The use of distinctively visual images allows an audience to perceive and distinguish the composer’s specific representation. From these distinctive visuals, the audience’s perceptions force them to respond in a particular way. In ‘Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon’, Ang Lee utilises a range of film techniques to position his audience through a combination of quiet, dramatic scenes and choreographed action sequences. In his painting, ‘Third of May, 1808’ Fransisco Goya conveys meaning exclusively with distinctively visual techniques. Both the composers are able to effectively convey their message and immerse the responder in the different aspects of the texts.…
Nordau gives the example of a painting by the artist Valdez. The subject is barbaric and vulgar, and yet, with a fresh perspective, Nordau argues that it is a truly beautiful art piece. Sensual beauty is not what art is always about. If you have an open mind, you can experience the intellectual beauty in almost every art piece. Nordau explains that you can feel the raw emotion of the painting, and maybe that is exquisite enough, all on its…
The author suggest that we ask ourselves: “What is the purpose of this work of art (and what is the purpose of art in general)? What does it mean? What is my reaction to the work and why do I feel this way? How do the formal qualities of the work-such as color, its organization, its size and scale-affect my reaction? What do I value in works of art?”…
The emphasis on making ‘art about art’ which is the focus of his non-representational abstract paintings, contrasts clearly with the focus on social critique that was integral to Bennett’s earlier work, and is intended to provoke viewers thinking and opens up new possibilities for understanding the subjects he…
meanings and rich ambiguity into his paintings of classical themes. This painting used to belong…
Some objects in the painting are a pregnant woman, a burning candle, a skull, and a cross lying on the table under some books. The way the woman’s head is rested on her hand and she is staring into the candle light, shows that she is in deep thought. I believe that the woman is reflecting upon her life. She looks to be pregnant, which represents life. The unity of…
After I had entered the room, I realized what it was about Impressionistic art that I loved so much. The amazing color. The nonconformity. The raw emotion. What a surreal feeling it was to stand there before the works of greatsthe works of masters. Such a feeling I had only felt a few times beforehand, yet none had ever dealt with historical masterpiecesmasterpieces that would alter the foundation of art and visual media until the end of time.…
When a work transcends into art, it surpasses its cultural restraints and touches us. We are moved; we are transported to a new place that is, nevertheless, strongly rooted in a physical experience, in our bodies. When we focus on works such as Van Gogh’s “Old Man in Sorrow” or Velazquez’s “Christ Crucified” rather than “The Scream” or “Campbell’s Soup Cans”, we become aware of a feeling that may not be unfamiliar to us but which we did not actively focus on before. Unlike popular culture, this transformative experience is what art is constantly seeking. The emotions invoked from a reading of Yeats or Frost pulls the strings of our conscience and heart and most importantly, they inspire and motivate us to change ourselves and/or the world around us. No amount of Meyer or Collins can bring forth the willingness to examine and investigate our lives or the lives of others. The felt feeling of art spurs thinking, engagement, and even action. Only art alone helps people get to know and understand something with their minds and feel it emotionally and physically. By doing this, art can mitigate the almost numbing effect created by modern pop culture and society and motivate people to start thinking and doing.…
Through the careful use of tonal modelling, David illustrates three dimensionality, which is therefore very naturalistic. Tonal modelling is shown through the deep shadowing in forms of the painting. This deep shadowing creates a more believable volumetric space. For example, we get a sense of the figures’ volumetric space through the shadowing in the folds of the figures’ robes; which suggests the outlines and contours of the figures’ bodies.…
The composition of the piece can be seen as very dynamic. The main focus of the painting, the Virgin Mary, draws the viewer’s eye immediately to the center of the piece, then it seems to follow her robes to the angel and up around the table in between them, following the light and the curved lines of the hearth over to the right panel where Joseph is shown. Then it seems that the eye is drawn outside of the piece over to subjects in the left panel, who are almost disconnected from the rest of the piece. They are shown outside the door to the home, which seems to separate them even more from the other subjects of the painting.…
To the left of the painting, there is a large massive object. This object is isolated from everything. It grabs your attention first then takes you to the rest of the painting. This object is large when compared to other objects in the painting. The curving lines of the object moving upward towards the sky are like arms reaching out. This object also allows the viewer to interpret what it could be. From a large bush growing upward toward the sky to whatever the imagination of the viewer depicts.…
Shattuck, R. (1997). Stages on Art 's Way. New Republic, 216(5), 43-49. Retrieved January 17, 2010 from Academic Search Premier database.…
Interpretation\connection: three important things I feel the audience should know about the performance is that the piece was a very different modern type of dance, it was based on animal instinct, and there was no specific genre of dance used for the performance to be based on. The most impressionable moment or me was when the dancers were each lined up separately with their backs towards the audience in between the pillars on the back wall up stage, I like this moment because I thought the lighting and spacing really caught everyone in the audiences eye. I felt the modern aspect, the theme of animal instinct and there being no exact genre of dance made me more open to the performance as art because I didn't try to compare it to anything else I just watched it for what it was. For example at first I felt it was very weird but as it went it went on I grew to be more open to it.…
A lot of things can speak to us but it takes the really something with great significance to actually mean something. Once something really strikes us it can change us maybe only a little bit or even completely. Art speaks through us with what we vision and not what we hear. Something so great only motivates us to do something maybe similar but just as great for ourselves. A lot of things can run through our minds but it’s better to go out and experience it rather to just vision what it could have…
Art has been created by all people at all times; it lives because it is liked and enjoyed. Art involves personal experiences of an individual accompanied by some intensity of emotion. Art is made of man, no matter how close it is to nature. Although each work of art is evidently the expression of an artists’ personal thoughts and feelings it may be inferred that, like any other individual, he belongs to a million, and he cannot free himself from the influence of his social, economic, political, cultural, geographic, scientific, and technological environment.…