Wednesday, August 14, 2019
Museum of Art Essay
After visiting the Raleigh Museum of Art, I discovered two paintings that conjured up opposite feelings that I will compare and contrast. The painting I liked most was titled, Jungle Camp, 2000 an Acrylic on canvas 72 x 60 in. (182. 9 x 152. 4 cm), from one of North Carolinaââ¬â¢s most respected artists, Maud Gatewood. Her paintings record the varied experiences of a wandering life. Writing on the back of the canvas, the artist notes the origins of this picture: ââ¬Å"Trapped in the Amazon with a bad legâ⬠. Confined to a hut, she made the most of the opportunity. The second painting titled, Venice without water, by North Carolinaââ¬â¢s artist Donald Sultan was the painting I truly disliked because of the feelings it provoked. Sultanââ¬â¢s painting from 1990 was an acrylic painting and measured 96 x96 inches in dimension. Sultan used Butyl rubber, acrylic paint, and plaster on vinyl composite tiles, which were mounted on four Masonite panels. Both painting represent landscapes captured by the artistsââ¬â¢ eyes or through a photograph. These paintings gave me two strong, but opposite, feelings: joy and sadness. I will describe the differences and contrast these two works of art. The two pieces of art works have several differences in style. First, the shape in the painting, jungle camp, is rectangular; while the second painting is square. The choice and use of color in the two paintings are completely opposite. Since color is most important to me, I chose the jungle camp painting due to the variety of bright colors that pop from canvas. The painting from Mrs. Gatewood is colorful, which gave me a feeling of joy and warmth. However, Sultan decided to use contrast instead of colors in his painting. Thus, Sultanââ¬â¢s painting is filled with different tones of grey, black, or white. Gatewoodââ¬â¢s painting represents a jungleââ¬â¢s view from a patio or balcony. I can see tall palm trees all stuck to each other in her painting, which gives the impression of abundance and fertility. She chooses many different variations of green. For example, she utilizes certain hues of light green to create an effect of sun reflection. There are two types of curtains on the patio, hanging on a fine line. The first is really colorful, a mix of tropical color, and the second is like a white veil, which you can see trough it. The mix of materials and colors for the curtains, added to the jungle, procures me a sense of evasion, vacation, and relaxation. I was drawn to the atmosphere of serenity and tropic jumbled together, which is the reason that this painting evoked my interest. However, Sultanââ¬â¢s painting is the exact opposite of abundance and excursion. The whole artwork is quite dark and sad. Itââ¬â¢s a representation of the well-known Rialtoââ¬â¢s bridge, which is an infrastructure between to planes. The first plane is an illustration of woodââ¬â¢s pillars, which surround the Venetian canals; they are use by the gondoliers to park their ââ¬Å"original dinghyâ⬠. The second plane is the bridge; it looks pretty scary and dark with no one crossing it. The final plane, which is the background, consists of some Venetianââ¬â¢s buildings. These buildings form a line that converges towards the bridge; which helps my eyes focus on the main subject the bridge. Sultanââ¬â¢s painting does not reflect the Venice that I saw five years ago. When I think about my trip to Venice, I have an enriched memory filled with bright colors from the Carnival. I remember vivid colors on all the masks, costumes, life, and crawl of people. Sultanââ¬â¢s artwork doesnââ¬â¢t have any of my souvenirs. Instead, the painting is more like a sinister version of the beautiful city, Venice. Although I do not like this particular outlook of Venice, I realized after studying his painting that the artist is expressing his environmental point of view of the city, which I completely agree with. As an admirer of this city, I feel concerned by the environmental issue depicted in the painting. The notion that the excess of tourism could be destructive to a fragile city like Venice is a valid concern. The artist conveys his dismay over ââ¬Å"the deteriorating environment with the unused mooring posts, the dry canal bed of mud-like tar, and the melancholy mood of the paintingâ⬠. I think that colors or tonalities are the essence of the painting, like the rhythm and tunes are for music. In my view colors are strongly subjective, they can have different psychologist effects and symbolistââ¬â¢s significations, they can differ from a culture to another; associating Black with mourning is normal, in our occidental countries, while in Asia itââ¬â¢s the actual opposite, White. In my case the colors are the main cause, on what I think is pretty or not.
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