Thursday, December 3, 2009

12/2/09

It felt weird going around to other people’s drawings today especially when they were already really well drawn. I felt as though I would mess it up and they would be mad when they got back to their easel, but I soon realized some areas in the person’s drawing that could use some help. My process for correcting was when I saw something that I felt as though did not fit or work, I would erase it and start over but if I saw something that just needed some tweaking I would use the charcoal to correct the small mistake. When I returned to my drawing I felt very confused, a lot was erased and I had a hard time trying to correct my own drawing. I had to start over on my trash can and chair but that’s all I got to in the end.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Self portrait



In this painting i was trying to show one side as being a quiet, chilled out person and with the pink, i was trying to show my loud and happy side. Although the pink side didn't turn out as bright as i would have liked it to, i think that it looks good. I had a lot of trouble with the blue side, i tried to make it light and dark in some parts but then it got too watery. With the pink side, i wanted it to be brighter then it turned out. When I drew the picture i feel as though it didn't turn out looking like me, but i think i could have done a better job if i worked a little longer on it. I had a lot of trouble with the background and hair, they blended together, making it hard to see where the hair ended and the background started. 

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Kiki Smith

Kiki Smith
American
Homespun Tales


This sculpture, made by Smith is elegance itself. Made with careful strokes from different tools, the women looks almost really, as if she is looking right at us, trying to send a message. While there is no color Smith did a wonderful job using her materials to bring out the life in the sculpture.

Kiki Smith is mostly known for her painting and drawing but succeeds greatly in her sculpting. Smith chooses to draw, paint and sculpt in a different way, she wants to create a story with her strokes of pencil, clay and paint. What she tries to tell in all her artwork is metaphor of social issues. They are hidden within her artwork of women and men. Smith has also worked with clothing, printing body part on them with a secret meaning of social issues for women and men alike.

Thursday, April 9, 2009




















Mona Lisa
Leonardo Da Vinci
16th Century 
Italian 


Sunday
Alex Echo
American


These pictures are similar by the way that they were painted. They both have women as the main point, with a landscape in the background. The landscapes are more natural with flowers and fields. They are different by the techniques used to paint them. The background in "Sunday" is more modern while the "Mona Lisa" is more old fashioned, of course because of when it was made (in the 16th century).  The artists point of views are very much different. I believe Alex Echo was trying to make the girl magical and distant, while the "Mona Lisa" is more about the women, rather then the background. It seems like the background was the final touches of the "Mona Lisa". 


Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Family


The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit
John Singer Sargent
American
1856-1925
The artists point of view: Through this painting, Sargent has shown us that there are four daughters in the Boit family. Although there is little movement going on, maybe just the girls holding hands, they all seem still. Balance within the painting is found through its colors, coming from dark and getting brighter, as if the two girls in the back are hiding. Who are they? Could they possibly benot the daughters but rather service girls? They are dressed very much alike and we cannot see their faces clearly, while the two girls in the front are much more clear and have a brighter setting. One is playing with a doll while the other young child is standing near the wall. This beautiful painting can be seen at the MFA in Boston, MA. The gorgeous china vases can be seen also, standing next to the painting itself.
The artist creates a repetition with the vases, they are very suttle. Sargent uses a great amount of contrast in this painting, with the light and dark. There is also a big sense of unitiy within the painting, something about an even amount of girls gives it that sense and also the rug gives it that almost home-y feel, making the girls look slightly stiff, but not, just like they are comfortable with being painted at such a young age.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Nighthawks

What I See: In this painting there are many contrasts of light and dark. The paint that the artist uses makes the people pop from the painting rather then hide in the dark, they seem to pop because of the background in the diner is bright, even though their faces are as bright and pale as the background. The artist also has balance and contrast in it, the balance that he uses is asymmetry. The placement is also perfect, over all the artist took much time in planning to make such a magnificent masterpiece. 

What I Have Learned: The painters name is Edward Hopper, the painting Nighthawk is of a diner in the Greenwich Village area of NYC. He had lived there for 54 years, he paints the by passers and customers. They are painted with such perfection and character that it is easy to see their eyes and clothes. 

Hopper creates a sense of unity through his art by the balance of asymmetry. The tertiary colors like the gray and dark forest green. The shapes are simple, as in squares and rectangles, circles and octagons. 

Friday, February 20, 2009

Where I am at

The project I would do again is the taking apart junk and make sculptures out of it. I had a lot fun taking apart the junk because it let out I guess emotions building up inside. I am still creating my sculpture but I really like the way that its going. I am making a flamingo out of a lot of pink sequins and pink junk. What i have so far is a body, head (eyes, beak and all). I am really excited for my grandmas reaction because it is for her because of how energetic she is (the color reparsents that) and for her balance of life (the flamingos legs balancing). I would love to do this project again and was very awesome. 

An artist I would research again would be the most recent one I have done. I researched Sarah Stockholder. Her work is bright and colorful and quite enjoyable. Stockholder does her hart with found things. Sometimes trash and sometimes not. She takes the found objects that could be plain and boing but paints them to be fun and nice to look at. I only saw a couple of her art works but if I another chance to research her I would go further into depth. 

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Shapes

Jessica Stockholder
American
#291


My first impression: In this interesting sculpture there are cool aspects. Most of it is made out of stuff you could find randomly in the trash except for the paint. The shoelaces that lace up the tuber ware gives it a urban look while the chain and plunger gives the sculpture a dirty and dangerous look. Even though this is 3D the colors make it pop out. The warm (red&orange) colors make it pop out the most because the sculpture is up against blank white and black backdrops. 

What I have learned: The artist Jessica Stockholder was born in Seattle, Washington but grew up in British Columbia. She studied art at Yale & University of British Columbia. In this sculpture she has used oil paints, couch cushions, hardware, plastic containers, shoes laces, a chain, toilet plunger, and plastic scoops. 

Friday, February 6, 2009

Marcel Duchamp

Marcel Duchamp 
Pode Bal
French

My first impression: This painting almost looks like a photograph. Everything looks so realistic, from the shine on the chess pieces to the windows reflection. Duchamp used more neutral colors within the painting, starting from the green, to the brown and the tan. Behind the man everything seems to brighten up, the yellow walls makes the man and the chess board stand out the most. 

What I've learned: Marcel Duchamp is a French artist who, while alive and a painter focused on the Dadaist movements. Duchamp loved to play chess, while in Argentina he worked with a craftsman to carve his own pieces for his own chess board.  By making his own chess board and pieces lead him to a new inspiration. This painting.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Portrait


The Cup of Tea
Mary Cassatt 
American

What I've observe: In this painting, Mary uses light pastel colors. What I can see is a women possibly sitting in a green house/porch enjoying a cup of tea. I see many primary colors like the blue in the chair, and the teal in the flower pot. There are also teritary colors in the pink dress and lilac shading. This painting makes me think of a spring evening and I feel as if she is looking over her probably beautiful garden. The model looks as if she is almost smiling but it is as if she content. 

What I have learned: I have learned that this painting was painted in 1879. Critics praise Cassatt for her ease to show the soft light dancing off of the models dress and flowers. This painting is currently residing at the Museum of Art in New York. 

Friday, January 23, 2009

Henri Mattise

Henri Mattise
French
"The Green Line"

A painting by Henri Mattise called "The Green Line". It is said to be Madame Mattise, his wife. The coloring that he has done with the painting is amazing, if you cannot tell. In this blog we are to look at his painting and explain why he has chosen to paint the way he has done. In the models face she is half green, half normal skin toned. She looks like she could be sick a lot but sometimes can feel better. Maybe he chose to present her this way because green can sometimes mean greed and she could be greedy. Paintings or pictures, or sculptures can be like music, another art, people can let their feelings out in music with lyrics and beats. Others can paint it out, take pictures, and create beautiful sculptures as a way to explain how their feelings. 

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Homage

Edward Hopper
American
"Homage"

My impression of this painting: 
We are suppose to tell what we think the artist is trying to tell us in this painting. I believe that Edward Hopper is trying to show us that the women may be seeing a ghost, maybe her friend, daughter, lady of the house who had died recently and follows her to remind her of who they were. The shading is amazing in this, even if it is painted it is hard to paint someone so lightly that they seem transparent. 

What I have learned: 
That Edward made this from oil paint and that he is quite famous for it. This was one of his rural scenes. 

Friday, January 9, 2009

New York Movie- Edward Hopper

My first impression: Is that this place could be a regular theater or a movie theater (hence the greenish screen). The women by the door must be a usher from the 1930's. The light detail is amazing, going from dark to light and the opposite. 

What I have learned: That this is in fact a movie theater, and that Edward Hopper did work a lot with light, in all of his paintings, in this one particularly he used his paint to show the brightness on a persons face, as the movie bounced off of it and the shadows of the womans pants while she leans back against the yellow wall.