Abstract style oil paintings; these kinds of oil paintings are merely beyond pragmatism. It is a form of art that in no way has any connection to the natural world. As there are many different styles of abstract art, it is simply impossible to classify them specifically. The same painting can mean different things to other people.
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Embellish your place with Oil Paintings as you desire
Abstract style oil paintings; these kinds of oil paintings are merely beyond pragmatism. It is a form of art that in no way has any connection to the natural world. As there are many different styles of abstract art, it is simply impossible to classify them specifically. The same painting can mean different things to other people.
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Abstraction through Nature Sources in Oil Painting
We are exceedingly fortunate to be surrounded by such an inspiring force as nature. The resources for a great abstract painting are all around us. Even if a natural object is chosen completely arbitrarily, or a combination thereof will always prove to open the creative oil painter toward astonishing abstract imagery. So, grab a mushroom, a rock, a pinecone, or even your dog! The potential lying within nature is limitless.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Michael Jackson Painting by an Artist - Peter Keil to be Auctioned
Being a musician and songwriter himself, Myland has always respected Jackson for his talent as well as his dedication to philanthropy. So this seemed like a painting way to pay tribute to his unique talent and legacy.
Monday, July 27, 2009
Eminent Oil Paintings Reproductions Even Can Use At Home
Oil paintings reproductions are more reasonable than original paintings, they are both equally majestic. In addition to oil painting reproductions being the affordable art of choice, and a more realistic way to decorate one’s home, they also make a special and one of a kind gift.
Friday, July 24, 2009
There's Great Fun in Oil Painting On Kids!
The ideas for kids face painting are restricted only to your imagination. When painting faces of young children, you must have patience, allow time for fidgeting, and keep your design simple. It helps perfect your talent to practice the pre-selected designs in advance of an event. Face painting is fun and imaginative. Think about it ... you can have a lot of good times with this activity.
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
The Splendor of Black and White Oil Painting
When using black and white as the only two colors of your oil painting you will find that over look will be classy compared to paintings of color. The black and white paintings are more pleasant on the eye and the features and feeling are not lost in a hectic collection of colors.
Creating a painting in black and white is in fact a talent. Some of the images that have been created over the years are truly spectacular. Who says you need color to express yourself when painting with oil paints. Black and white says it all.
Monday, July 20, 2009
Get a Photo Oil Painting From Photo You Made
The idea of oil painting from photo is truly a unique gift idea. For that special person, you can actually give them photo oil painting item. This is even better as this item last longer. Painting forms ones creativity as well as artistic ability. This kind of craft is worth appreciating. In effect, paintings are valuable materials worth of keepsake.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Importance Of Framing In Oil painting
To Preserve and maintain Oil painting for years, some basic care and attention is needed, for that oil painting has to be framed. The most frequent question asked is How to Frame a Painting? I say it depends on many range of factors starting from the cost of the frame to aftercare of your painting.
Necessity of framing:
A picture frame has certain characteristics and functions:
• The first and the foremost are to protect and ensure long life of your painting.
• Unify the painting with the architectural style of the room.
• Separating the painting from the wall.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Oil Painting Techniques - Color Section
But what colors should you buy? Here's ten which will cover most subjects, providing limitless combinations through mixing. This also saves money and will improve your understanding of colors.
• ALIZARIN CRIMSON (COOL RED)
• LIGHT RED (WARM RED/BROWN)
• CADMIUM RED (WARM RED)
• RAW UMBER (COOL BROWN)
• CADMIUM YELLOW (WARM YELLOW)
• RAW SIENNA (DEEP WARM YELLOW)
• LEMON YELLOW (COOL YELLOW)
• FRENCH ULTRAMARINE (WARM BLUE)
• CERULEAN (COOL BLUE)
• TITANIUM WHITE (BRIGHT WHITE)
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Art Paintings – Reproduction of Original Paintings
Painting is one of the oldest and most significant forms of art. Artists have used art to express their ideas about people, the world, and religion since prehistoric times. In turn, the paintings they create provide people with pleasure and information.
Paintings also serves various purposes: some are used as gifts, religious groups commission artists to paint religious subjects to promote religion, and other people collect paintings as an investment, and so on.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Guidelines to empower your oil paintings
A great thing to begin with is to use primary colors to create various shades of gray from white to black, and paint in black and white.This gives you a chance to know the value and contrast.
The thinner/oil mix up seems to last longer than just the thinner between cleaning, and when it gets really cloudy, it doesn't split.
Try to make a painting using only your palette knife to paint with it and the results are so interesting. When painting outside, make sure that your canvas and your palette are not in direct sunlight. It is better to shade your canvas and palette because if you paint with the canvas in direct sunlight, it will cause you to mix your colors wrongly.
A limited palette is suggested when painting outside as well. You can mix the colors you need and need not drag all of your paints out into the field.
Monday, July 6, 2009
Oil Painting - How to Shun Your Mistakes Easily
Cracking is one of the defects you commonly find in oil paintings. This defect occurs because the bottom layer of the painting contains more drying oil as compared to the top layer. In case the top layer contains too many solvents then it will dry very fast and become more brittle than bottom layer. To avoid this defect make sure you apply the paint properly on all the layers and give proper time to them to dry.
The main cause of a dull finish in the painting is the improper ratio of drying oils in paint and solvents. Generally, it happens when the amount of solvent is more in the painting. Make sure to use prime oil paint for avoiding this kind of sinking effect in your art work.
Thursday, July 2, 2009
The Quality Of Oil Painting Reproduction
The quality of oil paintings can vary from a print on canvas to commercial painting to a commissioned oil painting reproduction, the peak quality of all.
An oil painting reproduction is basically a recreation of a masterwork by a new artist. As the name suggests, these pieces are created using oil-based paints on a canvas. Because they are oil painting reproductions, they are considerably more reasonable than the originals.
Another remarkable thing about these oil painting reproductions is that they have great texture. The oil painting is crisp, clear, and alive on the canvas. The oil painting reproduction creates a breathtaking finished piece of art that will be a focal point of your room.
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
How to Paint Rivers and Achieve Realistic Reflections
Before starting to paint water reflections, the whole of the river should be painted in a tone considerably darker than the sky. This will help them to judge the correct tonal relations of various reflections.
Calm diagnosis is necessary when making a realistic painting of water which has become frantic and disturbed by a powerful wind.
With oil painting, the problem can be solved in the initial stage by ignoring the restless movement of water and painting the reflections as they would appear if seen on a calm day. Then, with a brush fully charged with oil colour, paint the movement of the water, leaving certain passages untouched.
Sunday, June 28, 2009
‘Acrylic Paints - preeminent in the Painting Industry’
In many ways they are very related to other oil paints, but they are very simple to use and much cheaper compared to oil paints. If you just start your painting career, it is very suitable to use them. It doesn't require skills that are required to use watercolor or the patience needed for oil paints.
Artist must be very quick with his or her design and ideas while using them. However, in present time additives are used in them to slow down its drying process.
If any artist wants to use this type of paint for external use, he has to buy a special paint made for exterior use only.
Friday, June 26, 2009
Canvas – The Best Medium for Oil Painting.
Canvas painting quickly took popularity over the more traditional and unwieldy wood planks. Because of its durability, canvas was able to withstand both the paint itself and the test of time. canvas is more portable, less expensive, and easier to create the correct size. No longer was an artist inhibited by the size of the wood plank he could find, and much larger paintings resulted from this freedom.
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
START MOBILE launches - Art For Your iPhone
"The iPhone represents a new modality for the innovation, ownership, and appreciation of digital art, and creates a new mechanism for artists and designers globally to monetize their talents," observed artist Chandra Michaels, the creator of the Sugarluxe iPhone Gallery. "This truly is New Art for a New Medium."
START MOBILE iPhone Galleries each feature a bundle collection of curated artist wallpapers, delivered as 99¢ iPhone applications. "Rather than clip-art wallpapers of sports cars and bikini models, START MOBILE is bringing curated collections of New Art at a New Price to iPhone users around the world," observed Christina Samala, START MOBILE's Creative Director. "We are using technology to bring art directly to the people, inspired by what Maxfield Parrish did a century ago using what was then the cutting-edge technology of mass reproduction."
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Hamilton gets done Painting in engine oil
Hamilton was extremely pleased with the way the painting has come out. He also mentioned that while he knew that the Mobil 1 is an important component that can give us an edge over rivals in some circumstances.
He would never have imagined one could use it to paint. Macaluso who is an expert in using motor oil as a painting medium said that he has been used motor oil into paintings since 2005, so it was exciting to do a portrait of Lewis, and it was a privilege.
Painting with Mobil 1 used motor oil offered a wide range of tones and was perceptibly a very refined product from its texture. It was extremely smooth and very particle-rich, with all the engine dirt in perpetual suspension, making for a great painting medium.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Utah Arts Festival June 25: Opening a vein for art
Prince, a 26-year-old painter who lives in Logan with his wife, doesn't take pride over the fact that his work -- plasma on Plexiglas -- provoked such a reaction. He doesn't downplay it, either.
Prince's crimson images may blend similar responses for those who peruse the Utah Arts Festival artists' marketplace June 25 through 28, when his work will be displayed inside the main festival entrance at 200 East and 400 South, Salt Lake City.
The scarlet, wine, cherry and maroon tones of Prince's images enclosed in Plexiglas and sealed with resin don't come from globules on a palette. They come instead from the marrow of the artist's bones, through a vein in his left arm, into a syringe, and either straight onto a Plexiglas surface while bright red, or onto a refrigerator shelf where they grow darker with time.
"Almost all artists pour their heart into a work," Prince said. "I was reaching for more. I wanted to pour myself onto the surface, so figuratively reached into something that was a part of me."
Friday, June 19, 2009
Prestigious Painter Award
As in the past, the competition was released to artists of all levels from Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C. Of the record 240-plus submissions received, 38 were chosen as semi-finalists. The jurors included John Winslow, painter and Catholic University emeritus professor, whose proclivities are literally evident in the selection of finalists. The other two jurors, also painting professors, were Patrice Kehoe, University of Maryland, and Ruth Bolduan, Virginia Commonwealth University.
Perhaps most interesting about the results of the judging is the relative homogeneity of the selections, with one glaring exception. On one hand is a group of abstract works, all of them relating linear patterning and layering of forms. The rest are realists, except for the top prize winner, Camilo Sanin, who works in a style that might be called Neo-Color Field. Sanin's striped paintings are redolent of the work of 1960s Washington Color Field painters Gene Davis and Howard Mehring, but on a much smaller scale.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
CHRIST REDEEMER - The Great Wonder from BRAZIL
This statue of Jesus stands say 38 meters tall, atop the Corcovado mountain overlooking
The idea for erecting a large statue atop
The contributions came mostly from Brazilian Catholics. The designs considered for the "Statue of the Christ" included a representation of the Christian cross, a statue of Jesus with a globe in his hands, and a podium symbolizing the world. The statue of Christ the Redeemer with open arms was selected.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
PYRAMID -- The Great Wonder from MEXICO
The site exhibits a multitude of architectural styles, from what is called “Mexicanized” and suggestive of styles seen in central Mexico to the Puuc style found among the Puuc Maya of the northern lowlands. The presence of central Mexican styles was once attention to have been representative of direct migration or even conquest from central Mexico, but most modern interpretations view the presence of these non-Maya styles more as the result of cultural diffusion.
The shell of Chichen Itza is federal property, and the site’s stewardship is maintained by Mexico’s Instituto Nacional de AntropologÃa e Historia . The land under the monuments, is privately-owned by the Barbachano family.
Monday, June 15, 2009
TAJ MAHAL – The Great Wonder from INDIA
As per the New 7 Wonders organization the seven candidates were elected by voting though none is rated ranking and the 7 are equally efficient offered as a group. The Taj Mahal from Agra , India was one among the 7 Wonders to celebrate.
This gigantic Tomb was built on the orders of Shah Jahan, the fifth Muslim Mogul emperor, to honor the memory of his beloved late wife. Built out of white marble and standing in properly laid-out walled gardens, the Taj Mahal is regarded as the most perfect jewel of Muslim art in India. The emperor was accordingly jailed and, supposed to see the Taj Mahal out of his small cell window.
Work on the tomb began in 1633 and 20,000 workers were laboured to build it for 17 years. The most expert architects, inlay craftsmen, calligraphers, stone-carvers and masons came from all across Indian and lands as distant as Persia and Turkey. The master mason was from Baghdab, an expert in building the double auditorium from Persia, and an inlay specialist from Delhi.
Friday, June 12, 2009
New 7 Wonders on goal for 1 billion votes
Worldwide voting rate is increases by 10 times greater
Voting for the Official New7Wonders of Nature is done from everywhere on the planet, via the Internet and telephone on the N7W Global Voting Platform. Voters can prefer their favorite 7 nominees at n7w.com, using the international telephone voting line, or with a personalized voting certificate.
Fifteen cities and countries are currently participating in the global bidding tender to prefer the location that will exclusively acquire the rights to be the Official Host of the Declaration of the New7Wonders of Nature event in 2011.
The final results includes the below mentioned list:
- The Pyramid at Chichén Itzá Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico
- Christ Redeemer (1931) Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- The Roman Colosseum (70 - 82 A.D.) Rome, Italy
- The Great Wall of China (220 B.C and 1368 - 1644 A.D.) China
- Machu Picchu (1460-1470), Peru
- Petra (9 B.C. - 40 A.D.), Jordan
- The Taj Mahal (1630 A.D.) Agra, India
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Asian Overview Rome in 2009
The group of relationships built online is possibly the most obvious subject of this exhibition. The wonder of discovering it is possible to build a society overcoming differences in age, geographic collocation and cultural habits, using virtual contacts and transforming them into an artistic event. In this exhibition there is an Indonesian artist who immigrated to Italy, Setyo Mardiyantoro, and an Italian artist who immigrated to Japan, Marco Sodaro. Two experiences of life both rare and they express with different techniques, painting and photography, the same sense of confusion to the environment.
The oldest artist is Jinleng Yeoh, internationally recognized artist since the 50s, whose works are in the National Gallery of Kuala Lumpur as in other prominent institutions, while the youngest is Liu Yang complicated digital artist and already teacher of this subject at the Academy of Fine Arts of Sichuan.
The strange symbolic artwork by Bruno Bruno, Mario d’Imperio and Antonius Kho seems the prelude to the complete abstraction of Hiroshi Matsumoto and Armando Profumi. A various collection of art that shows contact points between the different artists and also differences but expresses however the pleasure to discover and recognize each other escaping through this comparison from the social, political influences and the cultural environment of their background.
Monday, June 8, 2009
ART OF PALLAVAS - MAMALLAPURAM
Tourists are drawn to this place by its miles of undamaged beach and rock-cut art. The sculpture, here, is mainly interesting because it shows scenes of day-to- day life, in contrast with the rest of the state of Tamil Nadu, where the carvings generally represents gods and goddesses.
Mamallapuram art can be divided into four categories: open air bas - reliefs, structured temples, man-made caves and rathas i.e. 'chariots' carved from single stone, to resemble temples or chariots used in temple processions. The famous Arjuna’s Penance and the Krishna Mandapa, adorn huge rocks near the centre of the village. The beautiful Shore Temple towers over the waves, behind a defensive breakwater. Sixteen man-made caves in different stages of completion are also seen, scattered through the area.
Friday, June 5, 2009
Modern Art of MARC CHAGALL
As a pioneer of modernism and one of the greatest symbolic artists of the twentieth century, Marc Chagall achieved fame and fortune, and over the course of a long career created some of the best-known and most-loved paintings of our time.
Marc Chagall's artworks are hard to categorize. Working in the pre-World War I Paris art world, he was concerned with avant-garde currents; however, his work was consistently on the fringes of popular art movements and emerging trends, including Cubism and Fauvism, among others. He was directly associated with the Paris School and its exponents, including Amedeo Modigliani.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Overview of Contemporary Art
While work by living artists has always been composed by the MFA—Winslow Homer and Claude Monet were contemporary artists when some of their paintings were acquired—the Department was officially established upon the Museum's centennial in 1971. Modern and post-1945 art was originally pursued with a decided stress on color-field painters such as Jack Bush, Helen Frankenthaler, Jules Olitski, and Larry Poons.
A study collection of over thirty complete and incomplete canvases by Morris Louis was also created. Attention abroad in the 1980s encouraged additions by artists loosely categorized as European Neo-Expressionists, such as Georg Baselitz, Francesco Clemente, Anselm Kiefer, and Sigmar Polke, among others.