Dale Chihuly is known for his fabulous glass art-making skills. Chihuly was born in 1941 in Tacoma, Washington and found his love for working with glass while he attended the University of Washington. At the time he was studying interior design, unaware of just how much working with glass was going to change his life and vision forever. When Chihuly graduated in 1965 he enrolled himself in the only glass programs in the country, at the University of Wisconsin. After spending a couple years in the glass program, he found his way to the Rhode Island School of Design. This is where he set up his roots, establishing a glass program and teaching for more then a decade. Later in life he moved to Venice and worked in the Venini glass factory. This is where he discovered the art of glass blowing and instantly fell in love. His job in Venice is where he adapted the skills and knowledge to create his own unique craft. Chihuly has made quite a name for himself and he is responsible for creating a pathway and platform glass as a fine art. He has created and has had his art featured in over 200 museums all over the world. Including many well-known pieces of …show more content…
art such as, Cylinders and Baskets, Seaforms, Macchia, and Venetians to name a few. Chihuly’s art has also been featured in many exhibits including his own, Chihuly in The Light of Jerusalem. In addition to creating breath-taking works of art, he has also made some steps in helping other share in his love by co-finding the Pilchuck Glass School in Washington State in 1971. He has gained a lot of recognition for his contribution to the art society, being rewarded the most honorary awards such as twelve doctorates and two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts. Dale Chihuly’s pieces show us just how unique creating art with glass can be with their shapes and colors.
Chihuly explains his vision as wanting “people to be overwhelmed with light and color in a way they have never experienced.” I believe that he has truly embodied this vision, especially in his Macchia and Seaform pieces. Chihuly use of color is extraordinary with their hot pinks, bright blues, and high-lighter yellow makes the art come alive, making you feel like his pieces should be laid out in a fun house, or clown carnival. In addition, the way Chihuly blows the glass in the different loops, swirls and curves makes you forget that the pieces are made from glass and not clay, or another type of material that is easily molded. That is what is so spectacular about Chihuly’s work. His talent brings his viewers pure
joy.
For example, he uses texture, color and organic forms to make the landscape look as real as possible. Most of the shapes are formed by shifts in colors and line because the canvas are two-dimensional. The viewer can observe that the painting is dominated by greys, browns, ochers, and other natural colors such as green and yellow to give the scene a more nature-like look. All the components and objects painted in this piece appear to have the same texture and color as the ones found in real life, such as rocks suggesting a rough hard texture and clouds being soft, which probably means that Vernet took in consideration real landscapes and places he might have seen in real life. While using different shades of grey, and painting dark clouds, Vernet was able to convince that a storm was approaching but he also decided to add source of light coming from the upper left corner by using a golden yellow color to create a sense of warmth, which creates a nice contrast between the light and the coldness from the overall shadows that seem to dominate the artwork, creating variety; however, the repetition of colors such as greys gave the whole piece a sense of unity and they also express the shadows of a stormy day. We
The exhibition of recent stoneware vessels by Peter Voulkos at Frank Lloyd Gallery featured the sort of work on which the artist established reputation in the 1950s. The work was greeted with stunned amazement. However now it is too, but it's amazement of a different order -- the kind that comes from being in the presence of effortless artistic mastery. These astonishing vessels are truly amaising. Every ceramic artist knows that what goes into a kiln looks very different from what comes out, and although what comes out can be controlled to varying degrees, it's never certain. Uncertainty feels actively courted in Voulkos' vessels, and this embrace of chance gives them a surprisingly contradictory sense of ease. Critical to the emergence of a significant art scene in Los Angeles in the second half of the 1950s, the 75-year-old artist has lived in Northern California since 1959 and this was his only second solo show in an L.A gallery in 30 years.”These days, L.A. is recognized as a center for the production of contemporary art. But in the 1950s, the scene was slim -- few galleries and fewer museums. Despite the obscurity, a handful of solitary and determined artists broke ground here, stretching the inflexible definitions of what constitutes painting, sculpture and other media. Among these avant-gardists was Peter Voulkos.” In 1954, Voulkos was hired as chairman of the fledgling ceramics department at the L.A. County Art Institute, now Otis College of Art and Design, and during the five years that followed, he led what came to be known as the "Clay Revolution." Students like John Mason, Paul Soldner, Ken Price and Billy Al Bengston, all of whom went on to become respected artists, were among his foot soldiers in the battle to free clay from its handicraft associations.
Cleveland native, Scott Mescudi, more commonly known by his stage name, Kid Cudi, is a rapper, singer, and actor. Cudi’s unique sound has set an industry standard, and has pushed the boundaries of hip hop, with his implementation of alternative rock into his music. Cudi is not afraid to push the boundaries within hip hop which is why many people see him as a leader. As a result, the three following reasons highlight why Kid Cudi is a leader; his unique production skills, ability to tell a story through song, and dynamic musical range.
William Clark was ½ of the genius team that made their way through miles of unknown land, unknown nature, unknown natives, and came home with all but one voyager, who was killed of natural causes. William Clark and Meriwether Lewis were the first Americans to try and map the Louisiana Purchase area, and not only did they map it, they discovered allies, new plants and animals, and discovered new land and water routes that could be useful for future travelers.
At first glance, the cheerful bright blue sky on the upper portion of the painting caught the most attention. The second dominant feature is the small sailboat with seagulls on the background where Monet illustrated in brightest white. Examining closely in that particular area, it is noticeable that the artist intended to incorporate a sheer layer of white surrounding the sailboat to create the illusion of sheen light breaking through the clouds and reflecting into the ocean. Monet used a variation of values along with the combination of heavy and light individual brushstrokes to create uneven tones to show the movement of the water caused by the weather and the sun. Several layers of underpaint can also be seen as the artist’s intention for the waves to appear fuzzier. The fuzzy wave in the foreground to the right is slightly bulged from the canvas showing the finer brushstroke slightly dabbed on the surface. Dense cracking is present all over the painting possibly due to the painting being very
Alice Walker was born in Eatonton, Georgia on February 9,1944, she is the eighth and youngest child of Minnie Tallulah Grant Walker and Willie Lee Walker. He parents worked as sharecroppers. Not only did she grow up poor but in a violent and racist environment, this left a permanent impression on her writing.
Dale Earnhardt won many Winston Cup titles throughout his career, and he was also known as the” imitator” because he would nudge cars around the track to try and take the lead. Earnhardt said “I don't want to argue with my wife about her car - or my driving”. Earnhardt took after his father Ralph Earnhardt. Earnhardt wasn’t like most race car drivers. He would interact with his fans and he didn’t like most of the rules for racing. Dale Earnhardt has changed NASCAR in many ways. After his death it made NASCAR step up there pace on making racing a safer sport.
One man, a former slave, overcame so much and helped thousands of people.George Washington Carver was born into slavery in early April of 1865 in Diamond Missouri. His owners were Moses and Susan carver. At a young age his father was killed in an accident on the farm. He never married and died in 1943 at the age of 79.
Born in July of 1882 in New York, Hopper grew up interested in art and encouraged by his parents. After attending both the Correspondence School of Illustrating in New York City and the New York School of Art, Hopper experienced a shift in interest from illustrations to the fine arts1. While studying with the impressionist artist William Merritt Chase and the realistic painter Rober...
Since he was a boy George Washington Carver loved art so, when he was old enough. George Washington
Pei was born in China in 1917 and immigrated to the United States in 1935. He originally attended the University of Pennsylvania but grew unconfident in his drawing skills so he dropped out and pursued engineering at MIT. After Pei decided to return to architecture, he earned degrees from both MIT and Harvard. In 1956, after he had taught at Harvard for three years, he established I.M. Pei & Partners, an architectural firm that has been known as Pei Cobb Freed & Partners since 1989. This firm is famous for its successful and rational solutions to a variety of design problems. They are responsible for many of the largest pubic and private construction projects in the second half of this century. Some of these projects include the East Building of the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., the John F. Kennedy Memorial Library in Boston, and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland.
Alice Walker pours events and conflicts from her life into her works, using her rural roots as settings and Ebonics she brings her stories to life. Everyday Use and The Color Purple reflected the negative views Alice walker took upon herself because of her deformity. While also showing how things were in the Jim Crow era; where African-Americans were not afforded the same opportunities of whites. These two works explore events from her entire family, not just events she faced solely on her own. While also having the same rural setting as Walker’s Georgia upbringing. In this paper, I will go into detail of Alice’s two works Everyday Use and The Color Purple and what events are reflected in these works.
... and will continue to be in the future. Philip Glass, a minimalist who has written a large variety of music from chamber music to opera, is without a doubt a very influential contemporary music icon.
What I see in this piece is peacefulness. Stokes of the paintbrush are perfect to make it look whole. With the sun shinning down making the colors pop out even more. The olive trees glowing in the suns light with the mountains behind it. It is a piece I could look at for a long time with out getting bored. The colors of the piece just make it look so complete. With the lines of the
Frank Lloyd Wright was one of the most influential designers of modern architecture and designers of the twentieth century. Wright appreciated and loved nature, this was his key characteristic. The love he had for land displayed in his work. His designs and architecture were organic in nature and expressed wildlife.