Friday, May 19, 2017
Sculture Tie Dye Meal
This is one of my favorite things i have done this semester, it its my cannibal gummy bear. See there is a story behind the gummy bear and a reason for his Tie-Dye coloring. His coloring is from him eating all the gummy bears because gummy bears are kinda see through and each time he eats one their little bits mold into his as you can tell from the orange little gummy bear he is eating. That is also why he is so big it's his plan for domination over the gummy bears. Every time he eats one he gets bigger and eventually they will all be gone because he ate them all and he will be huge. I really enjoyed making this piece.
Bas Relief
Ok so this is my Bas Relief. most people are gonna look at it and say what the heck is this it looks like a bunch of junk. which is precisely what it is, junk put together to make what I think it the time of TV. On the right all the stuff represents a TV in the 60s just about. It is all in black in white and I used the ruffles to make the TV look like one from that time period. Also I used hot glue to look like little webs attached to the stuff in the TV. On the left..... is a TV from the present. It has color and all these strings and stuff like how much the tv is connected to our lives. In both the color, or the lines you know that show up when the TV is like fuzzing or something and the waves show, they are going to the middle and through the outlets and in the middle is a black space like in movies when the TV goes off it goes black into the center. But yeah that basically what it is if you asked.
Elements of Art
Thursday, May 4, 2017
Taurus
This is a metal tooling project. In my metal tooling project I made a Taurus which is the zodiac sign for my birthday. The Taurus is a bull and because it is a constellation the rode she is wearing is bad of stars. I really like the way this turned out although it was definitely not easy.
Thursday, January 19, 2017
Birthday Marc Chagall
Haven Dearing
This painting is called Birthday,
by Marc Chagall, was created in 1915 and is an oil painting on card board. This
piece is very interesting and you can see the uniqueness of it. In the painting
there is a man and a woman who are about to kiss. The women is holding bouquet
of flowers and there is a cake on the table. Along with the cake is a knife,
glass, and plate with food on it. The walls in the room are white and the
carpet is red. There are 2 windows and 2 pieces of furniture plus a stool, and
outside the one window you can see a road and grass.
In the painting Chagall uses a lot of
warm colors, so much that one table sort of blend into the orangey red carpet.
One thing that definitely pops out to me is the man’s green shirt since it is
the only green thing in the room and it is against a white background. The
color of the man and women kind of make them disappear because they are so
pail. Also the colors blue and red are repeated several times, although red is
repeated more. It might have been made to look this way but much of the
painting looks flat although some of it looks real because of a 3-D effect.
Over all it is very unique and it’s quality is good.
In this painting, I believe what
the artist is trying to convey, or tell, is of his love between him and his
wife or lover. This painting was painted a couple weeks before him and his wife
were to be married. The couple in the painting are kind of flouting as if to
say that the love was like a trance and the girl swept him off of his feet. As
said at total history.com the painting conveys that feeling of Euphic love
between young levers in a blissful yet ordinary setting.
This painting is very power I
believe it because of what the artist is trying to say and the way he says it.
He uses a unique technic when he makes the man and women look in human almost
spirit like and everything is flowing. All of the colors and the placement of
the furniture and people make this painting flow. Also between the furniture,
colors, and the illusion of the position things it give off as if this image
was viewed in dream.
Wednesday, January 11, 2017
Nonfiction
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