ChatterBank3 mins ago
Francis Picabia, Hera and Ridens
13 Answers
I know he painted cubist, surrealist and dadaist works, but i'm not sure which 'hera' and 'ridens' belong to. They're definatly not cubist but they look surreal to me, but i'm not familiar with dadaism, so are they that, or both,
http://en.wikipedia.o...le:Picabia_Hera_2.JPG
http://www.abcgallery...icabia/picabia29.html
thanks for any help on their styles.
x molly
http://en.wikipedia.o...le:Picabia_Hera_2.JPG
http://www.abcgallery...icabia/picabia29.html
thanks for any help on their styles.
x molly
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by mollykins. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well in my opinion,they are definitely not cubist.
I don't know this artist,but they lool like dadaist verging to ward surrealist.
I apologise if this doesn't help you.
According to this biography:~
http://www.picabia.com/biograph/bio_ev_p1.htm
He also dabblled in Fauvism & Orphism too,it gets more complex doesn't it.
The biography gives dates.so it may(I haven't read it) give you a clue as to your two paintings?
There might aslo be clues in his Wikipedia entry?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Picabia
and finally,Thank You this is an artist I didn't know before,but will make a further study of.
Alec.
I don't know this artist,but they lool like dadaist verging to ward surrealist.
I apologise if this doesn't help you.
According to this biography:~
http://www.picabia.com/biograph/bio_ev_p1.htm
He also dabblled in Fauvism & Orphism too,it gets more complex doesn't it.
The biography gives dates.so it may(I haven't read it) give you a clue as to your two paintings?
There might aslo be clues in his Wikipedia entry?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Picabia
and finally,Thank You this is an artist I didn't know before,but will make a further study of.
Alec.
PS:~
This
[email protected] <[email protected]
is the Contact us page of Picabia.com
they might be able to answer your question?
This
[email protected] <[email protected]
is the Contact us page of Picabia.com
they might be able to answer your question?
it says, in October 1928, film critic Gaston Ravel calls them “sur-impressionism”, referring to the simultaneity of superimposed film images, an impression of “the third dimension without the aid of perspective”, as Duchamp later describes them. Apart from birds and foliage, the subject matter often takes as a point of departure the classical figures of Botticelli and later Piero della Francesca.
so were these paintings done in this style, they fit the description.
so were these paintings done in this style, they fit the description.
ggrr, i don't know what to write about him . . . .
by the way, the title of the project is work rest and play and i thought that even though the various people he paints aren't working resting and playing in the same picture, i could do a version of jsut that, in that style. The artist you pick doesn't have to exactly fit the title but if you can take inspiration and make up your own piece that does fit the title, you get good marks.
by the way, the title of the project is work rest and play and i thought that even though the various people he paints aren't working resting and playing in the same picture, i could do a version of jsut that, in that style. The artist you pick doesn't have to exactly fit the title but if you can take inspiration and make up your own piece that does fit the title, you get good marks.
I don't think 'sur-impressionism' is a word - I think he's just been as puzzled as you are at how to categorise them and has simply invented a word (not a bad one, either). Do you actually need to categorise them at all? Words like that tend to be used by critics trying to force painters into pigeonholes. As an artist, just to your own thing and don't worry about what others might call them.
i've done a bit of a biography and this is my last paragraph. I don't want people to rewrite for me, jsut say if it sounds right for the pieces of art that i'm inspired by.
Throughout his life, he created art in many styles, but for this project, I am taking inspiration from his range of transparency paintings, which he started in the late 1920s. Even though these [ligustri, hera and ridens] paintings don’t include people working, resting and playing, in a final piece, I could do a painting in this style, with three layers, one working, one resting and one playing.
Throughout his life, he created art in many styles, but for this project, I am taking inspiration from his range of transparency paintings, which he started in the late 1920s. Even though these [ligustri, hera and ridens] paintings don’t include people working, resting and playing, in a final piece, I could do a painting in this style, with three layers, one working, one resting and one playing.
what i normally do is; paint etc a background on a page, do a rough copy of what i'm goign to write and if it will look ok, write it neatly on a nice bit of backing papaer and stick it on.
i'll write out some stuff and do backgrounds and when i go back to school, ask the teacher if its right, then stick it in if it is.
i'll write out some stuff and do backgrounds and when i go back to school, ask the teacher if its right, then stick it in if it is.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.