Lik Like Van Gogh's Starry Night

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As one of the most iconic artworks ever conceived, Van Gogh’s Starry Night; was completed one year before his timely self-inflicted death. (Kloss, Lecture 45, 23:23) Through his unbalanced emotional state this artistic master is clearly portraying his swirling emotions by creating a whirlwind of blues and violets while exercising traditional impressionistic techniques. These small brush strokes typical of Cezanne or Renoir give way to an understood imaginative (Kloss, Lecture 45, 22:54) nightscape ablaze with oversized and exaggerated illuminated stars. While the viewer’s eyes will roam throughout the painting it gives off the feeling of movement and of chaos; moreover, the tranquility of the nightly setting contradicts the viewers initial feelings and subsides to an emotional response of peacefulness and harmony. Instinctual the view will gaze upon the stars while the movement begins to take hold. This overshadows an important focal point of the tree or brush that Van Gogh created in the foreground on the left side of the painting. This creates a sense of isolation, a personal feeling of Van Gogh’s perhaps? …show more content…

Guernica tells the viewer a story of the horrific events that happened during the Spanish Civil War when German and Italian bombers unleashed atrocities to the civilian population (Kloss Lecture 48, 23:24) upon Picasso’s homeland. This moving painting depicts an actual event unlike Van Gogh’s Starry night that is purely imaginative. The scene upon a first viewing contributes to the distinguishable emotion of turmoil or perhaps madness. Picasso’s correctly identifies the calamity of war by the unrelated assortment of animals, people, and of the building which is represented. (Kloss, Lecture 48, 23:45) Picasso is able to stunningly portray the different emotional responses of the subjects painted within Guernica we can see, worry, regret, and

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