Thursday, August 27, 2009

Painting the city walls with colourful and attractive themes


Film posters and ugly graffiti bother you? It is all about to change as city roads will undergo a makeover with vibrant colors and themes. The BBMP’s initiative to add color and make the walls in the city look more lively and attractive has just begun.
Individuals and companies have already come forward to help the Palike build this initiative a success.
After initiate the project of painting the city walls with colourful themes, ideas and educative material, the Palike is now approaching five-star hotels and IT companies to come forward and continue this spree.
The BBMP has earmarked the idea of painting city walls with colourful motifs and designs on selected roads and locality. Pictures of murals, animals, folk art and designs inspired from the nature would be painted on these walls.
According to BBMP sources, the first phase of this project will different artists from the city and opportunity to make the roadside walls their canvas.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Plein air paintings in idaho

Plein-air painting, which is painting in the open air, is a admired activity in Idaho because the surroundings offered by the state's beautiful topography lend themselves to be captured by artists. For the sixth year, the Plein Air Painters of Idaho will flock to south of Stanley, Redfish Lake, for the Redfish Plein Air Paint-Out on Tuesday, Aug. 31, through Friday, Sept. 4. A reception and show will be held at Redfish Lake cottage on Thursday, Sept. 3, and will feature works for sale.
Redfish Lake as well as the surrounding Stanley Basin, Sawtooth Valley and Salmon River, suggest spectacular mountain scenery that painters will capture throughout the week.
Ketchum artist Deanna Shrell is a Redfish Plein Air Paint-Out regular and part of the Plein Air Painters of Idaho. She was recognized for "Best Landscape" in the sixth annual Art Museum of Eastern Idaho displays "Idaho Paints Idaho" earlier this year.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Realism art in painting

Realist art adopts the approach of portraying subjects in as straightforward manner as possible, without idealizing them and without follow the rules of formal theory. Realism first appeared in art of the 18th century, however, the great Realist era was the mid-19th century, as artists becomes disillusioned with the Salon system and the influence of the Academies.

What kind of differences are there between the realistic and the classical painting?

1) Figuratively, the classical image is music based on notation; the realistic Painting is music without notation knowledge.

2) Technique. Everything in the classical Painting is finishing stage by stage in accordance with laws which were not invented by the author. The realistic Painting is created in one layer, "alla prima." There can be several layers but only because the author does not have time to complete the picture "in the wet".

3) Plot. In the classical Painting the plot is constructing in accordance with the classical composition laws. The realistic Painting school does borrow something from the classical school but there is no composition law as such: there are as many laws as there are in realistic artists.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Ancient Egyptian painting techniques

Ancient Egyptian paintings survive due to the tremendously dry climate. The ancient Egyptians created paintings to make the afterlife of the deceased a enjoyable place. As a result, beautiful paintings were created. The themes included journey through the afterworld or their defensive deities introducing the deceased to the gods of the underworld. Some examples of such paintings are paintings of warriors and Osiris. Some tomb paintings explain activities that the deceased were involved in when they were alive and wished to carry on doing for eternity.
Egyptian paintings are painted in such a technique to show a profile view and a side view of the animal or person. For example, the painting to the accurate shows the head from a profile view and the body from a frontal view. Their main colors were red, black, blue, gold, and green.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Finger painting way into world record

Thousands of children are probable to descend on Belfast Zoo on Thursday, all eager to get their hands dirty.
Hope that they will be able to paint their way into the Guinness Book of World Records with the world's largest finger painting.
To succeed their canvas has to be bigger than the present record holder, a 2,000 square metre painting made in Austria in 2007.
The record attempt is being staged by NICMA - the Childminding Association as one part of its 25th anniversary celebrations.
Two thousand canvasses will be painted then sewn jointly. Depicting a house, NICMA hope it will symbolize the home-based care offered by childminders.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Michael Jackson portrait fetched $1 million


A Michael Jackson portrait by Andy Warhol fetched more than $1 million at an East Hampton in New York gallery, according to one of the gallery’s owners.
Vered Gallery sold the 1984 painting to a “speculator,” said Janet Lehr and a gallery partner. She declined to recognize the buyer, specify how much he paid or whom he bought it from.
On May 13, the similar painting sold for $278,500 at a Sotheby’s auction in New York.
Lehr said she expects the man who bought it from the gallery to dispatch it back to the gallery to resell.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Results of light paintings

Light painting by moving the camera is also called camera painting, is the antithesis of traditional photography. At night, or in a dark room, the camera could be taken off the tripod and used like a paintbrush. An example is using the night sky as the canvas, the camera as the brush and cityscapes (among other light sources) as the palette. Putting energy into moving the camera by stroking lights, creating patterns and laying down backgrounds can create abstract artistic images. Also known as "Camera Toss."
Making a light painting does not necessarily need to be done in a dark room or at night. Sometimes using artificial light, like LEDs and mobile phones, or through the limited sunlight beaming in a curtained room makes a shadowing effect. Using a mirror creates a double image, which adds up to a more inspired result.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Vermeer’s painting in New York

The painting will be exposed as part of an exhibition on the 17th-century Dutch artist at The Metropolitan Museum of Art next month.
The Milkmaid, dating from 1658, shows a milkmaid in a blue and yellow color dress pouring milk from a jug into a bowl.
The painting is being loaned to the New York gallery on next month by Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum. It was final seen in the US at the 1939 World's Fair, in New York.
Five other works by Vermeer from the galleries own collection will also go on display, as well as works by other Dutch painters.
Along with Rembrandt and Frans Hals, Vermeer is considering as one of the greatest Dutch artists, however only 36 of his paintings survive today. The exhibition opens on September 10 and runs until November 29.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Matte painting

A matte painting is a painted representation of a landscape, set, or distant location that allows filmmakers to make the illusion of an environment that would otherwise be too expensive to build or visit. Previously, matte painters and film technicians have used various techniques to combine a matte-painted image with live-action footage. At its best, depending on the skill levels of the artists and technicians, the effects is “seamless” and create environments that would otherwise be impossible to film.

Traditional matte paintings were still in utilize, but more frequently in conjunction with digital compositing. Paint has now been superseded by digital images formed using photo references, 3-D models, and drawing tablets. Matte painters combine their digitally matte painted textures within computer-generated 3-D environments, allowing for 3-D camera movement. Speedier computer processing times continue to modify and expand matte painting technologies and techniques.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Paintings renew power


Hyderabad:A painting and essay writing competition for schoolchildren was held at the Jawahar Bal Bhavan in Public Gardens on august 11th to create awareness among them about renewable energy sources.
More than 300 students from 100 schools in the city participated in the competition organized together by the Union Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, Non-Conventional Energy Development Corporation of AP (NEDCAP) and Confederation of Voluntary Associations (COVA).

The winners will be awarded prizes by Chief Minister YS Rajasekhara Reddy on August 20, the birthday of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, which is celebrated each year as ‘Renewable Energy Day’.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Mona Lisa smile on after Russian teacup attack


An "unhinged" Russian woman threw a teacup at the world's most famous painting, Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa," but it emerges unscathed due to its bullet-proof glass cover, the Louvre museum said on Tuesday.
"The young women take a cup out of her bag and throw it over the heads of other people who were looking at the painting. The cup cracked on the bullet-proof glass which was a little bit scratched," a spokesman said.
The Louvre, the biggest art museum in the world, has thousands of paintings, but most of the millions of guests a year make a bee-line for the Mona Lisa, known in France as La Joconde.
The 500-year-old painting was stolen in 1911 from the Louvre but was returned two years later after an Italian was under arrest for its theft.
It was doused with acid by a vandal in 1956 and later the same year a Bolivian injured it again by throwing a rock at it.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

StraightForward paintings of ordinary American peoples

'Painting the People," an exhibition of American art created mainly in the first half of the 20th century, could eagerly be titled "Painting for People." It's a show that generate good feelings about art, about humanity, and even, to a degree, about American culture.

These 44 paintings, on view at the James A. Michener Art Museum, address for antimodernism. They're nativist not only in subject matter, in the way they portray ordinary peoples, but also in their reliance on the belief that, after the hugely influential Armory show in 1913, some American artists rejected Europe as a basis of inspiration.

"Painting the People" is, for the most part, narrative, realist, and uncomplicated. The images that don't need to be deconstructed or puzzled out. They're paintings "for people" in the sense that specialized knowledge or art experience isn't necessary to enjoy them.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Michael Jackson painting, last sold for $2.1 million in 1990

The owner of a long-hidden painting of Michael Jackson, reputed to be the only portrait he ever posed for, say they are trying to sell it amid the renewed interest after his death. The painting, last sold in 1990 for $2.1 million, was brought out of storage at New Jersey warehouse recently and put on exhibit in a Harlem car showroom.
The 50-by-40-inch painting, called “The Book,” was done in 1990 by an Australian artist, Brett-Livingstone Strong, who was a good friend of Mr. Jackson and shared his taste for slightly fantastical style of life and dress.
The painting is owned by two toy inventors, Marty Abrams and John Gentilly, who established the painting in 1992 from a Japanese businessman who had bought it to make good on a debt he owed the inventors.
Currently, the painting is being displayed at the Dancy-Power Automotive at Lenox Avenue and West 129th in Harlem, selected in part because it is owned by a friend of Mr. Abrams and also because it is near the Apollo Theater, where the Jackson 5 won an amateur night competition in 1967.