Preview

art- henry matisse

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
918 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
art- henry matisse
Matisse started to create large scale cut paper collages. He called the technique ‘painting with scissors’.

Peter Kozlov is a very skilful painter that creates colourful pictures that look like a photograpy. He paints with oil and his works have a tendency to move to Hyperrealism. The most frequent subject matter of his works is a still life that usually involves fruits. What is amazing about Peter is his great attention to details. Each of his picture is a thoughtfully arranged composition of highly realistic palette and very destinct lines.

Blakemore He then evolved his personal work to become one of England's leading landscape photographers. He worked in diverse areas of photography from documentary, through portraiture to still life, with a particular focus in more recent years on tulips as symbols of sensuality and elegance. Blakemore is celebrated for the detail, texture and tonal richness of his work

Sandra blazell- graphite and acrylics
Matisse started to create large scale cut paper collages. He called the technique ‘painting with scissors’.

Peter Kozlov is a very skilful painter that creates colourful pictures that look like a photograpy. He paints with oil and his works have a tendency to move to Hyperrealism. The most frequent subject matter of his works is a still life that usually involves fruits. What is amazing about Peter is his great attention to details. Each of his picture is a thoughtfully arranged composition of highly realistic palette and very destinct lines.

Blakemore He then evolved his personal work to become one of England's leading landscape photographers. He worked in diverse areas of photography from documentary, through portraiture to still life, with a particular focus in more recent years on tulips as symbols of sensuality and elegance. Blakemore is celebrated for the detail, texture and tonal richness of his work

Sandra blazell- graphite and acrylics
Matisse started to create large scale cut paper collages. He

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    His work strongly features texture and reduction of form. There are strong emotions from the figure with engagement of the eyes. His works are constructed by…

    • 1733 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    With the work of the painter Mark Tansey (San Jose, California, 1949) his keeps a great methodological thematic and color affinity. The artist from Granada joins Gerhard Richter (Dresden, 1932) in his interest in the ‘photo-painting,’ naturalizing the illusionistic space and equalizing the oeuvre’s information through the blurring of its background. In Spain, Pomet’s work shares with Angel Mateo Charris’ (Cartagena, 1962), its inspiration in comics and the Pop-Art, and with that of his former studio colleague, Santiago Ydáñez (Jaén, 1969), its technical freshness.…

    • 691 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chuck Close Bob

    • 724 Words
    • 3 Pages

    * Suffered severe dyslexia and had a neuromuscular condition that prevented him from playing sport and found solace in his art…

    • 724 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    of those photos. He would become one of the most well-known photographers of nature of…

    • 3879 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    art gcse

    • 506 Words
    • 3 Pages

    He works in very thick layers, and his exaggerated, intensified colours tend to merge and fuse together to create a dramatic scene or landscape. In these two images, he has contrasted light pale washes against harsh, bright and thick textures, such as some of the clouds in the landscape image. Afremov also picks out undertones and base colours. He then intensifies these colours and turns them into one of the main and strongest colours that catches the eye. This works so well because these are the colours that are mixed to create other tones in the images, therefore, the colours all work quite harmonically.…

    • 506 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    This new technology led to the artists to begin to mass-produce their works. Before the work could be mass-produced the block of wood had been formed into the image. This was done by “[t]he artist’s design is either drawn directly on the block or on a sheet of paper which was glued to its surface. The cutter uses a knife similar to a penknife and carefully cuts away all the wood away from the sides of the lines which the artist has drawn.” After the wood was brought to the desired image/design the artist would season the wood to ensure that the block would not crack or warp. With this block the artist could then begin to produce prints. Prints could be produced cheaply and efficiently lowering the cost of what art used to cost for an original. The main reason for the reduced cost was the reduced the amount of time spent by the artist to produce the work. The artist could carve one block and transfer that image onto potentially thousands of mediums. With the creation of the concept of prints the middle class could begin to enjoy art a luxury that had been reserved only for the wealthy. With the emergence of a larger demographic of consumers’ artists began to produce more works propelling the industry…

    • 1807 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Adams was the last and defining figure in the romantic tradition of 19th century american landscape painting and photography. He claimed he wasn’t influenced but consciously or unconsciously he was in the tradition of Thomas Cole. Adams subject matter was the magnificent natural beauty of the west! His vast archive of papers, memorabilia, correspondence, negatives…

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Matisse is considered one of the most influential painters of the 20th century, and one of the leading Modernists. Known for his use of vibrant colors and simple forms, Matisse helped to usher in a new approach to art. He believed that the artist must be guided by instinct and intuition. Although he began his craft later in life than most artists, Matisse continued to create and innovate well into his eighties.…

    • 582 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Romare Bearden

    • 583 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Bearden became the most original and famous due to his unique collages that he mastered in isolation working methods. This artwork was displayed in abstract complicated positions and showed intricate details made from magazine and newspaper clippings, as well as foil and different fabrics. Pablo Picasso, Jose Clemente, and Diego Rivera were a few artists that also influenced his work. Romare broke many boundaries and traditional ideas and expectations of artists. He put a unique twist on the already established European collage method by using different techniques such as quilt work, print, many fabrics, textures, nature, landscapes, oils water colors and of course photo montage. These techniques gave his art a personality a vibe a feeling that made views want more the pieces always had many details and messages.…

    • 583 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Goldsworthy challenges mainstream landscape practice by setting his art pieces in the natural environment instead of the traditional surroundings like a museum where traditional landscape art works are displayed. The fact that Goldsworthy’s artworks are not in a museum leaves no limits to the audience when it comes to experiencing the art works unlike in museums where the audience are confined to the room in which the art works are displayed and there is usually no touching allowed. Although with his art piece “Snowballs” in which Goldsworthy places snowballs, containing materials such as sticks and berries, that are placed around London’s CBD which his art work was emphasised when placed in the contrasting environment to which the…

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Moma

    • 669 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Henri Matisse was a French artist, known for his use of color and originality. He is also commonly regarded, along with Picasso, as one of the two greatest artists of the 20th century. In addition Matisse was one of the great initiators of the modern art movement, which uses the combination of bold primary colors and free simple forms. His most notable paintings that comes to mind after visiting Moma is Blue Nude, Le Luxe II, Bathers with a Turtle, and La Danse. Collectively, these paintings have various similarities as well as differences from each other.…

    • 669 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gerhard Richter

    • 318 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Walking through the exhibition it is hard to believe one man painted all the images, many of which occupy opposite ends of the spectrum, yet each image is equally as effective. All though he’s devoted to paint, Richter uses a camera a great deal, painting from photographs more often than not, creating precise photorealistic images, however the next minute you will see a large canvas in the style of an abstract-expressionist, smudging and smearing paint everywhere.…

    • 318 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Arts and Crafts Movement began in the last decades of the 19th century. It was developed by the ideas and views of William Morris who was inspired by John Ruskin. William Morris was a dynamic and multi-talented man. His name is “indissolubly linked to wallpaper design” (William Morris & Wallpaper Design, [sa]). All his designs were made by hand and not machines because Morris believed that “the tastelessness of mass-produced goods and the lack of honest craftsmanship might be addressed by a reunion of art with craft” (Meggs and Purvis 1998:179).…

    • 934 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In U.S. People thought minimalism was the end to painting. That painting is an exhausted medium. In France however, minimalism was viewed as something to be dealt with within painting. Is does not represent the end of painting. At the forefront of this movement was Simon Hantai, a Hungarian. He is known for inventing Pliage (to fold) in France. From 1960 to 1982, he works exclusively on canvas that is off the wooden frame and wadded up, crumbled up. He then paints the canvas like this and opens it up. He sums all his painterly ambitions as an attempt to make painting exceptionally banal, ordinary. Intially very poor, looked at geometrical abstraction and gestural abstraction. He is interested in making painting that exceeds his conscious control, his conscious intention so that what is reveled is a surprise to him. He takes several features from Mathieu's work. The aesthetics of speed and painting in an altered state are ideals of Mathiew which Hantai takes interest in. Hantai tried to take over Mathieu's ideas while building a mechanisms that allows the work to surprise him. Hantai's answer to Pollock was the creation of Pliage. A new way of getting paint on the canvas. In Meun he alters his technique using knots in the canvas and flattening it out, creating mushroom shapes. This results in larger paint ares and also larger non-painted areas or white space. Ewventaully the white space becomes the most important part of Pliage. In pliage the non painted areas are no longer a neutral space, the white parts become a critical component of the work. The white areas lets the painted areas breathe. Hantai's Meun share great similarities with some of Matisee's work which place an emphasis on negative space. Additionally, the non-painted spaces are placed where he did not touch and thus could not compose them. Hantai's lifelong aspiration was to free painting from its author. He wanted for painting not to be only for the notionally gifted invdividuals…

    • 3374 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Enk, Filip, and Stephan Delbos. "Photographers Andreas Feininger and Dana Kyndrov." The Prague Post 28 July 2011, Tempo sec.: 1-2. Print.…

    • 1516 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics