Sentences with phrase «fleeting effects»

As a portable and quick - drying medium, it proved indispensable as a means of recording scenery and fleeting effects of light and shade observed during his extensive travels around the UK and Europe and it was in watercolour that he achieved some of his most creative and innovative results.
Graham's observations of fleeting effects in nature provided the basis for his painting.
Few artists of his generation were more rigorous in observing nature, yet Cézanne was less interested in recording fleeting effects than in conveying the underlying rhythms and structures of the landscape.
In a similar vein, three other early childhood researchers, including the economist Greg Duncan, a titan of the field, recently wrote about the fleeting effects of pre-K in the Washington Post.
He is keen to qualify that this is no Impressionist manifesto, explaining, «the rhythms I refer to are also abstract and graphic, not just about the fleeting effects of light.»
Rejecting traditional methods of building paintings with layers of thin glazes, the Impressionists worked spontaneously to capture the fleeting effects of light using bright pigments, large brushstrokes, and thick impasto.
This concern towards the light more importantly, the effect of change and alteration of the subject by the shift in light, and the need to capture the fleeting effect of what he saw followed Monet throughout his career.
They set up their easels at locations of their choice all around the town of Hammonton to capture the fleeting effects of natural light, quickly capturing a scene before it's gone.
In her striking series of photogravures, Dean captures the atmosphere of the light - flooded rehearsal space, and the fleeting effects of shadow and light in the former Ford Assembly plant overlooking San Francisco Bay.
Many of the works on display here were created in the full flower of Impressionism, when artists like Pierre Auguste Renoir and Childe Hassam devised a free, open painting technique and brilliant rainbow palette to capture the fleeting effects of nature's color and light.
In the early twentieth century, the California Impressionists used the techniques of French Impressionism to capture the fleeting effects of light in their immediate setting.
Parker writes: «Constable in his sketches not only sought the truth of nature, but the fleeting effects of light and shadow, the immediate here and now of the visual world.
Pochade Artists use colour to record a scene's atmospheric effect and to capture the fleeting effect of light for a planned landscape painting.
In the 1830s, Constable achieved more expressiveness in his work; he aimed less at the careful naturalistic depiction of a scene and more at an immediate record of the light and atmosphere of the moment and their fleeting effect on the sky, foliage, and water.
«This spike is almost certainly due in substantial part to the ongoing El Niño event, which is a fleeting effect that increases carbon dioxide concentrations temporarily,» Mann said.
Amidst media storms defending or refuting climate change, it seems that they in fact only have a fleeting effect on public opinion, new research shows.
However, when the roots of the anxiety and emptiness are not addressed, consumption and use have a fleeting effect, leaving you at a loss and in need of consuming or using more, and the cycle continues.
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