Spain has produced some of the world-class painters. Francisco de Goya and Pablo Picasso exist among the ranks of Spain’s most internationally acclaimed artist. These two influential artists use their artwork as a platform to protest against social injustices. Goya and Picasso, works can be understood to address Social Protest Art, but artist handles the subject in their own unique way. Goya and Picasso were both prolific artists of their times, offering works of great visual travesty of the glories of warfare and bloody victory.…
When doing portraiture artists tend to exaggerate colour and tones to get across the feelings in a picture or to exaggerate the importance of something or someone in a picture. I have chosen to compare and contrast the work of two portraits, first of all I will talk about ‘weeping woman’ by Pablo Picasso and I will secondly talk about ‘Woman with a veil’ but Raphael Sanzio.…
Watkins, J. (2010). Picasso’s Guernica: Propaganda, Art, or Revelation?, Available: http://www.transpositions.co.uk/2010/07/picassos-guernica-propaganda-art-or-revelation/, Last accessed 7th December 2012.…
These works of art attempt to impact and acknowledge the memory of war by showing you before, during, and after a war. They take different aspects of war itself, and through different perspectives and artistic designs, they…
As we move to the descriptive criticism we must look at how the work is physically put together and how it is unified as a whole. “Guernica” is full of many exaggerated and unique shapes. Looking closely we see the painting is made up of layers. The bottom layer is full of very large basic shapes such as rectangles and triangles, while upper layers show more unique and defined drawings. Many drawings are distorted and in areas very exaggerated. The work is unified through its basic grayscale colors across the entire painting and also through the previously stated, consistent and distorted nature of all the objects. As we look at the organization of this painting it may seem that it has none, but looking deeper we see that every piece of the puzzle has its place. “Guernica” is very balanced in its structure, the painting is not “leaning” to the left or the right. It is obvious that Picasso was very careful about the placement of the objects and shapes in the painting. Finally, when descriptively criticizing a work of art it is…
Luis Miguel Dominguin, a name that is very familiar and holds a close place in the heart of Picasso. Luis Dominguin was a famous and eminent matador, and since Picasso was interested in bullfights he would very often visit the matador and have him teach him all about bullfights. After a while, Picasso developed a good relationship with the matador. But why was Picasso interested in bullfights and what role did bulls play in Picasso’s Guernica? A bullfight is a sport and a tradition familiar in countries such as Spain, Latin America and more. Bullfights can be remembered by some people by the name Tauromachy or Tauromachia; this sport involves a bullring with bulls fighting inside it, some people find this so called exotic “deadly sport” an…
The painting was a surrealist art work. This art work was one of the most radical of Salvador Dali art career. It showed the outbreak of the Spanish civil war was caused by fear. This painting was to predict the unrest erupted in Spain. It was an early sign for the massacre in Spain.…
Salvador Dali’s Persistence of Memory is by far his most recognizable piece of art. Salvador Dali was born on May 11th, 1904 in Catalonia, Spain (Dali). Persistence of Memory was done in 1931, while he was living in Paris, France (Dali). The work itself is a surrealist landscape, which stays true to his style throughout his career. Persistence of Memory is full of symbolism and has many elements of art within the piece. By dissecting the various parts of images used in Dali’s piece, we can begin to pick apart the different elements of art found and pull meanings out of them.…
Created Paris June-July 1907, painted by the great Pablo Picaso, is an oil on canvas painting a very large and striking image, it is indescribable, confusing, and powerful, an crude incoherent jumble of color and shapes,…
Picasso Picasso is one of the most famous artists of the twentieth century. He created his art in Paris, the heart of the artistic world. A playboy to the core Picasso used his wild lifestyle as inspiration to his rather different approach to his artwork. Picasso was a painter, sculpture and basically a creator. He saw things in a totally different way then anyone else did. His drawings and sculptures portrayed objects and people in a cubism form of art. The objects or people were disorientated which depicted a type of mood or feeling or emotion in the drawing. The drawing I choose to recreate is the Head of a Woman (Dora Maar) by Picasso. It was executed in Paris, around May or June of 1941. It is signed and inscribed in the bottom right:…
“Guernica”: Symbolism, Significance, and the Spanish Civil War “Guernica,” painted by the Spanish painter Pablo Picasso in 1937, is a memorial of the bombing of the town of Guernica in Northern Spain by the Nazi’s during the Spanish Civil War (Petersen). The Spanish Civil War was an amalgamation of many different political factions into two opponents: The Republicans and the Nationalists. The Spanish Civil War, however, was not based solely on combative political ideologies. It was correspondingly due to many different political, economic, and militaristic struggles during the early twentieth century and the resulting frustration, anger, and class-antipathy corroded Spanish society. The masterpiece, “Guernica” has many symbols and objects…
Guernica by Pablo Picasso is an immediate response of an artist to an inhuman act of bombarding the Basque capital by German Nazis. The fact that this art piece relates to a real event in the history emphasizes its importance and the message it conveys. Picasso used a lot of symbols to convey the message hidden behind his art. One of the symbol is the electric light bulb which shines on the figures in the painting. The electric light bulb has a shape of an eye and it symbolizes that the world is being shown its inhumanity.…
Topic 6: Art as Response to War The paintings: Guernica, the Massacre at Chios, and the Living Dead are intimately akin, considering that these masterpieces depict the horrors of the war; and the blindness of the leaders who value most money and power than human life. The themes are war, ambition, genocide, rape, tyranny, civil unrest, looting, and lack of respect for human life. First, Picasso’s Guernica was painted to express the consequences of the uncalled bombing of the Nazis on the Basque community of Guernica, during the Spanish Civil War. Picasso’s palette was basically white, black, and gray in an effort to establish the mournful moments after the devastation.…
The painting “Guernica” is one of Pablo Picasso’s most well known paintings. Picasso painted this after twenty-eight nazi German bombers unexpectedly dropped hundreds of bombs on Guernica, a town in Northern Spain. Earlier that year, the Spanish government had enlisted Picasso to create a painting to be hung in the Spanish slot at the World Fair of 1937. Pablo Picasso was unsure of the subject of the painting until the bombing occurred. The tragic bombing of Guernica was so inspirational it immediately became Picasso’s focus, and only fifteen days after the bombing, he started painting. Picasso’s painting “Guernica” is obviously a social statement about the bombings, but he never really explained exactly what he was trying to convey by using the elements that he does. This makes the painting very difficult to critique. The painting is recognized today as one of the major icons for peace.…
Pablo Picasso’s ‘Head of a Woman’ was created at the end of 1924. This piece of artwork was painted on canvas using oil paint. It is a small, close up painting of a female head in a classical, thinking pose. Picasso has depicted her in thinking thought facial expression and realist colours were used on the female face. Different viewpoints in art will not only influence the composition within an artwork, it can also influence the viewer’s interpretation of the artwork.…