Painting techniques Essays

  • Madonna Enthroned: A Non-Byzantine Art Analysis

    749 Words  | 3 Pages

    to things such as style and technique. The Byzantine style Madonna is simplistic yet detailed, and only shows Mary and Jesus. But the Madonna’s Enthroned by Cimabue and Giotto show them is a much more realistic way, where they were able to use a lot more technique to show the growing trend of naturalism. Naturalism is when an artist wants to depict something as realistically and accurately as possible, which is what both Cimabue and Giotto expressed in their paintings. This trend encouraged all artists

  • Presenting A Portrait In Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo

    462 Words  | 2 Pages

    movement. The camera switches between the female character and the painting. Indeed it first switches between the bouquet on the museum bench and the identical flower piece in the painting, and then it switches between Madeleine’s curl of hair and the identical curl of hair on the painted portrait. Madeleine turns out to be like an artistic creation herself as is the portrait of Carlotta Valdes. This technique makes it look like the painting is leaking on her, transforming her into Carlotta. Scottie can

  • Leonardo Da Vinci's Influence On The Renaissance Era

    261 Words  | 2 Pages

    to this he was known as The Renaissance Man (Bio.com Staff). Leonardo’s paintings have had a lasting impact on the Renaissance era. His most known pieces of work are The Last Supper and Mona Lisa. His paintings were predominantly religious; he had a desire to paint things realistically. This became the standard for painters who followed in the 16th century (Museum of Science). While Leonardo strayed from traditional techniques he was still able to maintain the Renaissance values. Many of the painters

  • Leonardo Da Vinci's Last Supper

    691 Words  | 3 Pages

    started to paint one of his most famous paintings titled “The Last Supper.” He began his work of art on the northern wall of the dining hall of Sta Maria delle Grazie in Milan, Italy, and finished this work in the year of 1498. “It measures fifteen by twenty-nine feet. It stands whole as of today, except for the construction of a doorway in 1653, eliminating the lower central area of the painting” (Last Supper-History). Leonardo had a new method and technique for his creation of “The Last Supper.”

  • Valerie Hegarty: Vincent Van Gogh

    399 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ella Nasser Contextual research essay "As an artist you are only a link in a chain, and whatever you find or whatever you do not find, you can find comfort in it."- Vincent Van Gogh Inspiration is a curious idea. The amount of influences that can affect the nature and creativity of an artist’s work is countless, and to pinpoint a true inspiration is difficult but if I had to choose my most influential contextual research artist my inspiration would have to be both Vincent Van Gogh and Valerie

  • Gerrit Van Honthorst: Art Analysis

    1084 Words  | 5 Pages

    canvas painting. As i approached the image, I was still intrigued as the image she is holding is of a naked man facing away, the subject in the painting seems to get enjoyment from this. To me this piece of art makes me curious, I want to know who this woman was and why she is holding that image. The artist seems to be communicating the importance of

  • Leonardo Da Vinci's The Last Supper And The Adoration Of The Magi

    259 Words  | 2 Pages

    artist. Through many of his paintings, he began to create more and different compositions. For example, the Adoration of the Magi introduced main figures grouped in the foreground of the painting, while the background is a distant view of ruins and battle scenes. Or in The Last Supper when he grouped the twelve apostles into threes and had Christ in the center. In this he is more able to express the emotion of the people and create an emotional response from the painting because of the different placements

  • Tools And Techniques Of An Artist By Catherine Murphy, Fernado Botero

    289 Words  | 2 Pages

    The tools and techniques used by an artist create a theme for them and their work, whether they know it or not. Having a theme helps people identify an artists work. Creating a theme can be as simple as the colors or tones an artist uses. I will be analyzing work by Catherine Murphy, Fernado Botero, and Susan Moore. Catherine Murphy is famous for her self portraits. They are almost always of her doing something (i.e. painting) which is very creative, I think. She uses oil on canvas to create her

  • Compare And Contrast Two Paintings That Were Painted During The Period Of Impressionism

    614 Words  | 3 Pages

    In this essay, I will compare and contrast two paintings that were both painted during the period of impressionism. These works of art are only a decade apart, yet so different. The first is Bal du moulin de la Galette. Bal du moulin de la Galette is a painting by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. Bal du Moulin de la Galette is considered one of Impressionism's most celebrated masterpieces. The second painting is Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, which was created by George Seurat. George Seurat

  • Murals

    1053 Words  | 5 Pages

    happenings to special engagements, the ancestors of the homo sapien race had no way to record their time here on Earth. Yet, being the progressive species that humans are, they developed a method to document mental pictures. This method advanced into a technique that is still gaining ground in the modern day world. Murals started as a way to account for the past but has become a mechanism for expression. Humans now use it to convey human

  • Comparing Italian And Northern Renaissance

    838 Words  | 4 Pages

    religious scenes, such as The Last Supper, Shakespeare shied away from any religious influence in his various plays. Both Leonardo da Vinci and William Shakespeare stressed the importance of man in their respective works, however, they used different techniques to achieve their goals. Da Vinci emphasized

  • Comparing Two High Renaissance, Oil Paintings

    661 Words  | 3 Pages

    contrast two high renaissance, oil paintings. The first is The Mona Lisa. The Mona Lisa is a painting by Leonardo da Vinci which is one of the most famous works of art in the world. The second painting is The Small Cowper Madonna, which was created by Raffaello Sanzio better known as Raphael, was a high Renaissance Italian painter and architect. Both paintings are actually portraits that exhibit many similar artistic techniques. I chose both of these painting simply because The High Renaissance

  • Art Analysis: The Windmill

    796 Words  | 4 Pages

    catches my eye is the large windmill in the background of the painting. The windmill is the focal point of the entire painting. It catches your eye and draws you into the painting. The artwork is dull, there is not a whole lot of color, and the clouds in the sky are dark like it is about to rain. The windmill is on the waterfront, with the ocean on one side and a village on the other side. There is a very large castle in the back of the painting. In the water there is a sailboat that is leaving the dock

  • Black Figure Vs Ancient Greek Art

    508 Words  | 3 Pages

    1. Compare and contrast the black-figure style of vase painting with that of the red-figure style in both technique and illusionism in painting. You must use the provided examples in your textbook to support your essay. During the time of ancient Greek art there were two styles of vase painting, one being black-figure and the other red-figure. Black figure vase painting is when the composition is in black silhouettes on a red clay vessel. Black being such a heavy color, artist used white and purple

  • Essay Comparing Madonna With The Long Neck And Madonna In The Meadow

    504 Words  | 3 Pages

    within the same era. The painting by Parmigianino was created between the years 1535-40, while the painting by Raphael was created in 1506, so the resemblance would be that they are both around the same timeline. Another resemblance would be the oil painting technique in the two paintings, that embodies that in both of the paintings they were going through a loving and caring time, but with different settings. Also, the individuals have the same frame and faces in both paintings, all of their faces look

  • Ancient Mummy Paintings

    648 Words  | 3 Pages

    collection of fifteen Egyptian mummy paintings collecting dust for nearly one-hundred years, is now aiding scientists and art conservators from Northwestern University to discover how materials were used by ancient artists. Previously, researchers believed ancient painters to apply Egyptian blue only for special occasions. The color was the first ever man-made blue pigment, it took effort to manufacture. Surprisingly researchers found five of the fifteen paintings contained the pigment underneath the

  • Pablo Picasso

    587 Words  | 3 Pages

    The typical technique of this artisit is called Applied oil painting which uttilised Brushs with pallete knife . His technique was inspired by primitive simple art that . "When I was as old as these children, I could draw like Raphael, but it took me a lifetime to learn to draw like them." Picasso was using this primitive

  • A Brief Analysis Of The Painting Hometown Lake By Thomas Kinkade

    756 Words  | 4 Pages

    then became a big fan of Thomas Kinkade’s paintings. While walking around the gallery, I was attracted to the painting named Hometown Lake. This piece of art not only is impressive, but also has a significant meaning to me. It reminds me of my own hometown in Viet Nam. The painting Hometown Lake was published in August, 1997 and its material is oil on canvas. It is the fourth release in Thomas Kinkade’s Hometown Memory collection. He created this painting based on his own boyhood memory of his hometown

  • Leonardo Da Vinci Last Supper Analysis

    1604 Words  | 7 Pages

    crucified. Probably the most widely known painting was that of Leonardo Da Vinci’s Last Supper. Da Vinci paints the story of the Last Supper at the moment when Christ reveals to his disciples that one of them will betray him, capturing the emotions and reaction of each disciple, which had not been done before. The moment focuses solely on this event with no other distraction, entrancing the viewer to each of the disciple’s reaction. 75 years later, another painting of the Last Supper is created, but in

  • Describe The Relationship Between Hue And Tone

    726 Words  | 3 Pages

    2013). An example of painting ‘Barbarigo Altarpiece’ form artist Giovanni Bellini, some costly pigments like Ultramarine blue, vermilion have been used in painting (Nalezyty,