People throughout the world are blessed with the gift of art. We all ponder how it is accomplished and achieved, but in the end it all comes down to the remarkable artists that craft each work of art. Even though areas in the world house a substantial amount over others, there are still a number of cities that possess a great deal of art. Lucky for us, we live in a metropolitan area, and have a great art museum. In addition to that, it has plenty of it for everyone to admire and observe. The St. Louis art museum is a wonderful gallery of art to wander through.
With exhibitions like Monet’s “Water Lilies”, the everyday person gets to get a glimpse of the world around them that have not seen before with their own eyes. I love the St. Louis Art Museum. Even though I have lived here my whole life, I just never got around to going there. Although this has been my first visit to Art Museum, I know I will definitely go back. Once I walked in through the front doors, I was amazed. The overall size surprised me. I was actually expecting it to be small, but lucky for us, it is not.
Then when I reached the third floor, I was in awe because I got to see work from the 20th century. Also it was a great feeling to see the paintings I had studied in class, and then see them in person. As I walked from room to room, and floor-to-floor I could not get enough: until the museum closed down for the night, and I was told to leave. In spite of that, I downright enjoyed myself. I forgot that I was there for a school assignment. The artwork there ranged from weapons, furniture pieces, sculptures, and paintings. It is refreshing to see something new from turn you take.
The Essay on Boise Art Museum
Boise Art Museum is located in a serene environment with beautifully manicured lawns adorned with various artifacts. I had the privilege of visiting this renowned museum on 18th August 2003. During this time an exhibition showing the ceramic artistic works of Wanxin Zhang was ongoing. The ceramic works featured Chinese figures molded to the height of an average person and each piece having its own ...
Also, to see the timeline of art pass right by you as you go through the whole museum. I have chosen “Stairway to Auvers” by Vincent Van Gogh in the Post-Impressionism Era and was made around 1890, and “Red, Orange, Orange on Red” by Mark Rothko is Op Art and was made in 1955. A poem was written for “Red, Orange” by Mike Murawski, and it reads, “Hey, look out red! Move over, watch it! Scrumpf, smush, push, punch, let me through! I need some air, a breath, anything but red! Makin’ me feel like I’m struggling for the surface of the orange dark depth”(1)..
The paintings both have some similarities, but many differences. Though “Stairway to Auvers” has some subject matter, objects, and people to pick out, “Red, Orange, Orange on Red” does not: depending on the artist’s intent for the painting. “Red, Orange” you can make out slightly different colored orange and red rectangles. Though both paintings are very close in time period, they do have many differences. But every bit and each piece contributes to the changes in art throughout the years, and that is truly the only thing that matters.
Twilight Sounds” by Norman Lewis is an abstract expressionist painting that expresses the sound from the jazz era, and you can even make out some music notes. “In Beige with Sand” by Robert Motherwell shows how abstract art is really done by using very few colors but accomplishing many things with the way he makes random shapes. “Boxcars, Minneapolis #2” by Ralston Crawford is a vague painting depicting many boxes that may symbolize a car in a city. “Bethlehem” by Franz Kline shows a black cross with many lines passing through it on a white canvas.
This might symbolize the cross being Jesus, and the black and white meaning his birth. “Catalonia” by Robert Motherwell has mainly circles and lines, but may represent the separation of the city because of the lines separating the circles from each other. “Draft” by Helen Frankenthaler depicts only a few colors but to me looks to be a sky of some sort. “Ici” by Joan Mitchell seems to have a shape of animals or faces in the blotches of paint. “Helena’s Australia” by Sigmar Polke shows an orange dark night with a few stars out almost from the perspective from a bush. January, December, November” by Gerhard Ritcher seems to be a window and the colors go down according to the season or month, changing and conforming to one.
The Essay on A History of Human Art and Body Painting
If the impulse to create art is a defining sign of humanity, the body may well have been the first canvas. Alongside paintings on cave walls visited by early people over 30,000 years ago, we find handprints, ochre deposits, and ornaments. And because the dead were often buried with valuable possessions and provisions for the afterlife, ancient burials reveal that people have been tattooing, ...
“The Plaza After Rain” by Paul Cornoyer is an amazing painting taken in a large city. The center part of the painting is three people walking through the street while it is raining while car on the road pass them by. “Road at the Palisades” by Ernest Lawson is a flat view of a river or lake in New York that subject matter is a road connecting to a bridge. Maybe this was the artist’s road to home. Street of the Great Captain, Corodoba by Childe Hassam seems to make out a small plaza in a Hispanic originated area that shows off great lighting and bright colors. “Windham Village” by Julian Alden Weir depicts an alleyway to a neighborhood and it looks to be in fall because the trees do not have any leaves. Also the neighborhood appears to be decollate because the way the homes are portrayed. Art museums are a great contribution to society. They allow you, me, and everyone else to gaze upon the art that was created for us to look at.
The art that was created to keep the world of art going. Though some pieces of art may look the same, odd, different, have no subject to it, or just even look plain, it still has a place in the world to prove to everyone how our art has grown and what it has become. Without any art museums showing us what we have grown up to know, we would not believe it or maybe just not care. Now that I have been through the St. Louis art museum, I have a great deal of understanding for art, and that will stick with me no matter where I am.