Author |
Message |
dhgkhlf1314
Forum Master

Joined: 28 Apr 2011
Posts: 22
Read: 0 topics
Location: England
|
|
Five Fingers Bikila Ls 5 Famous Artworks At The De |
|
de Young's 5 must-see artworks include:
1. Three Machines - American painter Wayne Thiebaud's namely known as his goes that occupy nostalgic outlooks of American pop art and of consumerist USA. This painting namely a watercolor of a row of three gumball machines, objects looked often in everyday America. Thiebaud's amuse in American mass civilization he felt were best captured in ordinary, everyday objects such as cakes, pastries, boots,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], lavatories, dolls, & lipstick.
2. Rainy Season in the Tropics - A painting of a dense jungle ravine overtaken by an radiant rainbow by American outlook painter, Frederic Edwin Church. Like many of his outlook paintings, this work attracts a viewer's converge from afar. However, a closer look reveals the incredible detail such as the complicated merchant and mule in the base right edge of the painting. This stunning work how demonstrates Church's care "with adding a spiritual dimension in his works".
3. Dinner for Threshers - An indoor dinner scene of Midwest wheat peasants by Grant Wood, an American painter best known for his satirical scenes of the rural American Midwest. He often styled his Midwesterner paintings with an element of credulity and restricted mindedness he felt represented the small-town people from that region.
4. Boatmen ashore the Missouri - A depiction of 3 woodcutters working aboard the Missouri River by American artist, George Bingham, whose work described his view of American frontier life forward the Missouri River. Bingham's work was rediscovered in the 1930s for its evocation of a bygone era in American history and he is immediately warmhearted considered one of the greatest American painters of the 19th centenary.
5. Le Verre de Porto - "A Dinner Table by Night" is a painting of Madame Gautreau, a prominent Parisian prettiness by American Artist John Singer Sargent. His elegant portraits created an elegant picture of society during the Edwardian old and his subjects tended apt be celebrities, beauteous human, and the nobility of society.
The post has been approved 0 times
|
|
Mon 4:19, 09 May 2011 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
You can post new topics in this forum You can reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
|
|