The painting Red Hot, created by Marsha Clements, is a realist painting of two roses. These two roses are purposed to represent the changes that occur when two people becoming more intimate with one another. As our relations with others grows stronger we reveal things that we don’t readily exhibit to the rest of the world. Clements does this through the use of contrasting colors and lines from her brush strokes that directs the viewers’ attention to the contrast.…
Figure 3: News, 1991, Jan Senbergs I was also attracted to another painting, News (1991) by Jan Senbergs (see Figure 3). Due to its large size and appealing colour pallet of blue and browns, this piece at first, appeared quite aesthetically attractive. However, as I viewed the work longer and read into the piece, I saw the not so pleasant, surreal mechanical forms and the harsh brushstrokes that were created by the textured and expressively applied paint. These elements created a feeling of discomfort within me. This artwork was supposedly painted in response to the Gulf War of 1990-1991, where Iraq invaded Kuwait (Australian War Memorial, 2017).…
Through her struggle of gaining recognition and feeling appreciated for her efforts at home and at work, Ruth undergoes a self-evaluation wherein she discovers that she is more than what she sees. Her feelings of underappreciation do not go unnoticed; LuLing points out that Art’s daughters do not respect her (69-70) and later on Art calls her out for always giving but never taking (335). Ruth self-denies so much to the point where whenever anyone offers to do something for her, she avoids it not to be rude but because she is just that selfless, but LuLing and Art both urge her to be more assertive because she deserves to be heard. This is very similar to how Tan “asserts the voice of Chinese immigrant women” (Dunick 10) and its impact on her…
In the story “Scarlet Ibis” written by James Hurst, a theme is shown to the reader that sometimes, pride can be a destructive weapon in life if we use it to look down on others. The narrator starts the story by jumping into the past, he tells a story where he was ashamed of having a mentally and physically disabled brother, and spends all summer teaching him how to walk. However, he does this out of embarrassment and shame not out of love. One stormy night, Brother leaves Doodle behind alone forcing him to run faster, but he pushes too far, causing Doodle’s death. From Doodle’s death, he realizes how his pride got in his way of accepting Doodle for the way he is not for what he isn’t. In the story, he admits “I did not know then that pride…
Every morning when I walk by my family's dining room, I see a beautiful painting. It has many colors that all work so well together. There is a mix of pink, green, blue, red, and orange. It is an abstract art piece. The artist of the painting is named Pamela Munger.…
Having too much pride can cause you to overlook actions and only see the result of what you are doing. In the story “The Scarlet Ibis” brother gets to much pride from teaching Doodle to walk so he creates a program to teach Doodle to swim,run, climb trees and to fight. He worked Doodle till he turned purple.“And I prepared a terrific development program…
conflict conveys the message that people full of pride make decisions based on how they…
In the world, there are so many moments that can lead to love, and unfortunately, also regret. Many of these moments begin with pride. In the short story, “The Scarlet Ibis”, there are many events that lead to both of these things. Doodle and his brother are both put in positions where they have to make a decision on what matters to them the most. The author, James Hurst, from ¨The Scarlet Ibis¨ uses diction and figurative language to prove that pride is something that allows people to love, yet can also lead to regret.…
“The Scarlet Ibis” by James Hurst clearly conveys a theme that pride can account for one’s achievements or for one’s destruction. The narrator, Brother, is very prideful and soon it greatly affects those around him, and not in a positive way. Brother is embarrassed and ashamed of his brother, and how his disability makes him different. The narrator even took control the situation, determining to smother his brother if he ends up being mentally disabled as well admitting to himself that, “It was bad enough having an invalid as a brother, but having one who possible was not all there was unbearable, so I began to make plans to kill him by smothering him with a pillow” (1. 5. 1). The narrator showed significant signs, even at such a young age,…
James Hurst’s short story “The Scarlet Ibis” illuminates how too much pride can cause us to treat our loved ones in cruel ways. The narrator, or Brother, begins with his brother who he named Doodle that was a disappointment or invalid as he was physically different from the other kids. As Doodle and Brother grew up they went everywhere together and the narrator was embarrassed by of Doodle, so he felt as if he would teach him the things they thought he wasn't capable of to be like the others such as to walk. Once Brother had taught Doodle to walk he decided to create a development program for Doodle before school would start. The narrator one day took Doodle to learn how to swim at Horsehead Landing, until a storm came and they decided to go back home once it was worsening. The narrator had started to…
In conclusion, the narrator uses both positive and negative pride in the short story, “The Scarlet Ibis.” The narrator is both caring and self-centered, because he was happy when his brother smiled for the first time, but he wanted a normal brother to play with. These are some reasons why, “pride is a wonderful, terrible…
This building once the seat of Parliament is now one of the second most-visited tourist attractions in Germany and was built in 1871. To get this project approved, Christo and Jeanne-Claude had to gain the Parliament 's approval. In order to do this, they personally went from office to office, and they wrote many letters to each of the 662 members. On February 25, 1995 the Parliament held a debate and after 70 minutes the project was approved. This was a huge project with 600,000 feet of polypropylene fabric that had to be fireproof and nine miles of rope used. It took seven days to wrap the building and was finished on June 24th. Over five million visitors saw this…
As children, many people are told to take pride in themselves. Parents remind them to be prideful of their work, heritage, accomplishments, and goals. When kids get older, most are continuously reminded that they need to be confident. However, few are informed that this pride can bite. While confidence isn’t a killer, too much never leads to anything good. Pride allows many needless sins. Four books, Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, and The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, share this theme. Each book tells the same prideful and destructive story in a different way.…
“But all of us must have something or someone to be proud of…. I did not know then that pride is a wonderful, terrible thing, a seed that bears two vines, life and death.” The short story The Scarlet Ibis by James Hurst shows how one brother’s embarrassment of the other can lead to hopeful and disastrous consequences. Sadly, his brother, who’s pride gets the best of him, can’t be satisfied with a crippled brother, causing him to push Doodle to his limit and face the consequences.…
Nancy Graves Foundation. (2008). Retrieved July 2011, 28, from The Collection - National Gallery of Art: http://www.nga.gov/cgi-bin/tbio?person=237290…