The moment I saw Vincent Van Gogh’s painting, Irises, I knew this was the perfect piece to learn more about its distinguishable design. By looking at his artwork the first thing that came to my mind was Paul Cezanne’s The Basket of the Apples. Cezanne’s painting simply depicts a veneer-made container holding apples on a table with other items, while Van Gogh’s work displays an outdoor image of blue flowers called irises. Even though the artworks do not present the same material, both the fruits and blossoms were completely removed from its natural configurations. These masterpieces, led me to the notion that there lies a connection between them, but after doing research I found a number of differences that splits Van Gogh’s and Cezanne’s artistic…
Sykes analyzes two stories in which the artists ( the protagonists) were unsuccessful, because “For neither writer was the role of artist a major preoccupation,” rather both characters took as an ultimate goal personal aspects. According to Sykes, in order to achieve the goal of the arts, the artist should divide the arts of the other aspects to “honor the autonomy of the arts and win through to the goal of beauty that is the art´s telos.” (Sykes) This way, the arts can be corrupted by external purposes, that instead of expanding the beauty of the arts, disrupt the discipline itself. However, this concept can be applied beyond the arts realm, the lack of concentration of the ultimate goal can disturb a certain…
“In 1860, when I ran from the plantation in Virginia, I decided to be twelve years old. COuld’ve been anywhere from nine to fourteen, but as Frederick Douglass, that great man, said, you might as well ask a horse how old he is as a slave” (Stolz 3). This quote was said by Cezanne Pinto, the main character of the historical novel, Cezanne Pinto, about a young slave living on a plantation in Virginia with high hopes of freedom and an education. Originally born Deucy Clayburn, Cezanne spent his time as a slave working in the stables due to his gift with horses. The story is told from the point of view of an approximately ninety-year-old Cezanne, reflecting on his journeys with the cook, Tamar, to escape slavery. Although he faces many hardships of discrimination, he never let it get in the way of his dreams. In the end, the old man rests in peace with the satisfaction of living a…
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?”…
Cézanne’s painting has no illusion of reality due to the easily detected brushwork, little sense of depth, and delineation of form. There is almost no three-dimensionality, an element crucial to the creation of illusion, whereas in Vecchio’s there are several elements that create an idea of reality, an idea that the scene before us is indeed happening: the strong light sources that apparently model the figures and other objects, the traceable vanishing point, which is almost impossible to detect in Cézanne’s Bathers, and the significant contrast between the darker and lighter areas. The density of the brushstrokes and the absence of details in Cézanne’s painting break the illusion of the visual effect created by the harmony of colours, whereas in the Bathing Nymphs there is no apparent trace of the brushwork.…
An artist can create art work through a creative process. An element of this process is critical thinking. Artists’ creativity process begins with seeing. It then goes from seeing to imagining and from imagining to making (Sayre, 2009). This essay will provide an explanation of artists’ roles. The essay will also include two chosen works of art, one of which embodies the role of the artist and the other holds symbolic significance requiring the application of iconography.…
Art is one aspect of the past that has carried on for decades. Art in any form may it be poetry, novels, and playwright, sculpting as well as painting, has been an outlet for generations and continues to be an outlet and a means for expression. This paper will discuss “ The Mona Lisa” one of Da Vinci’s most famous paintings, as well as another great painting, Antonio Veneziano’s “Virgin and Child”(c. 1380). Both paintings focus on the human form and exhibit many variations of styles from lines, shading, color and possible meanings behind the work.…
Greuze’s moral dramas (one of which is the Broken eggs) reacted against Rococo. By pronouncing feelings and emotion they were also opposed by the rational and science-oriented representatives of Enlightenment. It puts Greuze’s creations exactly along with other artists in the 18th century who developed the same taste in their works– Taste for Natural.…
According to art critic Clive Wilson, writing in 1914, Cézanne was ‘the Christopher Columbus of a new continent of form (Harrison, C, 2008, p.63). Considered a revolutionist, Cézanne helped pave the way for other modern artists and his abstract tendencies contributed to the Cubist Movement. Robert Cumming (The Courtald Institute of Art, 2011) said Cézanne ‘was so influential as to play a key role in changing the face of art.’ This essay will examine whether Still Life with Plaster Cast (Plate 1.3.32) – with its narrow tonal values and a limited…
In this composition, we can see Cézannes painting technique is clearly recognisable, as it is different from many other artists, his work is characterised by his brush strokes; these can sometimes be repetitive , sensitive or exploratory depending on what Cezanne is painting. He uses a blocky form which gives the piece uniqueness and shows his signature style. The simple, natural colours show his emotions as being quite depressed and sad at this period of time. He uses a couple of shades of each colour and then builds on top.…
The Techniques that these two artist use in their works and exhibitions are polar opposites. Antonio Lopez in his “World of Fashion Art” exhibition makes use of any number of drawing instruments to mark a two-dimensional medium. Instruments used include graphite pencils, pen and ink, inked brushes, wax color pencils, crayons, charcoal, chalk, pastels, various kinds of erasers, markers, styluses, and various metals (such as silverpoint). In Contemporary art today, an artist who practices or works in drawing may be called a draftsman or advertising and promoting fashion maker. The human body, human form, bodies, fashion art, 70's 80's pencil, photography, paint, colored pencil are all present within Lopez's work. The accurate gesture drawing, realistic figure drawing, figure studies, art of drapery, wrinkles of fabric studies are included within Lopez's work. Fashion patterns within material and Layered collage are also prevalent within his work.…
Those who criticised L. thought, his art denied that art is a transformation of experience. The pratice of mere copying erased the relavance of the artist’s hand, the significance of individual touch, the principle of originality. The absence of gesture marked the loss of a masculine presence.…
[ 12 ]. Carol Donnell-Kotrozo, “Cezanne, Cubism, and the Destination Theory of Style,” in Journal of Aesthetic Education, Vol. 13, NO. 4 (University of Illinois Press, 1979) p. 100…
Easel painting, large-format wall painting, performance, stage design both for movie and theatre, and interior design constitute just a part (fragment) of his artistic activity field. Immense abundance [great richness] of means, the variety of materials contribute to this continuously vivid, creative and revelatory [exploratory] path. The determination, with which J. Cz. manically circles, like a moth, around certain painterly issues, connected especially with the op art vision of perceiving reality, provokes (us?) to look for the origins of his interests and choices. Following the full…
Today we tend to think of the work of art in terms of the artist, who, acting through his powers of imagination, willfully brings into being his creation. But this artist-centered interpretation of the text is really a more recent development, first seen in the early nineteenth century. As Abrams demonstrates in the "Orientation of Critical Theories" chapter of his book The Mirror and the Lamp: Romantic theory and the Critical Tradition (1953), the dominant modes of thinking about art have, throughout history, been rather different.…