Sentences with phrase «diaphanous color»

Her drippy, gestural images use layers of diaphanous color cascading in multiple directions.
Yet as Bannard drove deeper into abstraction, crafting wispy swaths of diaphanous color washing over one another (and the viewer), he again found himself at loggerheads with the art world's tastemakers.
Chicago saw this project as releasing the diaphanous colors of her sculptural Domes to soften and «feminize» the environment.
★ William Baziotes: «A Centennial Exhibition: Surrealist Drawings of the 1930s» (through Dec. 29) More low than high, these raucous sometimes ribald figurative images in watercolor and gouache reveal quite a different side of the well - respected second - tier Abstract Expressionist painter best known for the tasteful restraint, diaphanous colors and blurry organic shapes of his mature style.

Not exact matches

Paneled and full versions in solid colors or featuring modern prints, columnar versions in rich textures, and pleated versions in diaphanous fabrics will all seem very current.
I think the biggest strength of the Diaphanous Tunic is its color.
Diaphanous in one definition is «delicately hazy» and that is precisely what Resika works thick patches of color against in his Provincetown work.
Jenkins's diaphanous streaks and gentle, fluid fields of color positioned him as an important figure in abstract expressionism, and he often exhibited in the same venues as Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning — artists who shared his instinctual working method.
Jenkins controlled the paint flow across the canvas with an ivory knife, producing diaphanous and intensely colored multi-layered works.
The resulting colors are not static and distinct, but rather are subtle and diaphanous.
The heavy materiality of Mountains of the Moon had enabled a diaphanous chromatic lightness, but around this time he began to explore much subtler interfusions of hue in paintings like Snow Morning (1959) and Golden Day (1960), which seem to anticipate color - field paintings such as Jules Olitski's works of the mid -»60s.11
Her colors became diaphanous layers.
One of the highlights of the exhibition, Le Barrissement de la Peinture (The Trumpeting of the Paint), is a modest nine inches high and features a diaphanous figure gathering apples in a candy - colored landscape.
Other Hofmann students include Giorgio Cavallon, who is represented by a canvas in which areas of color seem absorbed by and emergent from an atmosphere of shimmering diaphanous light, and John Little, whose use of broad, muscular strokes that activate his surfaces are suggestive of the art of Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner, with whom he was closely connected after moving to East Hampton, New York, in the late 1940s.
The effect produced intriguing, water color - like, diaphanous sweeps of color that carried with them little evidence of a brush stroke.
Presented on separate floors of Tew Gallery through June 1, Minton's multivalent and playfully complex woodcut paintings, together with Ludwig's fecund layering of diaphanous veils of color and lush natural imagery, create a conceptual playground and a sensory feast.
Currently I am working on a water series, exploring light, color, depth and the diaphanous qualities of reflection.
Her expert and sometimes surprising treatment of paint — alternately diaphanous and goopy — complements a keen sense of color that glories in the hues and light that emanate from her laptop, and finds inspiration in the saturated colors of TV cartoons.
Actually, the phone, smoke, and sunlight are good analogs for what is in Greene's paintings: weighty, curving shapes, dissolving outlines, and diaphanous layers of colors.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z