When doing portraiture artists tend to exaggerate colour and tones to get across the feelings in a picture or to exaggerate the importance of something or someone in a picture. I have chosen to compare and contrast the work of two portraits, first of all I will talk about ‘weeping woman’ by Pablo Picasso and I will secondly talk about ‘Woman with a veil’ but Raphael Sanzio.…
The purpose of this assignment is to compare and contrast Giuliano Bugiardini’s Madonna and Child with St. John the Baptist, and the Master of Frankfurt’s Holy Kinship. Both are examples of Renaissance paintings, however, Bugiardini’s piece is an example of southern Renaissance, where the Master of Frankfurt’s is one of northern Renaissance.…
Diego María de la Concepción Juan Nepomuceno Estanislao de la Rivera y Barrientos Acosta y Rodríguez, known as Diego Rivera (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈdjeɣo…
Diego Rivera was born on December 8, 1886, in Guanajuato in Mexico. His parents were Diego and Maria Barrientos Rivera. Being a family of rather modest means, they lived in Guanajuato until 1892, when they moved to Mexico City.…
The “Sarcophagus Depicting a Battle between Soldiers and Amazons” is a Roman sarcophagus dedicated for an important Roman soldier. It was made sometime between 140 A.D. to 170 A.D. and was made out of marble. The lid of coffin was designed to appear like that of a roof Greek temple due to it triangular shape. There are five rows of vertical tiles along the side of the lid and at the end of each row is a lion head. Along the side of the sarcophagus is a high relief, the subjects appear almost free standing and not appear to be attach to the stone that it was carve from, depicts a battle scene. All these features on the sarcophagus is intended to glorify the soldier intern within and to demonstrate his achievement in life.…
Horace Hall Professor Sansome Latin America Humanities March 7, 2016 Diego Rivera: 1 Mexican Painter Diego Rivera was a big man, and not only because he stood over six feet tall and weighed, at times, more than three hundred pounds. Rivera dominated the Mexican art world from soon after the end of the country's revolution in 1920 until his death in 1957. At the age of seventy. 1 Rivera revived, and put to use, the antique medium of fresco painting. Fresco painting used pigments impregnating a paste of marble dust or sand and water-treated lime, which dries rock hard. His energy and his optimism charmed all sorts of people, from Parisian avant-gardes to American captains of industry.…
Cubist painter Diego Rivera had become a great success at this time in Europe, but the happenings in the world at the time would strongly change his work style. With the inspiration of political ideals in the Mexican Revolution (1914-15) and the Russian Revolution (1917), Diego Rivera had a mission to make art that reflected the lives of the working class as well as the native peoples of Mexico. Rivera soon developed an interest in designing murals during a trip to Italy. He found inspiration in the Renaissance frescos that were in Italy that he saw during his trip…
Hamilton, George H.. "Picasso, Pablo Ruiz Y". In William D. Halsey. Collier's Encyclopedia. 19. New York: Macmillan Educational Corporation, 1976. print.…
Many of Picasso 's later pictures were based on works by great masters of the past-Diego Velazquez, Gustave Courbet, Eugene Delacroix, and Edouard Manet. In addition to painting, Picasso worked in various media, making hundreds of lithographs in the renowned Paris graphics workshop, Atelier Mourlot. Ceramics also engaged his interest, and in 1947, in Vallauris, he produced nearly 2000 pieces.…
Genre paintings have always made bold statements regarding the “everyday life” of whichever time period they were completed in. Scenes could range from parties in a domestic setting in France, to bitterly realistic views of street and slum life during the Gilded Age in the United States.…
Pablo Picasso is a very well known artist of the 20th century and his work is still famous today. Picasso went through many time periods, but his most famous ones are the blue period, the rose period, and cubism.…
This past weekend, I decided to re-visit the Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena and picked out the Reclining Nude by Jean-Antoine Watteau which dated 1713-1717 and its medium was oil on panel.…
Many of Picasso’s works are influenced by his father who was a painter, for the death of his close friend Carlos Casagemas, and also for the World War I (Spanish civil war-Guernica). Picasso’s love for art was somewhat genetic. His father, Jose Ruiz Blasco, was a painter as well and he loved art. Picasso was quick to express his desire for art. Picasso’s father began teaching him to draw and paint from early childhood, and by the time he was 13 years old his painting were already better than his father’s. He lost all desire to do any schoolwork and instead spent the school days…
When talking about the work of the Impressionists, who derived their name from the criticism of their first exhibition in April 15, 1837. The Impressionists- Claude Monet, August Renoir, Edgar Degas, Berthe Morisot, Alfred Sisley (and several others) thought that the modern era deserved a place in arts as well as in history, and so started to incorporate what was happening around them into their art works.…
Every piece of artwork has a driving force behind the making of it. It could be as simple as an emotional feeling at a certain point in an artist’s life, or it could be as complicated as the political events taking place around an artist. Some artworks have multiple influences on them. Guernica, an internationally recognized anti-war symbol designed and painted by Pablo Picasso, was produced in response to the immense devastation, chaos, and disgust of the Spanish Civil War, or more specifically the German bombing of Guernica, Spain, as well as traditional yet iconic aspects of Spanish culture, like bullfighting.…