it is likewise an impression of how

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    whenever he needed help. Her first serious encounter with painting occurred after she survived a car crash whose injuries left her in a full body cast for three month and on extended bed rest (Herrera, 1983). Seeing their daughter fall into despair from this intense physical pain and loneliness, Frida’s mother had an easel made for her and her father lent her paints (Herrera, 1983). Because she could not get out of bed, she started painting what was available to her: “portraits of friends […], family

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    Censorship In Art

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    Since the beginning of time art has been an important aspect to our lives. We learn from it, admire it, and some even relate to it in different ways. Art comes in many different forms it could be sculptures, photography, paintings or music. Some forms of art could be inappropriate and offensive to some people. Should all art be censored? A great deal of controversy has been provoked by this. Although you may not think that different forms of art are beneficial to our every day lives, actually they

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    works by Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, and even Georges Seurat were still considered too radical for the collections of most American institutions. Today the Helen Birch Bartlett Memorial Collection comprises some of the most important and iconic paintings of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Art Institute of Chicago: The Helen Birch Bartlett Memorial Collection The Art Institute of Chicago is a Museum and art school located

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    Paper Assignment I Throughout Europe, the Renaissance period had various effects on art which can be broken down and seen from Southern (Italian) and Northern paintings. With the renaissance, came disinterest in dogma, and more of a focus on naturalism and humanism. However, the strong influence of religion never left either the Northern or Southern art works, due to the commission by the church. Giuliano Bugiardini’s, Madonna and Child with St. John the Baptist, 1510, is a pristine depiction of

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    B.C. And throughout the history of art, we can see a lot of artists being inspired and influenced by great talents before them, in one way or another they would carry the style or ideas of those previous artists into their own art and create new masterpieces. One particular example is Édouard Manet’s Olympia from the Realism period, and Yasumasa Morimura’s Futago. The two paintings share great similarities in their composition, but the content and purpose of the paintings, and style wise the two

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