Friday, June 6, 2014

Ryan De La Hoz

Another post prompted by Juxtapoz, the artist in question being Ryan De La Hoz (I "discovered" him through an article in the magazine). What strikes me about his work is, beneath the surface, the depth of intelligent meaning. Every aspect of the work is a symbol. His art is very grounded in the culture of today, and yet at the same time timeless. For example, with tie-dye, De La Hoz says "while it is now considered kitschy by some, it was once emblematic of a movement that defied corporate culture among many other things. I am interested in the way motifs change meaning over time as they are reappropriated."

Friday, May 30, 2014

Painting portraiture


As I'm focusing on portraiture in my open studio, I found the above artwork a helpful reference on technique. I admire the color the artist uses for values. Also, I find the expression the subject makes intriguing -- it pulls you in. Composition ally this painting can be admired as well. Overall, in small ways and big ways this painting acts as reference.

Friday, May 16, 2014

Abstract Oil


The original color scheme is what initially caught my eye in this oil painting. Things aren't distorted into a striking enough -- but well overused -- balanced rainbow of bold colors. If anything, the rich, brown earthy tones on the right half of the canvas seems to defy such cater-to-the audience aesthetics. Contrasted on the lefts side is a sky-like mish-mash of light blue and white -- it may seem to go with the whole fake-y aesthetic thing I was talking about, but in truth, it's contrast with the other half the canvas only further emphasizes the overall originality. It should also be noted that technicality wise, this painting is one to admire  -- the various shades and hues are picked, mixed, placed and layered with sharp precision.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Fresco

Just recently, I have "discovered" the existence of fresco painting. It's as if this whole time my subconscious has been repeating to me "There's four types of paint mediums: watercolor, oil, and acrylics, and that tempura stuff. There are no other paint mediums." So it's literally mind blowing to suddenly find out there are other paint mediums. Fresco painting, in  a nutshell, is painting on wet plaster. When the plaster drys, a chemical reaction takes place such as with pottery in the kiln, causing the color pigments to become richer and brighter. It's a really ancient technique, found in artwork all over the world. In Europe, it was a predominant paint medium for much of the middle ages (it and tempura) , though it was largely usurped by oil paints. This particular fresco painting is Indian in origin, and I can really appreciate it artistically -- from the sharp, accurate shapes, big bold colors to the meticulous detail. Added to this sense of appreciation is the rapid drying nature of fresco, meaning the artist has to be highly skilled in order to achieve such accuracy, complex coloring and detail.

Friday, April 25, 2014

William Wonter Painting

I guess I'm guilty of, once again, robotically typing in some art related mumbo jumbo into google images, and picking some random picture a few lines down that for whatever reason grabbed my attention, and then framing this frenzied, hasty series of events as something "deeply personal and moving".  Let's be frank. What's so deep about that? Thus, for this post I'm determined to do some background research to add that needed depth (okay, so the only difference now is the search has shifted from google images to wikipedia, but wikipedia is NOT as bad as everyone says). 
So, it turns out this oil painting is by renowned 18th century portrait painter William Clarke Wontner. I guess you could say he was sort of "behind his times" (in a good way), because instead of jumping on the surrealist bandwagon that was cruising around the bend around the time of his career, he immersed himself in Academic Classicism and Romanticism. 
It can definitely be said his drawing have a weighty classic and romantic vibe, bringing to mind the masterpieces of European painters several hundred years before the man's time. The rich, luminous shading -- a known trademark of oil painting -- exemplifies a technical proficiency not to be taken for granted. He doesn't just ape after his former's formula though -- he brings his own twist of mood and aesthetics -- subtly yet successfully. For instance, ponder the uniqueness and aesthetic merit to the marble wash background.


Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Mural

For the upcoming mural assignment, I plan to draw inspiration from this music video. I think the "earth people" are not only really cool looking, but profound. I'm really visually inspired by them and hope to incorporate the concept into my mural.  Though despite this, I want to add my own originality to the artwork.

Friday, February 14, 2014

Etchings

From a quick search of etchings on Google Images, I found this particular one by Anders Zorn really attracted me. The sense of depth in the portrait, with an emphasis on lighting, is masterful. Also, I like the way the artist's lines manage to be so expressive. The chopped, dissonant hatching-- almost scribble like--  brings a dark mood to the artwork. The picture is beyond realism in the sense of photograph perfectness:  it captures a scene with an emotional lense.