Sentences with phrase «loose brush strokes»

The uses of loose brush strokes, often in broken geometric shapes, add a dreamlike quality to the images she produces.
Whereas members of this movement draw inspiration from mass media, Thiebaud paints on the basis of his own memories, and his loose brush strokes are miles away from the mechanical, hard - edge reproductions by artists like Andy Warhol.
What's so impressive about these paintings is how the loose brush strokes capture the energy and very essence of the scene.
Discover the loose brush strokes and intriguing textures she uses to communicate the vivid colors of Paso Robles in her solo exhibition, California Wine Country: Impressions in Oil by Erin Hanson.
The imagery of her art is crafted with unprecedented assertiveness, a combination of refined, complex and loose brush strokes, characterized by violently expressive color and jarring compositions that elicit vivid emotional reactions.
Large planes of color executed with a loose brush stroke create a structured tension that asserts the artist's underlying abstract arrangement of form.

Not exact matches

Building a tapestry of structure and dimension through a weaving of loose and tightly knit brush strokes, Casteel builds upon the canvas» plain surface an orchestra of color and texture, with the application of paint not unlike the caress of a familiar hand.
The figures in Judith Linhares paintings are cooking, eating, sweeping digging and dreaming their loose - limed bodies are animated by paint fueled brush strokes.
In the loose, spare brush strokes of the German artist, you are as liable to find a mournful figure in tears as you are the exuberant limbs of a pack of humans in the middle of an orgy.
These city paintings, many of them of the city's main bridges, share commonalities with the funky return to representation and figuration via a meld of loose abstract expressionist brush strokes and paint application — lots of scumbling and blobs of paint — and a sort of ecstatic folk primitivism adopted by his contemporary and friends in New York in the mid to late 50s, such as Red Grooms, Robert Beauchamp, Gandy Brodie, Mimi Gross, Jan Müller, and Claes Oldenburg (with Eva Hesse picking up the tradition in the mid-60s).
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