The composition of the painting by Van Der Weyden consists of a woman cradling a baby with the focus of many different spectators on the infant. The crowd of spectators is mostly men and three farm animals, a bull, a mule, and a dog. The women and infant are sitting inside a reddish, stone, partially enclosed shelter; that is slightly deviated to the left of the center of the painting. There is a man in elaborate clothing kneeling before the infant and another is bowing while offering a chalice. There are four men in the foreground while the rest of the figures are crowded by an entrance to the shelter in the middle right section. The figures are slender and graceful.…
This painting shows the energy and positive attitudes of the people through the use of vibrant colors and the happy expressions of the faces. The people in this picture have features that were comparable to the minstrel characters (Wikipedia, 26 July 2013) often depicting Black face. Many have very dark skin with big white eyes and teeth, and are all smiles. All of the people are dressed nicely in dresses for the women and girls, top hats and slacks for the men and boys. It is safe to assume that the people in the picture had just came from church, because in the background you clearly see the church and a handful of people walking out as well as a carload of people driving off.…
Phil Jackson 's book, Sacred Hoops is him telling a story about his spiritual basketball journey to becoming one of the greatest NBA coaches of all time. It starts out with him coaching a season of the Bulls, then it flashes back to his high school life and him winning the state championship for Williston High School. After that he goes from an all American in college to a player at the New York Knicks, and the New Jersey Nets. After realizing playing pro ball wasn 't his thing, he turned to Zen Buddhism. From this Zen Buddhism he found himself, and found better ways to do things. He got asked to help coach the Nets as an assistant for a while. Phil also coached many minor league teams before becoming the assistant, and head coach of the Chicago Bulls where his career took off from there.…
Phil Jackson coached the Chicago Bulls basketball team to one of the longest winning streaks in professional sports. In his book, Sacred Hoops, he describes his approach to coaching a group of acknowledged stars. He clearly understands that simply collecting a set of outstanding players does not a championship team make. One way of understanding his approach is to think of every problem or project having components in four different spheres:…
In this painting, the movement has a significant impact on how the viewer will see it. John has tended to control the direction of how he wanted the viewer to look at…
Acceptance is a vital part of human interaction throughout history. This concept of acceptance is interpreted in a quote from Barbara Jordan, was a politician, lawyer, educator, and a leader of the Civil Rights Movement. She believed that “We, as human beings, must be willing to accept people who are different from ourselves.” This belief is one that she lived by in all the aspects of her daily life. In analysis, it can be found that there are several similar themes present in the Collection One texts “Texas v. Johnson Majority Opinion”, “The Wife’s Story”, and “The Lottery”, all of which go hand- and- hand with Jordan’s quote about acceptance.…
In demonstration, after the abolishment in the nation with three additional amendments, anti-freedmen deliberately searched a loophole to harass the freedmen. Forming the Ku Klux Klan and other groups, white americans killed and intimidated former slaves. In reference to Document E, the depiction manifested two men, a white southerner with a card saying white league, and K.K.K. member, holding a death skull over a family of black citizens grieving over their child’s corpse. The title of the picture speaks out: WORSE THAN SLAVERY. Considering the appellation and art, white southerners and K.K.K. contemplate eradicating and humiliating the black race. Moreover, the child is assumed as a victim of the murderers, causing grievance to African American’s social life. To summarize, because of the new amendments and the Reconstruction Era, African Americans have a difficult social life, finalizing the fact that America has unsuccessfully achieved social equality.…
Traveling is an aspect of what is perceived from our day to day lives, to something new that has never been seen. Ellis Wilson traveled throughout life with many struggles, and trials that created barriers in his overall success as an artist. Faced with many obstacles, he set on a journey with a paintbrush, visions, and stories all throughout his life. Regardless what life presented to him he kept treading on. He was met with new opportunities with each experience and that led him to his epiphany of his artistic ability when he was inspired by his travels to Haiti and the African culture of the people and their interaction. He moved forward with his talents, and his greatest influence, when his father passed away in the 1930’s. Ellis Wilson portrayed this emotion of losing a loved one in his painting Funeral Procession. (Wilson). This painting he expressed the significance of losing a loved one, overcoming a tragedy, but still being able to move forward and celebrate that lost soul. He had a personal connection to this losing his father at such an early period of his artistic and personal life. He left landmarks with all the various jobs he took to display his artistic talents, he never was discouraged, and moved forward creating a path that would be influential to later African American artists, decades and centuries later. He found comfort and warm close feeling still being connected to his home town; he still shared his success with them. His documentary explained, “Ellis’ continued interest in sharing his accomplishments and artwork with his hometown and home state reflected his strong connection to his community and family roots. He once told an interviewer that his only real regret was that his father, who had inspired his love of art in the first place, did not live to see his son’s successâ€(King). Wilson’s painting Funeral Procession created in 1958 was an exhibition of his signature style of angularity and elongation, a dedication of his…
Three paintings in particular contradicted the idea of a better, more conformed society. One of which is “Nighthawks”, by Edward Hopper. This painting is a scene of four people, a couple, an employee, and someone by themselves, in a small diner. The surrounding streets are very dark and these four people appear to be…
In the artwork The Immaculate Conception (Figure 1) painted by Antonio de Palomino y Velasco, the viewer is immediately drawn towards the most prominent figure in the painting. The features of Palomino’s work all direct the viewer towards the illuminated woman and the bird flying overhead in the center of the canvas. This painting utilizes creative elements such as perspective, lighting and colors, and shapes to accentuate the significance of the central characters in the foreground of the artwork.…
Many were blind to what to do and had lost a great amount of wealth, creating a feeling of anxiety. Artists also experienced this worry and portrayed this feeling through their pieces. Abraham Harriton, a Jewish painter simulates the restlessness that was experienced during this era with his painting, “6th Avenue Unemployment Agency”. Harriton paints an explicit portrait of how people had reacted to this sudden tragedy. The painting shows a line of people at an unemployment agency and indicates how anxious the people were at the time. However, the way Harriton paints this painting he shows that there is still hope no matter what. In the middle of the painting there is a woman who is pointing straight up and trying to calm all those around her. The woman pointing to the sky demonstrates that she is trying to signify that god is there and will be provided for during this time of depression. But, the people around her show that they don’t really care about what she is saying which shows how the questioning of the existence of god that sparked during this time. The painter however intended for this painting to show how the people react to these kind of situations and this painting shows that everybody is just worried for what will happen to them in the…
There are billions upon billions of postcards with pictures on them in the world. Why do people send these postcards? What is the meaning? Many postcards have pictures on them and are sent from spots of vacations or even just to say hello. Sometimes they hold great meaning, or sometimes their just sent for the beautiful picture stored on the front. For the most part, when people think of postcards they think of a beautiful picture that symbolizes happy times. However, back in the day, that wasn’t always the case, for the picture was not always beautiful. Without Sanctuary is a website that shows a myriad of postcards, but these post cards are completely out of the ordinary by our standards today. These post cards are of people being lynched, which isn’t exactly the most beautiful picture. In the picture you would not only see the lynching most times, but also the bystanders watching it happen often smiling about it like a social event. While it may seem awful nowadays, back then it was actually pretty common just to be an onlooker at a lynching, and for the most part a very socially acceptable thing to do. So maybe after all, the bystanders may not be complete monsters, as we make them out to be today.…
The cross and the lynching tree are symbols of death and hope which surround the African American’s press for identity, hope and survival in the face of death and adversity, and provide a connection to Christ through which faith bonds can never be truly broken. Whites utilized atrocities, such as slavery, to control the lives of blacks. Eventually, slavery through the letter of the law came to a close. Then for more than sixty years, “lynching” became a necessary evil employed by whites to show African Americans their power and supremacy. Lynching was a symbol of darkness and despair for blacks. Crowds jeered and mocked those murdered unjustly upon a tree…just as they did to Christ centuries earlier.…
When Jayanti arrives in America and meets her Uncle and Aunt, she feels ashamed to practice her traditional customs openly in the public. As she says, “I touch their feet like a good Indian girl should, though I am somewhat embarrassed. Everyone in the airport is watching us” (72). This is where we see how assimilation begins to contribute to the loss of her customs and who she is.…
By observing the decor of the chapel, I made the assumption that Jesus Christ was the center of attention. There were beautiful crosses everywhere and pictures of each moment of the crucifixion along the walls. Also, a statue of Mary , Jesus’s mother, was in the front of the sanctuary, and it had several candles around which made her look important. This piece of art was used as an alter for the church members. On the…