Sentences with phrase «as pointillism»

[2] Her paintings, which reference such disparate sources as pointillism, pixelation, and graffiti [3], invite the viewer to question what it is they are seeing and to put the images together for themselves.

Not exact matches

- ism does not mean a word is a religion or else consumerism, commercialism would be religions, as well is medievalism, pointillism and voluntarism.
«Students can view montage videos created as a tribute to artists such as Claude Monet, Vincent Van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, Georges Seurat, and Edgar Degas, then they can compare more recent art with the techniques of these famous artists and see how some of these techniques have changed — how pointillism led to micropointillism, for instance.»
Students complete 6 sets of value scales in a variety of drawing techniques such as hatching and pointillism.
Terrin says his style has been referred to as «modern pointillism»: bold strokes that appear abstract when viewed up close and come into focus only when the viewer steps away from the canvas.
[10] Jones notes that Riley investigated Seurat's pointillism by painting from a book illustration of Seurat's Bridge at an expanded scale to work out how his technique made use of complementary colours, and went on to create pointillist landscapes of her own, such as Pink Landscape (1960), [10] painted soon after her Seurat study [13] and portraying the «sun - filled hills of Tuscany» (and shown in the exhibition poster) which Jones writes could readily be taken for a post-impressionist original.
Mickalene Thomas started out as an abstract painter, inspired by Australian Aboriginal art and late - nineteenth - century French Pointillism.
One will and should remember him for the early 1970s, with the rhombus in the foreground and the quick curls everywhere as a grid to themselves, like a Pointillism in shades of gray.
Zavaglia has developed a technique which has been described as «Modern Pointillism,» that allows her to blend colors and establish tonalities that truly resemble the techniques used in classical oil painting.
Its celebration of Italian Pointillism was about as relevant to Italian culture, pure color, or New York sophistication as the Olive Garden.
In addition, Riley's work is highlighted in the exhibition Seurat to Riley: The Art of Perception, Pattern, Pointillism & Op Art currently at The Holburne Museum in Bath until January 18, 2018 (first presented at Compton Verney Art Gallery & Park, Warwickshire); as well as in Monochrome: Painting in Black and White at The National Gallery, London through February 18, 2018.
Long stuck with the reductive label of Op artist, Riley has established herself as a major modern painter in line with a tradition that reaches back to Seurat's pointillism and Matisse's cutouts.
Known as Faux Fauvism, it's inspired by Matisse and celebrates elements of Fauvism — that is, early 20th - century French paintings, marked by the use of bold, often distorted forms and vivid colours — as well as Cubism, Pointillism and street art.
Photo-wise, it's the old cliche about Impressionism as the secret child of photo, and Pointillism being the forerunner of process color in printing: Sigmar Polke's dots, Bridget Riley's psy - ops, camouflage, the pixel, inkjets and spray paint.
These are deeply subtle paintings with an understated clarity that owes something to the light - filled pointillism of Seurat as well as to the balance and poise of Agnes Martin's work.
On closer view, a dense weave of hundreds of thousands of dots becomes visible, revealing a methodology that owes as much to Pointillism as Abstract Expressionism.
I take as a referente the circle as the basic unity of visual language — already studied by the pointillism and the photomechanics -.
These marks distinctly recall the pointillism of Seurat and Signac, as well as the synthetic vision of Impressionism: When you step back from the canvas, the image snaps into focus.
On these boxes, and as part of the series Pintar por pintar, Negrón decided to work a group of abstract paintings that evoke french Pointillism of the late nineteenth century.
His painting were created using pointillism as a predominant technique.
Chromo - luminarisme as Seurat called it, or pointillism, as we know it today, applied colour theory in a very methodical way — what he called «ma méthode».
In her large, multi-media works, vivid spray - painted, translucent atmospheres are contrasted with opaque, hand - painted geometric areas reminiscent of pointillism or pixelation, a juxtaposition that creates significant spatial depth Recent works such as «Gray Matter» (2017) inhabit an intersection between the theatrical baroque and the graphic specificity of stained glass, which is accentuated a dynamic sense of movement, swirling spirals, upward diagonals, and heavy impasto.
Hansen is a multimedia artist who works at the intersection of «traditional visual art, pointillism, and offbeat techniques, using media that connect to the subject matter, such as karate chops, tricycle wheel imprints, burger grease, and worms.»
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