Sentences with phrase «brushy strokes»

Loose and decadent, they read like a travelogue, documenting the sights in the same brushy strokes of her abstractions at the time.
Roughly half are painted on natural linen in which Hedges» approach is a little different than on canvas, revealing the linen support and numerous areas where the pigment is applied in thin brushy strokes to expose the weave and texture.
Instead, enjoy Scott's brushwork, the brushy strokes, the energetic gestural markings, the sweeps and scribbles of colors that tumble and flow over one another.
Pensato is less interested in the cartoons and comics these figures emerge from than the way these characters are drawn, and her depictions expand and exaggerate the most basic marks of figural form: here, the eyes of Felix the Cat loom large, disembodied and delineated in thick, brushy strokes.
The short brushy strokes that represent body hair are both comic and descriptive of the figure's manliness.
In this way his most relevant counterpart from the United States may be Robert Ryman, though while the American emphasized his paintings» unorthodox supports by purging color, Mr. Viallat soaks his tarps and parasols with brushy strokes in a bright, Matissean range of blues and yellows, pinks and whites.
There is an undeniably sensual quality to the paint brushed onto the paper's surface as it modulates knowingly between generously applied paint that leaves delicate drips and the dryer, brushier strokes.
At once a path forward and a record of the past, the line is painted with an elegantly brushy stroke that intermittently loops back on itself to form knotty snarls and kinks.

Not exact matches

Experiment with the scale of birds near and far, using brushy, atmospheric strokes in our outdoor sky - painting project.
The fame of her early stain paintings and her identification with transparent, fragile hues notwithstanding, the majority of Frankenthaler's most achieved later works - that is, those made from the 1970's on - derive at least part of their expressiveness from the way their luminous (or dark and smoldering) color shifts from brushy, transparent washes to declarative, superimposed strokes.
Wide, brushy passages of thinned - down enamel are applied in back - and - forth strokes that linger with the touch of the artist's hand.
By the late»50s, Krushenick was presenting hieratic arrangements of brushy, planar forms, still animated by gesture and outlined in black or near - black strokes.
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