Portrait in Sepia Essays

  • Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's We Need New Names

    1080 Words  | 5 Pages

    In “Explanation and Culture: Marginalia” of 1979, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak writes that “the will to explain is a symptom of the desire to have a self and a world. In other words, on the general level, the possibility of explanation carries the supposition of an explainable (if not fully) universe and an explaining (even if imperfectly) subject”. Darling, the main character of “We Need New Names”, tells her life in an attempt to explain a home that never existed in the first place, and the descriptions

  • Salvador Dali: Persistence Of Memory

    815 Words  | 4 Pages

    Salvador Dali is the iconic Surrealist painter who became known worldwide both because his art and his eccentric and narcissistic personality. The man with a moustache, also photographer, filmmaker, sculptor, had a deep impact on contemporary art. His works left a mark on art history by his very personal and original way of combining painting techniques with meaningful or hidden symbols. 1. Persistence of Memory It is probably Dali’s most famous painting and a perfect example of artist’s creative

  • Andy Warhol Portraiture

    398 Words  | 2 Pages

    which the face and their expression is the main feature. The goal is to display the likeness, personality, and even the mood of the person being drawn. The start of portraiture began since the cave man times thousands of years ago and they made portraits by painting on the walls of caves (Cave Painting) and portraiture went threw the ages of art in general from ancient Egypt to accent Greece to medieval painting to the renaissance etc. Andy Warhol Andy Warhol was an artist, producer and director

  • Barbara Roberts Portraiture Analysis

    939 Words  | 4 Pages

    building, the portrait hangs near the House Of Representatives on the second level of the building. The piece is located in the center of the wall, with the portrait of Oswald West (Plate 1) to its left and Barbara Roberts (Plate 2) to its right. When comparing all three pictures it seems clear why Paul Missal's piece is in the middle. Out of the three, Straub's portrait is the only informal representation of a governor, especially since the painting is mostly a landscape. The portrait of Oswald West

  • Comparison Of Horace Bundy's Girl With A Dog

    1608 Words  | 7 Pages

    and Dodo and Her Brother by Ernst Kirchner. Bundy was incredibly captivating with his use of an oval shaped canvas. It really contrasted with the structured form within this portrait. The Girl with a Dog is oil on canvas painted in 1852. This type of portraiture is very unique and is quite modern compared to the standard portraits that contain one subject matter and direct gaze. However, Dodo and Her Brother stands tall as an almost life size portraiture. Kirchner painted this piece from 1908- 1920;

  • Summary Of Thou Blind Man's Mark

    867 Words  | 4 Pages

    In Sir Philip Sidney’s Poem, “Thou Blind Man’s Mark,” Sidney presents a male speaker who struggles with a inner conflict of the human trait, desire. This desire is what the poem centralizes on and he wrestles with the human trait desire which causes conflict in his life and his mind. He knows he must deal with it and tries to figure out how to subdue or erase it completely. The motivation driving him to write the poem, is his burning ambitions and his want to always rise through problems. But the

  • Valediction Forbidding Mourning Analysis

    806 Words  | 4 Pages

    Poems The poems “To the Virgins to make much of time” ,“Valediction: Forbidding mourning” and “To His Coy mistress” are poems about love. A few of them I would have to say relate to a realistic view of love like the poems “To His Coy Mistress” and Valediction: Forbidding mourning”. How ever one poem doesn’t have realistic view of love like “to the virgins to make much of time”. There are multiple line that show this realistic view in love and there's some lines that oppose that it is a realistic

  • The Rebirth Of The Renaissance

    903 Words  | 4 Pages

    The rebirth of knowledge began in Italy in (c.1400-1550). This period was a huge step to creativity and especially, change. Around the 15th century in Florence the Renaissance, which was a massive cultural movement, spread across all of Europe. This meant that a break was taken from the medieval traditions and a new era began in Philosophy, art, politics, economy and literature. Along with Renaissance came the Enlightenment of new ideas. Scientist prospered and new, and exciting inventions were beginning

  • Baroque Art Research Paper

    1018 Words  | 5 Pages

    Introduction Baroque – a word derived from the Portuguese word “borocco” which means irregular pearl or stone – is a term used in fine art to describe a fairly complex idiom that originated in Rome during the period c.1590-1720, it embraced sculptures and paintings as well as architecture. Baroque art above all other movements reflected the religious tensions of the age in comparison with the idealism of the Renaissance movement (c.1400-1530) and the slightly forced nature of the Mannerism movement

  • Ozymandias Comparison Analysis

    1321 Words  | 6 Pages

    Ozymandias is a poem written by Percy Bysshe Shelly also Ozymandias is an Egyptian King. Ozymandias’ real name is King Ramesses II; he is known as Ozymandias by the Greeks. Percy Bysshe Shelly hears about a finding of Ozymandias’ statue near his funeral temple and this basically motivates him to write this poem. The statue is completely demolished, leaving only a few pieces from the statue on the ground and there is no other form of life near it, everything around the statue is deserted. Percy Bysshe

  • Analysis Of The Pedestrian By Ray Bradbury

    701 Words  | 3 Pages

    Superior writers use a vast number of well-used elements. It is key to use exceptional elements if you thrive to be a great writer. An example of a writer with higher-level elements is Ray Bradbury. Bradbury has a famous short story called "The Pedestrian." The "Pedestrian" is a futuristic story about a man who is not involved with the world. Bradbury uses setting, figurative language, and symbolism to affect the overall succession of the story. First, Bradbury uses figurative language to portray

  • Lamb To The Slaughter Suspense Analysis

    1014 Words  | 5 Pages

    How do the writers create suspense in ‘The Signalman’ and ‘Lamb to the Slaughter’? Gothic literature consists of dark and mysterious scenery with an overall atmosphere of horror, suspense and melodramatic narrative devices. Charles Dickens and Roald Dahl create suspense in ‘The Signalman’ and ‘Lamb to the Slaughter’ by effective use of settings, languages and the theme of insanity. The author, Charles Dickens creates suspense in ‘The Signalman’ by portraying the setting as somber and eerie as

  • The Arnolfini Portrait Symbolism

    1513 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Arnolfini Portrait, 1434 (82 X 60 cm) is an oil painting that dates back to the early renaissance, painted by the Netherlandish artist Jan Van Eyck on 3 vertical oak panels. It was painted in Bruges, France, for the wealthy merchant from Lucca, Giovanni Arnolfini along with his wife in the comfort of their home. The painting has been in The National Gallery of London since 1842. The painting shows a couple standing in the middle of a bedroom, holding hands and in formalized poses. They

  • The Clemente Family Painting Analysis

    352 Words  | 2 Pages

    Family Portraits are an important part of personal as well as societal history. Popular today as well as in the past, a keen observer can notice both similarities and differences in portraits throughout time. When placing the portraits The Washington Family and The Clemente Family side by side, the juxtaposition reveals similarities as well as differences. There are several similarities between the two paintings. First of all, both paintings use shading in the same way. A few examples of how

  • The Lovesong Of J Alfred Prufrock Analysis

    1194 Words  | 5 Pages

    Several decades later, a modernist writer, T.S. Eliot, conveys a similar message through his diction and use of imagery in his poetry. In “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”, Prufrock demonstrates a lack of connections with nature, people, and God. These broken relations cause him to be unhappy, lonely, and a major procrastinator in life. Prufrock lives in a filthy urban city with “yellow smoke” (16) replacing air. Yellow fog or smoke refers to high sulfur content which pertains to Hellish imagery

  • Frida Kahlo's The Two Fridas

    1472 Words  | 6 Pages

    Self-portraits are not meant to be interpreted as unbiased opinions of the subjects’ basic physical appearance. This, however, does not make them deceptive or untrue. Instead of merely showing us what these people look like, self-portraits express the endlessly complex facets of a human’s soul. They show us the things, people, and qualities that the artist valued. Dürer embodies Christ to exemplify the power of the artist and their divine ability to create, to make something where before there was

  • Research Paper On Mona Lisa

    854 Words  | 4 Pages

    I chose to do my research paper on the Mona Lisa because it is a classic art peice that has alot of meaning behind. It is a very historical peice of art that is very old and valuable. The Mona Lisa is a half-length portrait of a girl by the Renaissance creator carver da Vinci, that has been acclaimed as "the best known , the foremost visited, the foremost written concerning, the foremost sung concerning, the foremost parodied work of art within theworld". Vasari's account of the Anglesey Island Lisa

  • Mona Lisa Research Paper

    267 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Mona Lisa is a beautiful piece of art from the Renaissance period. Leonardo da Vinci painted the beautiful portrait during the Renaissance period. This painting is important because it changed history by becoming one of the most popular paintings ever, and it helped to inspire lots of other paintings done later by other artists. The Renaissance was important because it helped pave the road for things in the future and it helped improve the human race (in my opinion). This is an Astrolabe

  • The Love Song Of J. Alfred Prufrock, By T. S. Eliot

    287 Words  | 2 Pages

    From the poem, “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”, T.S. Eliot’s portrayal of reality and the ambiguities of human existence has influenced my perception of the world. The lines, “Do I dare/Disturb the universe?/In a minute there is time/ For decisions and revisions which a minute will reverse,” compel readers to question our purpose in life. Most individuals can relate to Prufrock, the poem’s main character; he admits to his shortcomings and dissatisfaction of his existence, acknowledging how

  • An Elderly Woman

    323 Words  | 2 Pages

    The reading and the lecture both discuss a Rembrandt's painting named Portrait of an Elderly Woman in a White Bonnet. While the reading states that this picture cannt be Rembrandt's because of a number of discrepancies, the lecture states the opposite. In facts, the professor refutes this thesis. First of all, the reading claims that the cloathing worn by the lady in the painting is rather unusual given her social status. Indeed, the lady is wearing an expensive fur collar that contrasts with her