"Landscape" Essays and Research Papers

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    artwork By John Glover‚ focusing on the elements of art (Line‚ Shape‚ Tone‚ Texture and Colour) Patterdale Farm - John Glover (circa 1840) John Glover’s Patterdale Farm captures the Australian landscape at its greatest incorporating varied tone using the deep greens associated with Australian landscape‚ accompanied by the rich detail spread throughout the work. The painting depicting a common setting during the 1840’s in Australia. His use of varied tone casts great spanning shadows across all

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    A. Y. Jackson is the one of the greatest painters in Canadian History. He painted the landscape of Canada on the canvas with new style. His new style was crude and eliminated the details of objects. With his group members he traveled all over the country sketching out Canadian landscape and endeavored to depict the nature as it is. It was innovative but not appealed to the public because people assumed that anything European is automatically superior to anything Canadian and Impressionism was commonly

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    Painting‚ you see the resemblance of a landscape that is portrayed within Altdorfer’s painting as well. I believe that Richter mimics the type of painting that Altdorfer created because not only are the same colors used‚ but the idea of the specific landscapes had to have been similar to create these paintings. I like to think that just because Richter’s painting does not seem realistic and natural; his painting is still the idea of a landscape‚ which can be compared to Altdorfer’s

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    Art History- Thomas Cole

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    Thomas Cole‚ an American Influence Thomas Cole was an established 19thcentury American painter. He was a landscape artist and the founder of the Hudson River School‚ an American art movement consisting of other landscape artists. He was known for his realistic depiction of American landscape and countryside. Along with painting landscapes‚ he painted allegorical works‚ the most famous being The Course of Empire‚ a five part series and The Voyage of Life‚ a four part series. As Cole’s fame began

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    Waterscapes

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    supported the landscapes of our civilizations. Earth’s evolution and transformation is due to water. Nowadays we are facing complex urban development processes leading to completely new challenges concerning the management and design of urban infrastructure systems and landscapes. Water can improve spatial quality by creating an attractive and spacious place. Landscape architects‚ planners and designers know better the fundamentals of water and its power in transforming our landscapes. This means that

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    An artist that stood out among the many individuals of this time that I thought to be a great example of this period was Joseph Mallord William Turner or just simply J.M.W Turner. As far as Romanticism goes J.M.W was one of the most well-known landscape painters in England. His style consisted of oil painting‚ watercolors‚ and etching. J.M.W was born 1775‚ his artistic career launched at the young age of 12 with his first painting‚ leading him to the road of success. Not long after was he accepted

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    Falling Landscape IV

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    The first piece of artwork I’ve decided to write about is "Falling Landscape IV" by Evon Streetman and was created in 1994. It was roughly the same height as me‚ and was nearly 4 feet wide. It was a large piece‚ which was wonderful for exaggerating the features and details. The medium used was cibachrome‚ which is a positive-to-positive process used to reproduce film transparencies on photographic paper. I think "Falling Landscape IV" was the most beautiful piece in the entire museum‚ and I enjoyed

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    Symbiotic Relationship

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    What has landscape architecture and industrialized society to learn from indigenous cultures and their symbiotic relationships with nature? “‘Despite nature’s many earlier warnings‚ the pollution and destruction of the natural environment has gone on‚ intensively and extensively‚ without awakening a sufficient reaction; it is only during the last century that any systematic effort has been made to determine what constitutes a balanced and self-renewing environment‚ containing all the ingredient’s

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    Cole‚ a founder of The Hudson River School‚ can be considered one of the most famous American artists. The Hudson River School focused on creating landscapes of the continental United States in a pastoral setting in which humans were one with the their land. The Hudson River School artists accepted that the beauty and diversity of the American landscape was only possible through the divine grace of god. And while each of their individual piety varied the Hudson River School painters opinioned paralleled

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    American people have been influenced by Europeans for centuries. Art has always been an important factor throughout history and has influenced how we think. The Hudson River School is a prime example of people’s love for art. Taking on characteristics of the Romanticism movement in Europe‚ the Hudson River school was the first painting based school in America. (2) With a strong sense of nationalism‚ artists painted beautiful scenes of American wilderness and desired to become independent of European

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