Professor Redfield research paper
Art 106
December 16, 2012 The Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art is one of the most important museums, which connects the old fashion museum to modern museum through many photographs, paintings, films, sculptures, and architectures. It is located at New York City, United State, and now it contains library and famous restaurant there. Entering the museum, I first realized that the lightness of the room because of the light color of the wall, and the brightness of the light. It has a feeling of an ordinary house because of its ironwood floor and its low ceiling. However, the scene is extremely a bright image, depicting the changing of the nineteen-century museum to the twenty-century museum. As a first piece to analyze, I chose the Turning Road at Montgeroult, which was drawn around 1898 by Paul Cézanne. Pau Cézanne is a famous French artist, and he is one of the well-known artists as a bridge between the late nineteen-centuries to twenty-century work art. His work of arts usually contain the nature and they are often complex to the human visual perception. As the Turning Road at Montgeroult, it appears straight forward to the viewers, but it feels like a little bit of complexity. The image is indeed a nice depiction of the nature, and it contains three different zones. The first zone is the green foliage at the bottom, a middle zone is the road and houses, and the third zone is the sky. All three zones have a very difference in the coloring, the bottom encloses a dark green color, the middle holds a warmer color, and the top has a warm and dark blue color. For the bottom part, it seems like the colors overlapping each other; it can be thought that the artist has carelessly poured the color mixing together, and he was lazy to repainted it. However, it makes the scene more curious because we cannot really see what is inside the green bush accept the foliage. As for me, I can