SEPHORA Art Class: Impressionist Makeup How-To

Posted by admin on March 21st, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 8 Comments »

Paint up some pretty drama using layers of color and texture. From clothing to the makeup, Impressionism was celebrated on the spring runways by mixing textures and colors to create light and movement. Here, we catch up with makeup artist Sylvia Del Orto at our Beauty as Art cover shoot for the skinny on how to score this gorgeous look.

Duration : 0:1:49

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What is the name of that Impressionist painting?

Posted by admin on March 20th, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 2 Comments »

The painting possesses a lamp-post at night illuminated. The artist captures this illumination by using almost a surrealist type of application of paint. I want to say it is done by a 20th or 19th century modernist….

Any ideas?
JODY FTW! THANKS!

http://www.artinthepicture.com/artists/Giacomo_Balla/streetlamp.jpeg

Street Lamp
1909
by Giacomo Balla

Giacomo Balla
Style: Futurism
Lived: July 18, 1871 – March 1, 1958 (19th – 20th century)
Nationality: Italy

Who played the german artist in "The Thomas Crown Affair" who used to be an impressionist but now paints the

Posted by admin on March 19th, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 1 Comment »

wife’s face on the "Mona Lisa". He had white wavy hair with a ponytail and a beard

Charles Keating … Friedrich Golchan

P.S.–I had to pop my copy of the movie into the machine to catch the name when Mark Margolis (Heinrich Knutzhorn) said it aloud from jail.

Camille Pissarro _ French Impressionist painter

Posted by admin on March 18th, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 25 Comments »

Camille Pissarro
(b Charlotte Amalie, St Thomas, Danish Virgin Islands, 10 July 1830; d Paris, 13 Nov 1903).
Painter and printmaker. He was the only painter to exhibit in all eight of the Impressionist exhibitions held between 1874 and 1886, and he is often regarded as the father of the movement. He was by no means narrow in outlook, however, and throughout his life remained as radical in artistic matters as he was in politics. Thadée Natanson wrote in 1948: Nothing of novelty or of excellence appeared that Pissarro had not been among the first, if not the very first, to discern and to defend. The significance of Pissarros work is in the balance maintained between tradition and the avant-garde. Octave Mirbeau commented: M. Camille Pissarro has shown himself to be a revolutionary by renewing the art of painting in a purely working sense; at the same time he has remained a purely classical artist in his love for exalted generalizations, his passion for nature and his respect for worthwhile traditions.

Jacob Camille Pissarro (Charlotte Amalie, na ilha de São Tomás nas Índias Ocidentais Dinamarquesas, hoje Ilhas Virgens Americanas, 10 de Julho de 1830 — Paris, 13 de Novembro de 1903) foi um pintor francês, confundador do impressionismo, e o único que participou nas oito exposições do grupo (1874-1886). ascendência O seu pai, Abraham Frederic Gabriel Pissarro, era português criptojudeu de Bragança, que no final do século XVIII, quando ainda pequeno, tinha ido com a sua família para Bordéus, onde na altura existia uma comunidade significativa de judeus portugueses refugiados da Inquisição. A mãe de Camille Pissarro era crioula e tinha o nome Rachel Manzano-Pomie.
Com 11 anos Camille Pissarro foi enviado a Paris para estudar num colégio interno. Voltou para a ilha São Tomás, a fim de tomar conta do negócio da família. Algum tempo depois, a sua paixão pela pintura fê-lo mudar de vida: fez em 1852 amizade com o pintor dinamarquês, Fritz Melbye e a oportunidade de concretizar seu sonho surgiu com um convite para acompanhar uma expedição do Fritz Melbye, enviado pelo governo das Antilhas Dinamarquesas, para estuda a fauna e a flora da Venezuela, onde passou dois anos.
Pissarro conquistou sua liberdade aos 23 anos. Em 1855, ele já estava em Paris com ajuda de Melbye, tentando iniciar sua carreira. O jovem antilhano fascinou-se com as telas de Camille Corot e travou amizade com Paul Cézanne, Claude Monet, Charles-François Daubigny, entre outros pintores impressionistas. Com Monet passou a sair para pintar ao ar livre, em Pontoise e Louvenciennes. Em 1861 casou com Julie Vellay, com quem teve oito filhos.

Video editing by Gil carosio
Music: Noa
Beautiful That Way (La Vita E Bella)

Honors for this video (2) 30-01-2009
#76 – Top Favorited (Today) – Education – Brazil
#3 – Top Rated (Today) – Education – Brazil

Honors for this video (11) 31-01-2009
#64 – Most Discussed (Today) – Brazil
#1 – Most Discussed (Today) – Education – Brazil
#7 – Most Discussed (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#34 – Most Discussed (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#1 – Top Favorited (Today) – Education – Brazil
#6 – Top Favorited (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#90 – Top Favorited (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#54 – Top Rated (Today) – Brazil
#1 – Top Rated (Today) – Education – Brazil
#3 – Top Rated (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#17 – Top Rated (This Month) – Education – Brazil

Honors for this video (12) 01-02-09
#27 – Most Discussed (Today) – Brazil
#1 – Most Discussed (Today) – Education – Brazil
#7 – Most Discussed (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#34 – Most Discussed (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#77 – Top Favorited (Today) – Brazil
#3 – Top Favorited (Today) – Education – Brazil
#6 – Top Favorited (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#90 – Top Favorited (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#30 – Top Rated (Today) – Brazil
#1 – Top Rated (Today) – Education – Brazil
#2 – Top Rated (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#17 – Top Rated (This Month) – Education – Brazil

Honors for this video (6) 02-02-2009
#2 – Most Discussed (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#12 – Most Discussed (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#4 – Top Favorited (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#29 – Top Favorited (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#2 – Top Rated (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#5 – Top Rated (This Month) – Education – Brazil

Honors for this video (6) 05-02-2009
#2 – Most Discussed (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#8 – Most Discussed (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#7 – Top Favorited (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#27 – Top Favorited (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#2 – Top Rated (This Week) – Education – Brazil
#6 – Top Rated (This Month) – Education – Brazil

Honors for this video (3) 13-02-2009
#10 – Most Discussed (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#30 – Top Favorited (This Month) – Education – Brazil
#6 – Top Rated (This Month) – Education – Brazil

Duration : 0:3:32

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What are the differences between the impressionistic artists and dutch artists.?

Posted by admin on March 17th, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 2 Comments »

impressionist artist like Monet Manet and Cassette and dutch artists like Rembrandt and so one?

Most Dutch artists (the ones you mean) lived in the sixteenth and seventeenth century, in the time of the Dutch revolt. Rembrandt himself was born in the early 17th century. They were making paintings on commission from wealthy people, and were all painting very realistically and detailed. They often painted very Christian or historical subjects.

Impressionist painters made, as the name says, very ‘impressionist’ images of what they saw. It was more important to them to get the setting and colors right than whether it was realistic and detailed. Monet, Manet and Cassatt, the people you name, were all deeply influenced by the French landscape and people (the first two being French themselves), and France was also the centre of Impressionism.

The Art Collectors Guild presents Monet: White Waterlilies

Posted by admin on March 15th, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 3 Comments »

This Art Collectors’ guild presents a selection of framed artwork, White Waterlilies by the impressionist painter Claude Monet. The artwork and artist are described in this informational video. To learn more about, or acquire this artwork please visit http://artcollectorsguild.com

Duration : 0:5:32

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Any Modeling Clay artist that make paintings like oil-painters do?

Posted by admin on March 15th, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 1 Comment »

As a Modeling Clay Master painter I would like exchange information with other modeling clay painters, not bead makers, nor figurines of any kind, nor jewlers. Plain painters, preferably landscapes, impressionist, and city scape painters any such artists like that any where? That would like to exchange experiences?

I’m a painter, have been using mixed media lately which includes some 3D sculpting materials. I don’t use non-drying modeling clay but have experience with other air-dry clays. After getting a loose translation of your profile, your technique sounds interesting – I have seen this done before but wonder about its longevity. Any pictures?
jp

When paintings such as La Grenouillière by the Impressionist painter Claude Monet were first exhibited in the

Posted by admin on March 13th, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 1 Comment »

When paintings such as La Grenouillière by the Impressionist painter Claude Monet were first exhibited in the late-nineteenth century in Paris, they were regarded by many spectators as unfinished, crude, and ugly. Those spectators failed to understand that
A. aesthetic standards change with time and place.
B. standards of beauty are both modern and universal.
C. visual art should be beautiful, or at least realistic, and preferably both.
D. aesthetic interest is directly related to the artist’s technical skills.

A

Ferdinand Du Puigaudeau – Impressionist Painter

Posted by admin on March 12th, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 1 Comment »

a slideshow with fredinand du uigaudeau paintings, amazing landscape by an impressionist french painter (1864 – 1930)with music by damien rice

Duration : 0:4:24

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Can you help me identify this impressionist painting?

Posted by admin on March 11th, 2010 and filed under impressionist artist | 3 Comments »

Two or three years ago, I saw an exhibit of Impressionist paintings from the Phillips collection. One painting in particular stood out to me, but I can’t remember the artist or title. Now I want to include it in a paper I’m writing, but I’ve been unable to find it. It was rather small, probably about 12"x10", and depicted a woman seated on a bed, partially turned away from the observer. She’s hunched over with her arms folded over her stomach and seems to be suffering from despair or great grief. If I remember correctly it’s impressionist in the style of Cézanne. It must be a relatively minor work as I’ve never run across it reproduced anywhere since I first saw it, but perhaps one of you art mavens knows what I’m talking about.

Sounds like Degas’ Melancholy. If you put that into google images you’ll get an image.

Here’s the details from a catalogue I have on the Phillip’s Collection:

Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas, Melancholy, c. 1874, oil on canvas, 19 x 24.7 cm.

Good luck with your paper.