Most people live a relatively normal day to day life even if we may have our share of mundane problems. If we are asked to describe our emotions, at the very least we can say happy or sad or fine. When we truly love something or take great pleasure in something, most of us tend to wax poetically. In contrast, there are people like Ishmael Beah whose lives started off quite normal but then it took a major wrong turn. From the tender age of ten years, Beah witnessed the horrors of war in his home country, Sierra Leone.
This class allows Melinda to get comfortable with expressing her emotions through art. This development eventually leads her to articulating her emotions. Mr. Freeman inspires Melinda through his ways of teaching art and how to express one’s self through
Artist at this time wanted to expose the feelings and emotions that were being felt that was not always seen it earlier art
The ways in which people are capable of expressing themselves through the use of art is endless. To some extent, each person has an extremely different interpretation of introspection into their psych. In this paper though, the differences will be put on hold while the spotlight shifts to the similarities, for better or worse, that we all share. Alan Rath’s sculpture Infoglut for example, has a brutally honest take on how technology has shaped who we all are. Infoglut transforms parts of the human body through the use of technology and “industrial components.”(TOCA)
Viewing the painting, brightens the light in the artwork. There is a sense of reality as the light seems to move through the clouds. The faces of the characters are shown by light and there is an effect of light moving by walking in front of the scene. Emotions are evoked when one looks at this scene. There is a state of protection and safety.
Hello Cimberleigh, Thank you for sharing your post! I appreciated reading your hypotheses about what you saw in the paintings. It was interesting to review other responses and see how different people view and draw various conclusions from the same images. For example, in the first image you saw isolation whereas I saw someone being methodical, not necessarily thinking about anything in particular, but contemplating. From my perspective, the person may have been thinking about positive and negative things, but without additional information I didn’t feel comfortable drawing conclusions.
“In the silence of their studios, busied for days at a time with works which leave the mind relatively free, painters become like women; their thoughts can revolve around the minor facts of life and penetrate their hidden meaning.” There’s a hidden meaning or objective behind every artist’s work. We all interpret paintings differently; some art can be forms of phi phenomenon (illusion of movement created by presenting visual stimuli in rapid succession), or others could be interpreting cues such as Monocular and Binocular. We can’t fully understand what the artist is trying to present unless there is an outline, but we can surely look at the texture, colour, line and shape of each painting to get a meaning for ourselves. A person that demonstrates a form of interpreting his art is Stu Oxley.
The children are moved and may even be moved to tears, but art is supposed to make us feel, and it allows the children to accept that their feelings are natural and shouldn’t be hidden. (Buchanan,
Throughout his entire career as an artist, he only sold one painting. He lived in poverty, and suffered from severe malnourishment and sleep deprivation. All of his sufferings sent him spiraling into “fits of madness and lucidity,” which ultimately placed him the Saint-Remy institution after cutting off his own earlobe in attempts to murder his friend and fellow artist, Gaugin (“Van Gogh Gallery”). Van Gogh’s anguish heavily influenced his art. His “fusion of form and content is powerful; dramatic, lyrically rhythmic, imaginative, and emotional,” because he was “completely absorbed in the effort to explain either his struggle against madness or his comprehension of the spiritual essence of man and nature” (“Van Gogh Gallery”).
To describe, the art showed variety of emotions, both positive and negative that were placed on masks. Dialogues that were in play, but with only facial emotions. Unlike the
According to The Art Institute, this painting is Van Gogh’s second self portrait he ever made, its style that of “The Paris avant garde”, later to be known as the “Post impressionists”. Although some might think that Van Gogh’s 1887 self portrait is just an exercise in technique, with Van Gogh merely painting his own face for practice, I feel that this portrait, upon further inspection and introspection, reveals the hidden emotions of Van Gogh- his sorrows, pain, fear, and
An initial reaction to this artwork is a feeling of mourn with an explosion of emotions. At first, the artwork serves as a symbol of sorrow, despair, and melancholy. The title of the work adds a dry, bland sense to the meaning behind the drawing. Through observing the drawing more strenuously, the work becomes more of a symbol of war and a cry for help. The despair and troublesome times that the working class went through during war is characterized in this artwork.
The Renaissance was marked by prosperity with works of religious service, holy deities, meticulous, and beautifully perfected paintings. These works have re-produced the golden glow of ancient Greece - Rome. However, the historical flow is a non-stop movement, in which its fluctuations lie in viewpoints and sentiment of human beings. Likewise, art is not separable from history. Art is often influenced by history.
Depression. An endless struggle towards the surface of an ocean of self-doubt and worries. Mental illness is not always clear to see and can be expressed in many different ways. Vincent Van Gogh expressed this through his many paintings. It may not be apparent when first looking at Van Gogh’s paintings, but after a while, a pattern can be seen or inferred.
The colors show his depression and agony and reveal how truly broken down the subject