Tuesday, 4 June 2013

Wes Wilson & Victor Moscoso

Wes Wilson audience were mostly young psychedelic people. Wilson style is to fit his own ambitions, show the characters with almost indistinguishable personality by expanding outlines and shapes. At the same time he played with foreground and background. Wilson used of colours was inspired by the light and he mixed colourswith wild discard, which resulted in jolting visuals which perfectly captured the essence of the music his art promoted.
 
Moscos's style is most motable for its visual intensity, which is obtained by manipulating form and colour to create optical effects. Victor Moscoso also use intense color contrast, edges and borders. Its audience was as well as Wes Wilson's psychedelic young people.
 
I like both artists style, mostly because of the colours that are used and the way the text is placed to work well with the image.

Thursday, 24 January 2013

Pablo Picasso


Pablo Picasso was born on 25th of October in Malaga.
In 1937 The Spanish Civil War inspires one of his most famous paintings ‘Guernica’ following the German air attack on the town.  At age fourteen, he passed the entrance exams at the School of Fine Arts in Barcelona where he was more advanced than most of the senior students in the advanced classes. Both his first two large oil paintings, were accepted into exhibitions around Spain and he then passed the entrance exams at the Royal Academy of San Fernando but left after a couple of months. Picasso was influenced by his father's artwork in his early years. Paul Cezanne's paintings inspired Picasso to experiment with perspectives and begin Cubism with Georges Braque. 

What made Picasso famous i think is the fact that his work was different. He was basically responsible for a lot of the movements that came after. He influenced people like Duchamp and other Avant Guarde artists. Keep in mind he perfected cubism and created the collage technique, which eventually lead to abstract art. Things we look at now as ordinary were things he did first. Picasso influenced minimalism also. For the time, his work was revolutionary because not many people were painting like him and also his work was controversial. However I was asked to create a painting in Pablo Picasso style which is cubism. It was a bit hard at the begging, as it was the first time I have done this kind of work. I had to paint a face using Picasso's technique. The most important paint a face so its actually looks like a face. I firstly sketched it to help me do this task. I found it interesting, because I have done some research about Pablo Picasso before, but it was the first time I was using Cubism, it was a bit of challenge. In my opinion I have done well, but this in not one of my favorite techniques. 

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Peter Doig

Born in Scotland in 1959 but raised in Canada, Peter Doig moved to London in 1979 where he studied at Wimbledon, St Martin's and Chelsea Schools of Art. He first gained public recognition in 1991 on winning the Whitechapel Art Gallery's Artist Award, and from then on continued to consolidate his reputation as one of the very finest figurative artists of his generation. Often referencing photograph and film, but transforming such sources into dream-like, almost mystical imagery, Doig's work typically explores man's interaction with an emotionally charged physical environment. The artist currently lives and works in Trinidad.

This painting was done in 1993 by Peter Doig. He was working on this painting for three months before he added the reflection of the three figures. The picture is showing three people, who are standing on a frozen lake and you can see a house in the background I would say it’s probably a family. However this painting might be showing artist memories or his childhood.  It’s colourful and positive, but by him using blue for the trees and white dots which symbolise snow its winter time.

Richard Hamilton


Richard Hamilton was born in London on 24 February 1922. From 1938 to 1940 before he studied painting at the Royal Academy School, he attended art classes as a teenager. From 1942 he worked as an industrial designer for four years, and then he was expelled from Royal Academy School, because he defied his teacher instructions. Between 1928 and 1951 he moved to Slade School of Art in London. After a trip to New York in 1963, Richard Hamilton began to combine elements of photography and painting in his pictures. In 1962 his first wife Terry was killed in a car crash and in part to recover from this he traveled for the first time to the United States in 1963. During the 1980s he intensively studied the opportunities provided by digital media and their effect on image perception and fine arts. I don’t really like this artist, because for me it’s just taking images from different sources and sticking them so they work well with each other to make a one piece. Richard Hamilton was my inspiration for one of the projects I had to do. I was meant to look through different magazines for images that I would use to make a collage. I found it a little bit boring, because basically what I had to do was cutting out and stacking them on one piece.  

Monday, 7 January 2013

Vincent Van Gogh

Vincent Van Gogh was born on March 30, 1853 and died in 1890. He was Dutch artist. Between 1860 and 1880, when he finally decided to become an artist, van Gogh had two unsuitable and unhappy romances and had worked unsuccessfully as a clerk in a bookstore. Van Gogh remained in Belgium to study art. In 1886 he went to Paris and studied with Cormon. He met Pissaro, Monet and Gauguin and began to lighten his very dark palette and to paint in the short brushstrokes. Van Gogh's finest works were produced in less than three years in a technique that grew more and more impassioned in brushstroke, in symbolic and intense color, in surface tension, in the movement and vibration of form and line. Van Gogh is considered a Post-Impressionist. He has also been described as a sort of Expressionist due to his use of color to express emotion. He is, in a sense, hard to classify because of his uniqueness.

Click to view larger image
This specific painting, now in the collection of the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, was the first of the three oils that Van Gogh produced.The bright and bold use of color in Vincent's Bedroom in Arles is typical of the palette he began to use beginning late in his Paris period. Yellow was Van Gogh's favorite color throughout s Arles and Saint-Rémy period.

Tuesday, 18 December 2012

David Downton

David Downton was born in Kent, in the south of England in 1959. He studied illustration and graphics at Woleverhampton from 1979 to 1981. A the age of 24 he moved to Brighton and began his illustration career. H worked on a wide variety of projects ranging from advertising and packaging to illustrating fiction, cook books and, occasionally, fashion till 1996. In the same year David was asked to draw at the Paris couture shows by the Financial Times. Since then be became world famous fashion illustrator and his reports from the shows have been seen internationally.

Downtow was wroking for Vogue, Tiffany & Co, Topshop,  Chanel, Dior, L'Oreal and many more. In 1998, he began working on a portfolio of portraits of the world’s most beautiful women like Erin O’Connor, Paloma Picasso, Catherine Deneuve, Linda Evangelista, Carmen Dell'Orefice, Iman and Dita Von Teese.

I

Sunday, 9 December 2012

Charles Rennie Mackintosh 1868-1928

Scottish architect and designer who was prominent in the Arts and Crafts Movement in Great Britain. He was apprenticed to a local architect, John Hutchinson, and attended evening classes at the Glasgow School of Art. In 1889 he joined the firm of Honeyman and Keppie, becoming a partner in 1904.
In collaboration with three other students, one of whom, Margaret Macdonald, became his wife in 1900, Mackintosh achieved an international reputation in the 1890s as a designer of unorthodox posters, craftwork, and furniture. In contrast to contemporary fashion his work was light, elegant, and original, as exemplified by four remarkable tearooms he designed in Glasgow and other domestic interiors of the early 1900s.
Mackintosh’s chief architectural projects were the Glasgow School of Art (1896–1909), considered the first original example of Art Nouveau architecture in Great Britain. By 1914 he had virtually ceased to practice and thereafter devoted himself to watercolour painting.
Although Mackintosh was nearly forgotten for several decades, the late 20th century saw a revival of interest in his work. The stark simplicity of his furniture designs, in particular, appealed to contemporary taste, and reproductions of Mackintosh chairs and settees began to be manufactured. The Mackintosh House in Glasgow was reconstructed and opened to the public as a museum in the late 1970s.

I have studied the design of Mackintoshe's chairs carefully, because I was asked to desing a chair in his style, which was using shapes like flora or fauna. I quite enjoy this project as this was the first artist I have studiet who was inspired by nature. I had a variety range of choice and I was coming up with more ideas than for the other projects as I could mix tree curvy shapes for back and leafs for the sit.