Thursday, 24 June 2010

Art Definition & Picture Frame




A picture frame is an item used to safeguard a painting and draw the eye to it.



The acrylic or metal picture frames we use today are the decendants of the more classical carved wooden ones.



Antique picture frames are said to have been around since the 2nd century B.C! Borders have beenfound around cave paintings across the globe.



The idea of a picture frame was to isolate and protect specific paintings.







Jareth & Sarah Oil Painting SMALL by bluebirdiesinger








The earliest recorded picture frame was dated to the middle ages, a time where artists would usually make their own frames.



It was during the Renaissance that frame making gained prominence.



Pro frame makers came into the forefront and Antique Picture Frames reflected the furniture style, from ornate to gilded or rococo.



Usually in wood or metal, an antique picture frame adds a sense of voyeur to the image contained and the room surrounding it.










Not all walks of life can afford a real antique frame, so many people reproduce the look and feel for a lower price.



Crafted from wood or metal, these replica's can look almost identical to the original on a much smaller price-plan.



Antique Picture Frames are normally in Victorian designs in metal or carved ornamental wood.



Just to warn you: misplacement of an antique fashion frame can totally wreck the decor of a house.



Pulling attention from the image in the frame is your first priority, the image is just as valuable!



Anyone can pretend to be an art connoisseur, but if the style of a picture frame isn't matching the style of the house then the whole point of the frame is overlooked.










Antique frames in metal and would became collector’s items.



But recently they have been thrown into public view and became must-haves again.



It wasn't long before changing attitudes and perspectives have forced Antique Picture Frames into the limelight.



The minimalist and simplistic plastic frames of today are normally churned out of a production line, but are favoured by the public, as they reflect personal attitude.










portraits art

Dave at the Dean Gallery by redxdress


Liberace. Turn of the Century Carousel Art Exhibit Union Station Washington, DC by teladair

click




Creative Art Experiences that Refine the Hand for Handwriting

As the young child journeys toward being a writer, several experiences develop her hand-strength and coordination. Many of these can be found in the art area.

Drawing and Coloring


A multitude of drawing media exists for the young child. He can sketch with a pencil, then color it in with colored pencils. Thin and thick markers allow for vibrant colors. Crayons can be peeled or unpeeled, and provide a sensory experience in conjunction with an artistic one. There are different shapes, sizes, and styles of crayons available. Cray-pas and oil pastels are also available, for color mixing fun. All of these drawing media require a grip like you use when writing. The require a degree of control for the drawing to make any sense. Often a child also wishes to start incorporating words into his drawing, and labeling it.

Painting

The child who uses a paintbrush has to learn a proper grip in order to control it. Start with thick, stubby brushes, then gradually introduce thinner ones. Thicker paintbrushes are easier to control; thinner paintbrushes require greater dexterity. Painting requires a lot of whole arm motion, as well as some finer finger work. The more the child practices, the more control she gains.

Drawing on a Chalkboard

Drawing on a chalkboard requires the same arm movements and grip as painting. Large arm movements can be used to draw large shapes and lines on the board that will later be replicated in finer detail with pencil and paper. It's also a great place to practice writing large letters. Similar skills can be attained by using markers on paper at an easel or dry erase markers on a dry erase board.

Painting a Rock

A child refines small find motor skills as he paints a rock. Choose a small, colorful rock and let the child use a thin watercolor brush to paint the rock with water. The color of the rock will change as it is "painted". When it dries, it is like a blank canvas on which to start over. The fine strokes that "color" the rock are reminiscent of those used in writing.

Cutting with Scissors





It’s paradoxical to cite Turner and Blake while simultaneously praising Brace for her “rapturous virtuosity” and condemning her for being monotonous and courting kitsch. After all, in his search to express the “complex mysteries of intuition and imagination,” Turner deployed his own rapturous virtuosity on what was basically the same subject matter over and over again (a charge that, to cite an early example of an artist who attempted to capture a complex mystery through subtle iterations, one might level at Bellini for all of those Madonna and Child variations, and so on throughout the history of art—how many versions of Ocean Park did Diebenkorn really need to paint?). As for the charge of evoking kitsch, it’s of course nonrefutable—it relies wholly on the sensibility of the observer to find a work sentimental and cheap. Mizota looks at Blake and finds an “ecstatic light” where I find ludicrous adolescent faux profundity. Similarly, if the critic finds the present drawings monotonous, there’s no arguing with her perceptions, but it serves no purpose to cloak them in a language that’s ill fitted to transforming her subjective reaction into something to which the rest of us should be expected to assent.

Rather than monotonous, I see Brace as an obsessive explorer returning to territory she intuits has secrets to reveal if only she could get at them—which in fact is what connects her to Turner and other searchers of the sublime. As some have noted, the line between the sublime and kitsch can be thin, but to this beholder at least, Brace has kept well to the side of rapture and wonder.





New, unseen works, both portraits and landscapes, pepper the presentation. But they zoom by, practically unnamed, as though the audience wouldn't care to examine them, much less know details like titles or years.

And they’re lost in a tour that emphasizes Kahlo’s sordid suffering -- her crippling trolley accident, the humiliations of marriage to the philandering Diego Rivera, her debilitating string of unsuccessful surgeries. A marvelous early portrait of Rivera, Kahlo’s lifelong subject and foil, inspires Luke’s commentary that “a portrait like this could only come from love.” A more painterly analysis of why scholars and critics now figure Kahlo's portraits among the greats of art history would lend more insight. 



Reinforcing the mystique around Kahlo, the woman, is Luke's fascination for her fashion statements (one of her real dresses hangs in a glass display case on the Ford’s picnic grounds), and his claim that Kahlo, who dressed in both mannish suits and the feminine folkloric rebozo, invested as much energy into her persona as her art. This well-shared interpretation insidiously devalues her art.



Previously unseen film footage is also on view. A fetching black-and-white film shows Kahlo sketching, an extraordinarily beautiful woman, jet-black hair coiled in neat braids under a chic hat that hugs her small head. But there we go again, lapsing into Kahlo-mania! 



Local area students from Central Los Angeles High School #9 joined four visiting performers from Mexico’s Taller Coreografico de la Unam in a show-opening danced homage. Mexican dance maker Gloria Contreras’s symmetrical choreography has a dated, unadventurous feel, but Olga Rodriguez excelled in her expressive, “Magdalena.” Rina Lazo and Arturo García Bustos, two of Kahlo’s surviving students (“Los Fridos”) contributed memories. The crowd’s many happy Frida-ites, some in colorful costume, circulated the Ford grounds.



-- Debra Levine



Gregorio Luke at the "Ford: Frida, a New Look," John Anson Ford Amphitheatre, Saturday, 8 p.m.



Photos: Gregorio Luke, in front of a portrait of Frida Kahlo, and Central Los Angeles High School No. 9 with Mexican dancer Alfredo Garcia. Credit: Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times.



Tuesday, 11 May 2010

For Art


'Family Portrait' - Douc Langur Monkeys - Fine Art Pencil Drawings  www.drawntonature.co.uk by kjhayler



source: picture frames

 



Villages of Tuscany (Tuscany, Italy)

Photographer Joel Wolfson returns to Tuscany for another unforgettable experience on how to best capture one of the most stunning places on earth – where the golden light blankets the land and warms the...

Basic Digital Photography & Lab (Fallbrook, CA)

This class is intended for those with very little or no experience in operating a digital camera. Participants will get hands on experience in operating their digital cameras. This class is focused on...

Inspire, Capture & Create (Sedona, AZ)

Join Bobbie for an exciting photographic workshop that will provide a total artistic experience, working in camera, on location and in a state of the art digital lab. Locations will include "Out of Africa"...



Jeff Boutin - Speckled Pony - LE - Canvas

Speckled Pony by Jeff BoutinImage Size: 24 inches x 32 inchesOverall Size: 24 inches x 32 inchesLimited Edition of 500 CanvasesUnnumbered and UnsignedCertificate of AuthenticationGiclee on CanvasPrice: $224.40


Walt Disney Storybooks - Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs - Pop Snow White - LE - Paper

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs - Pop Snow White by Walt Disney StorybooksImage Size: 11 inches x 17 inchesLimited Edition of 125 PrintsNumberedCertificate of AuthenticationGiclee on Paperby Jenny Chung.Price: $125.00


Guy Combes - Leopard Lounge - LE - Canvas

Leopard Lounge by Guy CombesImage Size: 22 inches x 32 inchesOverall Size: 22 inches x 32 inchesLimited Edition of 35 CanvasesNumbered and Signed by ArtistCertificate of AuthenticationGiclee on CanvasPrice: $695.00


Monday, 29 March 2010

7 Ways To Improve Drawing Quality


A kid's first scribble is something that it wants to express if you place a pencil in his hand. Art is quite simple, an easy skill and is something with which you can have great fun. It is also relatively cheap and can start with paper and a pencil. It can go on until acquiring costly tablets and pens - computer hardware which you can draw on your computer. It is very costly; however the precision for perfection is extremely high.




Unlike earlier times, attaining information on drawing and sketching is very simple and a bargain. You can search information on Google and discover multiple sites which tutor drawing. Also, nowadays this art form is preferred by many youngsters. Like all other forms of art, with systematic and constant practice, you can become a great artist.




Below are my own top 7 tips for developing your drawing abilities and hone the skill that is, illustration!




1. If you are drawing and you are a right handed writer, ensure that the light is from your left side. This will stop your hands shadow falling on your view.



2. The best place to start would be drawing: straight, curved and scribbled lines. This should help co-ordinate your hand with what you see in your thought. You could have good hand-eye co-ordination before progressing further.



3. Practice by drawing ovals, circles, thick, bold and crossed lines. As the baby develops from crawling to walking, so shall your artistic skills!



4. The curves and lines are like foundation to a building. The pillars should be strong enough to have a good building; similarly, these initial small curves and lines will go a long way in your career. You should also start altering the pressure on your pencil. You should be able to choose the correct thickness and darkness in the lines that you draw.



5. To begin with you will not be able to draw a circle or an oval shape correctly, nevertheless don't get discouraged. You should practice until you attain perfection. You should also keep all your drawings carefully from the start to know how you are developing. You could also date your sketches and preserve it for future reference.



6. You should concentrate in the place where you think you suck. If you aren't able to shade properly, then learn more to do that. You can even test out your own method of shading. Construct your own uniqueness, don't ever copy from other artists.



7. The most basic point - Use good materials. They say the artist is only as good as his palette! Quality is key to a good peice, so never compromise on your equipment. 4-6B pencils are recommended to professionals and beginners alike.


Monday, 1 February 2010

Art Equipment


Alejandra Salgado Painter Art Magic Realism Magical by SalgadoPintora


Alejandra Salgado Painter Art  Argentina Argentine by SalgadoPintora


Living in the favorable and unfavorable situation is "part of living", But smiling

in all those situations is called "Art of Living"

clinic attacked for conducting art of living ...another example of CPms gondaisam...Shame DYFI

5 Years back my clinic was attacked by agroup of DYFi extrimist, reason was I was art of living organiser at my palce








Polk County in Central Florida offers many unique art galleries within its boundaries. Here are a few of the best.

The Polk Museum of Art is more than just an art museum. Offering something for everyone, the Polk Museum of Art is located at 800 East Palmetto Street in Lakeland, Florida. It boasts nine galleries which contain hundreds of pieces of art. As you step inside the Polk Museum of Art, you will find the Hollis Gallery, a gateway to the museum’s two main galleries, the Dorothy Jenkins Gallery and the Emily S. Macey Gallery. The exhibits are refreshed every two or three months. Unlike many art galleries, the Polk Museum of Art is quite suitable for kids. A permanent pre-Columbian collection includes hands-on activities for children and the Museum Gift Shop offers many whimsical educational gifts and souvenirs. General admission is $5; students are admitted free. Visit the museum’s website at http://www.polkmuseumofart.org/content/.

On Kentucky Avenue in Lakeland, you will find two more Polk County art galleries. Imperial Art Gallery, located at 128 South Kentucky Avenue, is a co-op of Lakeland artists working in all media. Give them a call at (863) 603-4663. Arts on the Park, located at 115 North Kentucky Avenue, features sculptures, Florida landscapes and wildlife art. This gallery holds monthly receptions and six annual juried shows. Call (863) 680-2787 for more information.

The Lake Wales Arts Center is housed in a spectacular building that was built in 1927 as the Holy Spirit Catholic Church. Located at 1099 SR 60 East in Lake Wales, this Spanish Mission styled facility was named to the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. The Lake Wales Arts Center offers tours, classes, lectures, art exhibitions, and musical performances. For further information and a good look at the facade of their building, visit the center’s website at www.lakewalesartscenter.org.

The Ridge Art Association is a non-profit fine arts organization that has been around for more than half a century. Located at 210 Cypress Gardens Boulevard in Winter Haven, the Ridge Art Association offers monthly juried and invitational art exhibitions. Gallery hours are 12:30 until 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. Check out their website at http://www.ridgeart.org/.

For a look at some local art, check out the Frostproof Art League & Gallery. This tiny art gallery, located at 12 East Wall Street, features the work of over fifty local artists. They also offer art classes. Give them a call at (863) 635-7271 for more information.






Tuesday, 1 December 2009

Altered Canvas

Photo: jordan bell smith painted this for me :) http://tumblr.com/x4w4dflcp

- i d k ; why myh nails are painted black . . .




a1451 Art Deco Facade by tengtan


Deco by Luís Vieira




Photo: jordan bell smith painted this for me :) http://tumblr.com/x4w4dflcp



Fabric works and canvas prints polar opposites.



From notes: Carn Dum

The Ornate Gate Key, and Iron Gate Key can now be picked up by every member of a fellowship.



Article:



The availability of open-minded sexual discussion in the 21st century electronic world, there's never been a better time to be kinky. Yet anyone who's ever had to face the problem of introducing roleplay, fantasy, fetish, or other "wild side" activities to a partner with more traditional tastes knows that reconciling kinky with vanilla in a relationship can be just as difficult as ever. Luckily, with a little careful communication, sensitivity, and patience, introducing your partner to the world of kink can be successful and fun.

Get comfortable with the basics.

Before introducing the more wild and crazy activities into a new relationship, it's a good idea to work on getting comfortable with your sexual chemistry as a couple with some vanilla activities. Learn to communicate, be comfortable together, and the basics of how to please one another before moving on to more challenging tasks.

Present your interests as a boon, not an obstacle.

One of the most common mistakes made with introducing kink is to bring it up with a sense of foreboding, a feeling that's usually the result of unnecessary shame. Instead, treat your kink like a quirk at worst and an adventure at best. Be confident and expect that your partner treat you with respect, and if he or she feels a bit awkward at first, don't take it personally.

Take it slow.

Especially if your fantasies are elaborate and complicated to pull off, start things out simple at first. Incorporate early activities that don't create a dramatic change in your normal sexual routine. For example, if your kink is heavy bondage, don't whip out 20 yards of rope and a book of elaborate knotwork, just start with a couple of silk scarves and the headboard.

Be grateful.

Compliment and thank your partner for the indulgences being granted. This is especially important if your partner feels awkward about what whether or not he or she is doing the activity in question "right." Be sure, always, to make it clear that you enjoy the activities in question because you can do it with them.

Respect your partner's boundaries.

While it's reasonable to expect your partner to indulge you in activities that are harmless (if somewhat odd), any kink you enjoy that involves any elements of power play, pain, danger, dubious legality or "gross out" factor may be an activity that you can't, in all fairness, expect your partner to get comfortable with.

Practice give and take.

Remember that your partner's pleasure and satisfaction is just as important as your own and that you will need to balance his or her vanilla needs with your kinky ones. Make an effort to be just as giving and generous in this area as your partner is by indulging your kink.

Establish habits.

Make it clear to your partner that your needs are not a "one time" issue. Explain that you'd like to make these activities a regular part of sexual routine. Come up with a plan for regular kinky activity, whether it's once a week or once a month. This way, you will both know what to expect.



I thought:



Asian markets gain after Wall Street rise-http://bit.ly/4KVqmx

Monday, 16 November 2009

Art Biography and Canvas Art Online




Cardiff has always been the most well known city in existance. A culturally rich capitol, Bristol is visited by hundreds every week. At the minute, Wakefield has loads of fantastic and unique art exhibition, one of the most impressive being a huge collection of Bernard Palissy doodles at the British Museum. This exhibition is entitled, “Closer to the Master” and is available for viewing from February 17th until December 23rd.



"Afterglow" Art Glass & Floral Watercolor by Paul Jackson by PaulJacksonArt.com











This amazing exhibit displays an unbelieveable selection of histories all-time best Renaissance artists. It pulls together multiple pieces from a numberof other museums, resulting in an entirely fresh and unique selection. It draws together pieces of Michelangelo’s works that had never been placed together before and that have been apart since the dispersion of Nicholas Hilliard’s art studio during the mid 1500’s.





UrbanVibes Team conceptualize and absorbing the vibes of technological art form into a higher new level.Email… http://bit.ly/3qO047

I LOVE A!!! Especially works by artist who are spiritually connected to a higher consciousness. One of my favorites is ALEX GREY

Yea but still I could teach her the ways of Art and Higher Learning,








Amongst all these drawings are several pieces that stand out more than any others as far as their importance. These more memorable pieces are; the Study for Adam from the Sistine Chapel, studies for the figure of Day from the Medici Tombs, Flying Angels from the Last Judgement and his final and slightly disturbing Crucifixions.