Ad
related to: artists that use one color to match bluefreelancer.com has been visited by 10K+ users in the past month
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Paul Bilhaud, Combat de nègres pendant la nuit, 1882 Monochrome painting was initiated at the first Incoherents exhibition in Paris in 1882, with a black painting by the poet Paul Bilhaud entitled Combat de Nègres pendant la nuit ("Battle of negroes during the night"), which had been missing since 1882 when it was rediscovered in a private collection in 2017–2018. [2]
In the color theory of Marc and the Der Blaue Reiter group, the blue color stands for the spiritual principle. The painting was initially not understood and was derided or even spat upon. [3] It was part of the private collection of Bernhard Koehler, who supported Marc financially and received paintings from the artist in return. Koehler ...
"International Klein Blue" (IKB) is a process registered in France on 19 May 1960 at the Institut national de la propriété industrielle (INPI) under Soleau envelope no. 63471 by the French artist Yves Klein. It combines ultramarine blue pigment with a specific binder created with the help of a chemist. By law, no one can appropriate a colour.
The Blue Period (Spanish: Período Azul) comprises the works produced by Spanish painter Pablo Picasso between 1901 and 1904. During this time, Picasso painted essentially monochromatic paintings in shades of blue and blue-green, only occasionally warmed by other colors. These sombre works, inspired by Spain and painted in Barcelona and Paris ...
Composition with Red, Blue and Yellow is a 1930 painting [1] by Piet Mondrian, a Dutch artist who was a leading figure in the Neo-Plasticism movement. It consists of thick, black brushwork, defining the borders of colored rectangles. As the title suggests, the only colors used in it besides black and white are red, blue, and yellow.
Televisions and computer monitors use a similar technique to represent image colors using red, green and blue (RGB) colors. [9] If red, blue, and green light (the additive primaries) are mixed, the result is something close to white light (see Prism (optics)). Painting is inherently subtractive, but Pointillist colors often seem brighter than ...
The Blue Room (La chambre bleue) is a 1923 painting by French artist Suzanne Valadon. One of her most recognizable works, it has been called a radical subversion of representation of women in art. [1] Like many of Valadon's later works, it uses strong colors and emphasizes decorative backgrounds and patterned materials. [2]
The color blue in particular was to have a spiritual significance for the artist, as it did to his German painter friend Marc. The other significance of the work is that it shared its German title ( Der Blaue Reiter ) with the name of the group of progressive artists co-founded by Kandinsky in 1911, which published an almanac and organised ...