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Paul Cezanne
... could always find the cone, the sphere and the cylinder in Nature, and that all natural shapes were composed of these shapes at their most basic form.
Cézanne inherited sufficient wealth to live in rich seclusion in Provence near Aix. ...
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Paul Cezanne, who was the son of a wealthy banker, became a painter in the 1860s in Paris when he quit his studies of Law.
... find the cone, the sphere and the cylinder in Nature, and that all natural shapes were composed of these shapes at their most basic form. inherited sufficient wealth to live in rich seclusion in Provence near Aix. He needed this ...
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Paul Cézanne.
... always find the cone, the sphere and the cylinder in Nature, and that all natural shapes were composed of these shapes at their most basic form.
CÉzanne inherited sufficient wealth to live in rich seclusion in Provence near Aix. He needed ...
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Paul CézanneHe was born in Aix-en-Provence on January 10th, 1839, into a middle class family, and took a classical course of studies
... most significant influence on Cézanne's work. He not only provided moral encouragement that Cézanne required (very insecure), but he also, introduced him to the new Impressionist technique for rendering outdoor light. Along with Claude Monet, August Renoir, and a few ...
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Perception in Art and Science
... perception on reality. An individual's perception depends on their cultural background, beliefs, morality, past experience or knowledge, personality etc. since all humans are different every person has a different perception. For example, if there is an art exhibition that is ...
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Personal Art Evaluation.
... at their works, I found they usually painted their paintings with various of paint. Therefore, I decided to do my final piece also with paint. At first, I thought this was a very bad idea, this was because I didn't ...
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Picasso - Olga in an arm chair and Jacqueline
... the intense colour relationships and dramatic distortion drawings.
The painting I chose included cold colours. There is not much expression to this picture he seems to be dreadfully serious, and he has no facial expression.
I learnt that a successful ...
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Picasso's Guernica
... a picture which appeals to visual thinking-as distinguished, for example, from a news photograph which many make use of the sense of sight merely for the purpose of informing us of what went on in a certain place-that figure is ...
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Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon and Guernica
... of five female prostitutes.
This painting was influenced by the barbaric qualities of primitive Iberian and African art, as well as Cézanne, another well-known artist. Picasso was influenced by a particular painting of Cézanne known as "Bathers." However, Picasso changed ...
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Picasso, Pablo (1881-1973).
... prodigy, painting realistic works when he was only 14 years old. Picasso's first personal style, called the Blue Period (1901-1904), focused on the themes of loneliness and despair, and featured mainly shades of blue. The style of this period gave ...
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Picasso’s Guernica
... will look at the contemporary reactions to Guernica and how it still affects people alive today.
Section 1: The Spanish Civil War
This is the background, the context, which informed Picasso, a Catalan in voluntary exile in Paris, and ...
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Pollock, Jackson (1912-56). American painter, the commanding figure of the Abstract Expressionist movement.
... it with `sticks, trowels or knives' (to use his own words), sometimes obtaining a heavy impasto by an admixture of `sand, broken glass or other foreign matter'. This manner of Action painting had in common with Surrealist theories of automatism ...
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Portraits through the ages.
... he also uses a lot of blue colours as he did in his painting around this time as this was painted during the Spanish civil war and many of his family or relatives were living in Spain at the time. ...
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Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
... brother) joined them by invitation. The painters William Dyce and Ford Madox Brown were also notable practitioners of the Pre-Raphaelite style.
The Brotherhood began immediately to produce highly convincing and significant works. Their pictures of religious and medieval subjects emulated the ...
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Provide a brief description of the stylistic attributes and conceptual principles of surrealism.
... justify the war, was a clear progressive development of Dadaism, in that it sought more than the mere nihilism and the 'cult of absurdity' that the latter had to offer.
From the launching in Paris 1919 of the anti-literature ...
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Realism and Impressionism
... sentimentality that characterized the academic art of that time. The Impressionist movement is often considered to mark the beginning of the modern period in art.
Impressionism in painting arose out of dissatisfaction with the classical and sentimental subjects and dry, precise ...
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Reason and Imagination
... true"5 we immediately trust it. This is because, over the years, science has achieved many advances made through the scientific method, and these advances have improved our lives dramatically. If the scientific method is used to prove a theory to ...
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RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE AND THE ART OF EL GRECO AND STANLEY SPENCER
... together in harmony.
Feeling beyond time and space is an experience which may seem as if it is
detached from the world. The Sense of reality is when life feels as if it is more
real after the religious experience. Blessedness ...
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Renoir.
... Monet during the summer of 1869.
Prior to this, Renoir had met 16 year old Lise Trehot, whose dark features and rounded figure attracted Renoir. Lise became Renoir's favorite model and mistress and can be seen in a number of works ...
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Review of Mexico Illuminated/Iluminado.
... preserve their own history. She showed how she did art not only for her own pleasure but also for the society, too. I admire her for the ways she contributes herself to others' communities. It was a good discussion because ...
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Review of the self-portrait by Thomas Hart Benton.
... was in Massachusetts. This is where Thomas and Rita had a little summerhouse, where they spent many summers. Here Thomas forged his own conceived style. In the painting there is a double portrait of Thomas Hart Benton and his wife ...
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Rhythm of Wild Water.
... they were on holiday there. Reefs such as these often play host to numerous "cleaner fish" who transform the reef into a sort of cleaning station. Here, large sea animals, such as this green sea turtle, can come to be ...
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Richard Deacon was born in Bangor, Wales, in 1949.
... Dominique FabrĎgue, the costumes. The dance was performed at La Ferme du Buisson, Paris, before touring France. Deacon's use of performance in his work has undergone change throughout his career. He actively participated in his earlier works but eventually found ...
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Rogier van der Weyden's "The Descent from the Cross" .
... the realistic spatial depiction that had only recently been achieved in painting. The niche he paints is deep enough at the bottom of the picture to accommodate several figures. Yet, the figure's heads are painted very close to the Cross ...
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Romanticism v realism
... with Algerian immigrants. It is a subjective interpretation of the event. Fifteen corpses and survivors are piled onto one another, posing in a melodramatic manner, giving the entire painting an implication of pain, suffering, despair and death. A man raised ...