http://herotwins.hypermart.net/corn_god/goya1.jpg
this is the Goya I was talking about. Absolutely gives me the shivers. It's called Chronos Devouring one of His Children.
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http://herotwins.hypermart.net/corn_god/goya1.jpg
this is the Goya I was talking about. Absolutely gives me the shivers. It's called Chronos Devouring one of His Children.
Yes, absolutely. :nod: Here's an another one I like:
Karl Friedrich Schinkel: Gothic Cathedral by the Waterside (a copy by Wilhelm Ahlborn)
http://gibert.rachel.free.fr/bookmar..._gothique2.jpg
This is one of my favourites:
http://xs114.xs.to/xs114/07161/Peter...-the-World.jpg
My grandmother has a copy of it, not the original painting by Rubens of course. But I love it and it looks exactly like the original. I'm a fan of mythology and I've always loved the scene.
It's not just you. The paper I wrote contained about a page and a half on that subject.Quote:
Originally Posted by Bii
O'Keefe totally denied that her paintings resembled anything other than flowers. Maybe she didn't intend them to look like female body parts, but some of them do. Dunno. She said the following about the issue:
I remember the squeals of outrage in my American Art class a couple of years ago, when the "kids" (sorry, but 19 and 20 year olds are kids to me) were showed slides of O' Keefe's work. I clearly remember some girl saying "Ew". :rolleyes: I think I sprained an eyeball with all the rolling my eyes did that day.Quote:
Nobody sees a flower really; it is so small. We haven't time, and to see takes time - like to have a friend takes time.
I think her paintings of poppies are among my favorites.
http://i61.photobucket.com/albums/h5...al-poppies.jpg
She somewhat danced around the issue, actually. To quote my paper:
Oh, say no more, say no more, wink wink, nudge nudge, nudge is as good as a wink to a blind bat, eh?Quote:
"That’s something people themselves put into the paintings”, she told Dorothy Seiberling, “They’ve found things that never entered my mind. That doesn’t mean they weren’t there, but the the things they said astonished me." [Emphasis mine]
Of course it's possible that she was ambivalent about it because Alfred Steiglitz, her husband and promoter, insisted that they were girly bits.
Gah.
My favorite is Giorgio De Chirico
The Nostalgia of the Infinite
http://www.colchsfc.ac.uk/art/De%20Chirico.jpg
Melancholy and the Mystery of the Street
http://www.abcgallery.com/C/chirico/chirico9a.JPG
These both are earlier, around 1914 paintings, in later years he switched to a much more surrealist style, however these earlier paintings are the ones I fell in love with and my favorites.
p.s. I was lucky enough to see many of his paintings within the Rome museum of modern art :D .
Monet, including his haystacks which I once saw 20 or 30 together in one show.
NYC Line Artist Ty Wilson. he's a small fry compared to some of the names being dropped here. I have his Paris Blue and The Date prints framed.
i'd like to post them but still cant figure out how. :(
Hmm, well it isn't just some people. Check out what cuppajoe says in his post. The resemblences to genitalia were remarkable enough to some people to cause quite a stir about O'Keefe's work. God I feel so stupid at my age being embarrased to write the word "genitalia" in a post. :blush: I mean, some of her paintings look suggestive to me, and some don't and honestly...I don't really care. I mentioned a while ago when asked about symbolism in art that I am completely superficial, I like looking at the pictures and that's it.
To me, those poppies look like poppies, and poppies are some of my favorite flowers...and wasn't it Freud who said "sometimes a cigar is just a cigar". He was big on seeing symbolized "naughty bits" too.
According to at least one of O'Keefe's biographers, she pursued a lesbian relationship with artist Rebecca Strand, and her marriage to Stieglitz was one of convenience. I guess we could make an argument about her subconscious desires coming through in her art, but frankly, I'd rather quote Monty Python...*wink wink, nudge nudge*. :DQuote:
Originally Posted by cuppajoe_9
Claude-Joseph Vernet: Storm on a Mediterranean Coast
http://www.latribunedelart.com/Nouve...erraneenne.jpg
Sentimentalism anyone? :yawnb:
i really, really like o'keefe too..especially her painting called "the blue wave"...the colors are incredible...i have yet to be able to find it tho...i first saw it in one of her calendars in the 80s...
another one is edward hopper...a lot of people will probably will probably recognize his bar scene "nighthawks"...but he has many more...
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/225/4...a5cf89a9_o.jpg
Is that it, littlewing?
awesome cuppa joe !!!...***humbly bows** i have been looking for that picture 4ever...and could never find it...i wanted to get a print....thank you ever so much...can you tell me the link to go there and get it so i can hold it n hug it...i thought it was one of her best ones...and yes niamh i agree, the colors of blue are just beautiful... :)...again this forum comes thru...i so enjoy everyone here...:)
I've lost the original source, but you can take it off of my Flickr account here.
Wow, that is one incredible painting, thanks for the request and thanks for the delivery. I fully agree that one can sit and gaze at that for a long time. Very beautiful. :)
Rene Magritte
The Menaced Assassin
My favorite artist or my favorite painter?
Bah, I know what you mean. My favorite artist is Salvador Dali, but I'm also a huge Picasso fan. Couldn't tell you my favorite works; that would take some evaluation.
Rene Magritte
http://www.idst.vt.edu/modernworld/a.../Magritte2.jpg
Incase the link is ever removed:
Attachment 1073
My favourite painter is probably Albert Edelfelt. I've got Queen Blanca on my wall :)
http://www.disajn.com/Nr2-2005/108.jpg
yikes nick! thats one crazy painting!
Anna i really like that painting! its amazing how he painted the silk of her dress!
I like it because I see each figure occupying the room at a different time. It reminds me of Faulkner's storytelling. It's a mystery that can never be solved!
His other work is interesting.
This one I'm actually unsure of, I'll have to look it up and check:
http://i119.photobucket.com/albums/o...o/tapestry.jpg
"The Garden of Earthly Delight" (I believe) by Heironymous Bosch:
http://i119.photobucket.com/albums/o...o/triptych.jpg
One of Wassily Kandinky's "Compositions," I can't remember which:
http://i119.photobucket.com/albums/o...o/comp6640.jpg
I could just stare at that one for hours.
Edelfelt did amazing job with painting fabrics. :) They just look so real.
This is another painting by Edelfelt. It's called "A Child's Funeral".
http://users.tkk.fi/~apajunen/seeart...umissaatto.jpg
Edelfelt was in need of money, and so he "re-painted" this painting as a "happy version", where they are heading for a christening instead of a funeral. A picture of it can be found if you click the link below. Choose "aiheet", then "kansankuvaus" and find a painting called "Ristiäissaatto"
http://www.yle.fi/teema/teemagalleri...rt_swf.php?id=
Oh my... Use of light is amazing in this painting.
favourite painters is vincent van gogh and francis bacon. The Starry Night is my all time favourite painting.
Johannes Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring
http://homepages.tesco.net/ian.cox99...g%20(1665).jpg
I have seen both this painting and the Mona Lisa in person and was completely enraptured by the above and TOTALLY underwhelmed by the Mona Lisa.
http://i197.photobucket.com/albums/a...nColumn44c.jpg
"I am not sick. I am broken. But I am happy as long as I can paint."
Frida Kahlo
"I drank to drown my pain, but the damned pain learned how to swim, and now I am overwhelmed by this decent and good behavior."
Frida Kahlo
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frida_Kahlo