You are browsing the archive for Art.

Avatar of fiona

by fiona

Euan Uglow

December 1, 2010 in Art, Artists, Painting

Euan Uglow (10 March 1932 – 31 August 2000)

Click on image for larger view.

Euan Uglow was born in South East London he studied at Camberwell School of Art in London, then at the Slade.

Painting from life Uglow worked slowly often taking months or years to complete a painting, “When one model first arrived, she had a boyfriend. Later she married, and by the time I was done, she was divorced.” He measured up using a very precise method, using plum lines and chalk marks, the finished paintings are also covered small markings.  His use of planes and subtle tones of colour on the body is really beautiful, he liked to paint by day and draw at night  saying, “Colour under electric light is coarsened”

see more about Euan Uglow on Wikipedia

Avatar of %s

by Darigan

Life drawing and Alberto Giacometti

August 13, 2010 in Art, Artists, Drawing, Painting

Life drawing at its core is about the study of the human figure, its structure and its ability’s, the ability to move in such a variety of ways and to make the most interesting of shapes, the tension of the muscles and the power they contain, and one could spend a very fulfilled lifetime studying this alone because the human physical structure is an amazing design! (Whoever’s responsible for it?) Its dynamics and it’s grace of movement and of course its beauty, real beauty that goes far beyond the superficial beauty that can be just a reflection of the glamour of the modern world. But the study of the human figure is ever timeless and can always be modern in the hands of the artist with a vision and a sense of their time and their place because without a sense of this time and place “timeless” cannot be achieved and surely in the long term this has to be the aim of the figurative artist, to portray humanity and I know its an over used expression but I cannot think of a better term than “to portray the human condition” Few if any have done this better than the Swiss born sculptor Alberto Giacometti.

Alberto Giacometti (born 1901 died 1966)

Painter, sculptor, print maker

In 1934 Giacometti took it into his head to try and do some figure compositions.

“I needed to make quickly I thought one or two studies from life just to understand the construction of a head and of the whole figure, and in 1935 I took a model for a study that should take a couple of weeks and then I would carry out my compositions. I went on working from the model all day everyday from 1935 to 1940, nothing was as I had imagined, a head became for me an object that was completely unknown and without dimensions”

He mainly worked from two models his brother Diego and a female professional model. For the last thirty years of his life he confined his sculpture to three themes, a head, a male figure walking and a female figure standing, they are self contained and withdrawn and each of them portray some of the finest examples of human existence on this planet.

Avatar of fiona

by fiona

NCFA – Petition

November 23, 2009 in Art

NCFA
Please take a moment to sign the National Campaign for the Arts (NCFA) petition to Government to ensure that the arts are on national and local government agendas. The NCFA needs at least 10,000 signatures by Friday 27 November 2009.

The NCFA is calling for the following:

- Maintenance of current levels of funding to the Arts Council
- Retention of Culture Ireland, the agency for the promotion of Irish arts worldwide
- Retention of The Irish Film Board, development agency of the Irish film industry
- Retention of the Artists’ Tax Exemption Scheme
- Commitment to retain the Arts portfolio at cabinet as part of a senior ministerial portfolio

This petition went live on Wednesday 28 October 2009. To sign the National Campaign for the Arts petition please go to: www.petitiononline.com/ncfa/petition.html

For more information about the National Campaign for the Arts go to: http://www.ncfa.ie/

Stop SOPA!

SOPA breaks our internet freedom!
Any site can be shut down whether or not we've done anything wrong.

Stop SOPA Ireland!