Sentences with phrase «work pointillism»

All his works evoke that flavour of the excitement of the bustling city, including his newest work Pointillism ².

Not exact matches

Meanwhie, the application of Van Gogh's own artistry to a work about his life and art reminds one of the (infinitely superior) legerdemain on display in Sunday in the Park with George, the Stephen Sondheim masterwork that deploys musical pointillism in the service of its pointillist subject.
Pointillism, the term used with respect to the work of Seurat, is the practice of painting patterns of small, distinct dots of pure color next to each other.
I'm in love with this beautiful «Nomads» collection of work by Spanish artist Pablo Jurado Ruiz, created through the fascinating technique of Pointillism.
[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.
While he has never had a defined style — he has employed a series of different styles and techniques, including Impressionism, Pointillism and abstraction — Nahas's work draws mainly from nature and the abstract motifs of early Middle Eastern geometry.
Nevertheless, there is an unmistakable and driving sense of kinetic movement and energy within all her works, especially the pointillism of her «arrow» paintings that depict schools of tiny arrows massing and converging like small fish or unseen air currents.
Her new paintings, much like her previous work, call upon her signature spray gun, pointillism, and geometric shapes.
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.
Although it may seem that the flies work randomly, the method results in thoughtful abstractions, referencing movements like pointillism or impressionism.
A lot of the work comes out of optical mixing, and from pointillism.
Influenced equally by the pointillism of Seurat, the dynamism of the Futurists, and the abstractions of Pollock, her work from the»60s onwards consisted of flat planes of simple, repeated shapes (first in black and white, later with colour) assembled in often dizzying configurations.
Cloar employed pointillism in his painting style, creating over 800 works in his lifetime.
This experience widened Benton's horizons and his early works explored a range of styles including Impressionism, Divsionism or Pointillism, Synchromism, Cubism and Constructivism.
While pointillism was about the optical, Drummond, in a passage quoted on the gallery's website for her solo show in 2005, describes the effect of her work in terms of sound:
Visually the work suggests an especially bold cousin of pointillism.
They are unlike any other paintings being made in the world today: owing something perhaps to Seurat's pointillism or the early works of Agnes Martin, but with an optical charge that is entirely individual and an internally generated sense of pace that invites the eye gently into and across the surface of the painting.
Bridget Riley: Learning from Seurat at The Courtauld Gallery The link between Riley's trademark striped works and Seurat's pointillism isn't obvious.
Digitally printed onto the textiles, these works pay homage to the modern tradition of pointillism which originated during a time of social and economic unrest in Europe dating back over a century yet still relevant today.
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.
They are unlike any other paintings being made in the world today: owing something perhaps to Seurat's pointillism or the early works of Agnes Martin, but with an optical charge that is entirely individual and an internally generated sense of pace that invites the eye gently into and across the surface of the paint.
Matisse had worked his own way into abstraction through color, from perceptual studies based on Cézanne to the pointillism of Signac, immersing his subjects in luminous space, from which boldly simplified color compositions like The Blue Window (1913) were to emerge.
In addition to works by Van Gogh, the museum's permanent collection also contains paintings by the artist's contemporaries, notably those associated with Impressionism (1873 - 90), Post-Impressionism in France (1880 - 1900), Pointillism (c.1884 - 1900), and Post-Impressionism in Holland (c.1880 - 1920), and stages exhibitions on various aspects of 19th Century art history.
He was most influenced by the Pointillism of Camille Pissarro, but his subsequent work also reveals his appreciation for other Impressionist and Post-Impressionist artists.
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.
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.
The group show Efflorescence, containing the works of four brilliant artists (Alexi Torres, Ellen de Meijer, Gavin Rain and Zhuang Hong Yi), all range in style — from pointillism to non-objective, three - dimensional wall pieces — but share the use of high chromatic, vibrant, energetic hues.
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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