2018年3月23日星期五

Two Beautiful Garden Paintings

Garden Path in Spring was painted by Duncan Grant. Landscapes and flowers were a lifelong passion of Grant's and a central subject-matter in his work. Grant's primary concern in works like Garden Path in Spring was with colour, harmony and unity of design. In addition, while they sought to define a distinctly national style, Grant's treatment of landscape was consistently influenced by the European aesthetics of Post-Impressionism and was strongly anti-nationalist, even when his subject-matter was most conspicuously British.

He spent the majority of the war years in the rural sanctuary of Sussex. Certainly the wider world is not alluded to in Garden Path in Spring, where the intimacy of the domestic garden setting is intensified by the crowded composition. Blocking out the views beyond and even the sky above, the voluminous trees and plants fill the entire canvas, while blossoming branches sweep inwards to form a protective shade. The extent to which Grant's vision in the early 1940s was of an inward-looking, enclosed world is most apparent when the Charleston paintings are compared with his earlier, European, landscapes.

Grant's flower garden was a rare luxury, and in some senses a rejection of the nationalistic language of wartime self-sufficiency, in line with his earlier pacifist response to the First World War. The detached, carefree and luxurious world of Charleston, enjoyed by its inhabitants and visitors, was to appear increasingly out of tune with modern British life, and in the post-war era of austerity and rationing Grant suffered a decline in his reputation. His solo show at the Leicester Galleries in June 1945, in which Garden Path in Spring and other Charleston scenes were exhibited, received a poor critical reception, although it enjoyed some popular success and all of the large canvases sold.

 A Garden
A Garden was painted by Albert Moore in 18696. In the late 1860s Moore, like many of his contemporaries, was influenced by Japanese art. He began to produce pictures which were almost entirely without subject, yet decorative and subtly coloured.


Invariably they show women in classical robes, allowing him to concentrate on the colour, texture and movement of draped fabric.The Victorian poet Swinburne said such paintings are the ‘worship of things formally beautiful .... The flower-like device at the bottom of the picture is the symbol Moore used as a signature.

Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden Painting


Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, the Garden of Eden is here reinstated as a horticultural fantasy, defined by its relationship with an unseen domestic interior.  Mahoney's image of perfection glimpsed from a window was created in the mid-1930s, when the idea of the garden was actually an accomplice of suburbanisation.

Children Painting Carnation Lily Lily Rose

Carnation Lily, Lily, Rose was painted in 1885 by John Singer Sargent. The inspiration for this picture came during a boating expedition Sargent took on the Thames at Pangbourne in September 1885, with the American artist Edwin Austin Abbey, during which he saw Chinese lanterns hanging among trees and lilies. He began the picture while staying at the home of the painter F.D. Millet at Broadway, Worcestershire, shortly after his move to Britain from Paris.

At first he used the Millets's five-year-old daughter Katharine as his model, but she was soon replaced by Polly and Dorothy (Dolly) Barnard, the daughters of the illustrator Frederick Barnard, because they had the exact haircolour Sargent was seeking. Dolly, aged eleven, is on the left; Polly, aged seven, is on the right.

He worked on the picture, one of the few figure compositions he ever made out of doors in the Impressionist manner, from September to early November 1885, and again at the Millets's new home, Russell House, Broadway, during the summer of 1886, completing it some time in October. Sargent was able to work for only a few minutes each evening when the light was exactly right.

He would place his easel and paints beforehand, and pose his models in anticipation of the few moments when he could paint the mauvish light of dusk. As autumn came and the flowers died, he was forced to replace the blossoms with artificial flowers.
The picture was both acclaimed and decried at the 1887 Royal Academy exhibition. The title comes from the song 'The Wreath', by the eighteenth-century composer of operas Joseph Mazzinghi, which was popular in the 1880s. Sargent and his circle frequently sang around the piano at Broadway. The refrain of the song asks the question 'Have you seen my Flora pass this way?' to which the answer is 'Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose'.

Famous Garden Painting My Lady's Garden

My Lady's Garden was painted by John Young-Hunter in 1899. Painted in the grounds of Holland House, Kensington. The artist's first wife Mary (1872–1947) posed for the lady. The picture is cited in the Introduction to Royal Academy Pictures, 1899, with other imaginative canvases by the younger men as ‘typical examples of the modern spirit and as marking plainly the direction in which youthful fancy is disposed to tend.  My Lady's Garden Painting for Sale

A. L. Baldry described the school to which the artist and his wife belonged as ‘the new Pre-Raphaelites’ and said that it had grown up as a reaction against the realistic belief taught a quarter of a century before. According to him ‘My Lady's Garden’ was the first picture to show that this romantic tendency had gained a hold over the artist.

2018年3月22日星期四

Spanish Romantic Artist Francisco Goya

Francisco Goya was a Spanish romantic painter and printmaker regarded both as the last of the Old Masters and the first of the moderns. He was a unique painter. He was known for his dark prints, and paintings, and for being cruelly realistic in each one of them. He never tried to beautify a personal portrait, and he portrayed things as he saw them, not how people wanted them. Goya was only famous with the aristocrats when he was alive, which is more than most artists can say.

Francisco de Goya was born in Aragon, Spain, on March 30, 1746. His dad was a guilder, and his family was middle class. They lived in a house that bore his mom’s family crest, but later moved to Madrid. At the age of 14, he became an apprentice to JosE Luzán, but was not with him for long because of the move to Madrid.
Goya painted his first project in the late 1760’s at the Basilica of the Pillar in Zaragota, Spain. He was living there at the time, and they just needed a few artists to help finish the job they had been working on for some time.

On July 25, 1773, Francisco married Josefa. She was a niece to one of the administrators at the Royal Academy of Art, and Goya reapplied shortly after their honeymoon, and was accepted. In 1775, he went to work for the Royal Tapestry Workshop. The tapestries he designed became some of the best in the business, and he started getting personal commissions.

In 1783, Goya had his first big break. He was to paint a portrait of Count Floridablanca, which was notably received by the aristocrats. He received more portraits, and in 1786, at the age of 40, he was appointed painter to King Charles III, then became court painter for King Charles IV in 1789.

In 1814, he painted his most famous painting, The Third of May 1808. In it, soldiers are shooting innocent people, all men with the town’s Catholic Church behind them. This is based off a true event, when Napoleon had his soldiers come to Spain, and kill townsfolk, to try and force them to let him rule. Napoleon failed in the end, and this piece commemorates the Spanish revolt to him and the innocent that were killed. Also at this time, Goya moved in with his house keeper, Doña Lescadia, which was considered scandalous. She had her illegitimate daughter living with her, and it was rumored that Goya was her father.

Shortly after, Goya started what he called the “Black paintings.” His most famous, Saturn Devouring One of his Children, is painted on his living room walls. During this period, he had become obsessed with Mythology and other stories, and painted them in a gory, macabre manner that frightened most people. He moved to Paris in 1824, to try to get away from Spain, but returned in 1826. He fell ill, and moved to Bordeaux, France, where he died in 1828, at the age of 82. In his honour, Spain's main national film awards are called the Goya Awards.

Impressionist and Neo-Impressionist Painter Camille Pissarro

Camille Pissarro was a French Impressionist and Neo-Impressionist painter born on the island of St Thomas (now in the US Virgin Islands, but then in the Danish West Indies). His importance resides in his contributions to both Impressionism and Post-Impressionism. His father was Portuguese-Jewish and his mother was a native Creole. Pissaro’s family had been living in the St. Thomas Danish colony.


Pissarro was sent to study to Savary Academy, which was a boarding school in France. There he showed his passion for drawing. When he returned to his hometown, Pissaro had little interest in their family business so he just used his time making a sketch of picturesque port. Year 1852, he went to Venezuela and labored as a creative artist for almost two years.

In 1855, he then resided in France. Fortunately at the time of his arrival, there was an event called World Fair, an important Exposition Universelle that was all about art. At the fair, he met Corot and admired his works. Being advised by Corot, Pissarro soon started sketching and painting in small villages and near Paris, down the Seine, Oise, and also Marne rivers. Pissaro studied at AcadEmie Suisse and had friends like Claude Monet, Paul CEzanne, and some future members of the Impressionist group. In 1860s, a prominent critic named Emile Zola praised his convincing realist landscapes.

In 1871, Camille resided in Pontoise where he remained close to his friends for almost 10 years. CEzanne frequently came to accompany him and under Pissaro’s influence, CEzanne learned nature further with patience.

Camille Pissarro gradually left Neo-Impressionism in 1890 and preferred a style which better allowed him to catch his feelings of nature, while retaining the purity and lightness of color being acquired during Camille’s divisionist phase. During his last years of his existence, Camille shared his time between Le Havre, Rouen, Paris, and also his residence in Eragny and he also painted several patterns of different elements of the city with different weather effects and light, while signifying the animation of the current city. A lot of his paintings are being considered among the best and it made a fitting ending to his long but eventful career.

French Famous Painter Edgar Degas

Edgar Degas was a French artist famous for his work in painting, sculpture, printmaking and drawing. He is regarded as one of the founders of Impressionism although he rejected the term, and preferred to be called a realist. A superb draftsman, he is especially identified with the subject of the dance, and over half of his works depict dancers. Edgar Degas was born on July 19, 1834, in Paris, France, he was the eldest out of five children.
His full name is Hilaire-Germain-Edgar DeGas. His dad was a banker, and the family was moderately wealthy. At 11 years old, he enrolled at Lycee Louis-le-Grand, and graduated in 1853 at the age of 17 with a bachelor in Literature. His mom died when he was 13.
His dad wanted him to be a lawyer, so he began later on that year. He put very little effort into it, for he wanted to be an artist.

The next year, he turned one of the rooms in his house into a studio, and enlisted at the Louvre as a copyist (a person who goes and copies art for studying). While painting there one day, he met Jean August Dominique Ingres, one of his favorite artists. Ingres told him, “Draw lines, young man, and still more lines, both from life and memory, and you will become a good artist.” In April of 1855, he received admission to Ecole des Beaux-Arts.
Degas first paintings were historical. He submitted his work Scene of War in the Middle Ages to the Paris Salon in 1865, but it received no attention, and he never did a historical painting again. His work began to gain awareness when he previewed Scene from the Steeplechase: the Fallen Jockey in the Paris Salon of 1886. This piece shows the transition into his new phase of work, a more contemporary manner of art.

In 1864, he met Éduard Manet while at the Louvre; they were copying the same Velázquez painting. Afterwards, he became friends with Manet and his work became more like the Impressionists. With the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, he enlisted in the National Guard. At rifle practice, he found out that his eyesight was defective, which became a problem for the rest of his life.

Over the years, Degas had become increasingly disappointed with the Paris Salon, so he started showing his work off with the Impressionists in 1874. He took over for organizing the exhibits, which the Impressionists soon realized was a bad mistake. Degas put anybody into the Show, which angered everybody. Plus, he hated being called an Impressionist; he didn’t believe he was one. But what Degas didn’t realize is that his experiment with color and form, his pictures of daily life, and his friendships with all the artists, specifically Mary Cassatt made him an Impressionist. In 1886, the group broke up because they couldn’t take Edgar anymore.

Slowly, his financial situation improved, and he was able to start collecting the art he had been forced to sell. Degas idolized Delacroix, Ingres, and Daumier, which were represented well in his compilation, as well as El Greco and other classical artists. His work like the Glass of Absinthe (painting), 1876, and Little Dancer Aged Fourteen (statue), 1881, were well received by the art community, and his popularity increased along with his earnings. A majority of his art is oil paintings, but many of it is done with pastels, like The Tub, 1886, and his other bather pictures.

Degas stopped making art in 1912, for he was forced out of his longtime residence on rue Victor Masse due to a demolition of the building. He spent the last years of his life wandering around Paris nearly blind. He never married nor had any children. His only assistant was Mary Cassatt. Edgar Degas died on September 27, 1917. His paintings, pastels, drawings, and sculptures are on prominent display in many museums.

Turn Your Photos Into Beautiful Oil Portrait Paintings

Photo to Painting is the genre of painting based on using the camera and photographs to gather information and then from this information creating a painting that appears photographic. Are your walls bare of photographs but your hard drive is overflowing with holiday and family photos that have never been sorted? If yes, then it’s time for you to find out how you can create unique photo gifts using photo gift ideas from www.daydaypaint.com , they will turn your photos into beautiful 100% hand painted paintings made by professional portrait painters. A great idea for anniversary gifts, birthday gifts or unique gifts for any occasion.

The following is some suggestions for digital photo gifts to commemorate any occasion:

Wedding Photo Gifts: Choose a candid or formal digital photo and Day Day Paint will recreate it as a genuine oil painting, watercolor, pastel or Acrylic work of art. They’ll supply the frame too, and your gift will be one the wedding couple will cherish for many years to come. A Day Day Paint designer will help you choose the best shot and customize the background for a unique photo gift.

Baby Photo Gifts: A new baby in the family always gets the cameras working overtime. From the hundreds of candid shots taken, choose that one perfect shot and ask Day Day Paint to make it into a permanent oil painting. For the new parents or grandparents it’s a photo gift idea that will become a family heirloom.

Children and Pets: Our children and our pets are always favorite subjects for photography gifts. Make your next gift photos original pastel drawings from digital photographs. Large or small, framed or unframed, a pastel drawing makes a unique photo gift that will be cherished for a lifetime. And for photo gifts of lasting quality Day Day Paint uses only best art supplies and materials.

Vacation Memories: It’s great to have a photo album of a special vacation, either in print or on line, but it’s even better to create a unique photo gift using the best shot of the trip and give it to your fellow traveler. Ask Day Day Paint to create a genuine watercolor from the photograph, choose a frame, and you’ve created a custom photo gift that will enhance the decor of any home and be a constant reminder of a beautiful time and place.

For custom photo gifts for any occasion, the Day Day Paint online art gallery is the first place to shop. You’ll find custom paintings from photos in the medium of your choice - oil, watercolor, pastel, charcoal, pencil or Acrylic – and in a wide choice of sizes and frames. Day Day Paint has a staff of highly professional and experienced artists and designers who guarantee the quality. They will take photos of the finished paintings and email them to you. They do not send paintings out until you are full satisfied.

Norwegian Painter Edvard Munch

Edvard Munch was a Norwegian painter and printmaker whose intensely evocative treatment of psychological themes built upon some of the main tenets of late 19th-century Symbolism and greatly influenced German Expressionism in the early 20th century. One of his most well-known works is The Scream of 1893. Edvard Munch was born on December 12, 1863, in Loten, Norway, Edvard was the second of five kids. His dad was a doctor, and a really pious man, whose extreme religious views left a lasting, obsessive impression on him throughout his whole life. His family moved to Oslo the year after he was born, because his dad had gotten a job in the area.

In 1877, his oldest sister died from tuberculosis, too. This was the only sibling he was close to, and it upset him that his two favorite people in his world were gone. He became slightly paranoid, thinking that death was following him everywhere. He had nightmares about this, and his art reflects them later on.

In 1886, he held an exhibition in his home town of Oslo, with his new pieces he had been working on. The town people revolted. They said the paintings were too violent, too macabre to be put on display. One of the ones he showed at the time was The Sick Child, finished right before the show. It portrayed his sister on her deathbed, and he and his mom around the bed. The colors were all dark and dreary to set the mood, and it was painted with long, quick brush strokes, which makes the painting seem more violent than it is.

Three years later, he traveled to Paris. Edvard went to all the impressionism and post-impressionism shows to try to gain some new techniques and ideas. He disliked Monet, thought Van Gogh was alright, and absolutely loved Paul Gauguin’s work. Edvard said it was “reaction against realism” and that “art was human work and not an imitation of nature in Gauguin’s paintings.” Gauguin would take humans, and instead of painting every detail, he would simplify them, and Munch was very impressed with that.

In 1892, the Union of Berlin Artists invited Munch to its November exhibition. Munch went, but the show closed after one week, because his paintings had caused so much disruption among the critics. Munch said afterwards, “Never had I had such an amusing time-it’s incredible that something so innocent as painting could have created such a stir.”

The next year, Edvard painted The Scream, his most famous painting.

In 1899, he began to have an intimate relationship with a woman named Tulla Larsen. She was an upper class lady, who was several years older than him. They traveled to Rome together, and she expected Edvard to propose to her. He never did, and when they returned home to Germany, she proposed to him. He gave in under pressure, but then ran away to Paris. Tulla followed him there, but he denied her again, so she married one of his younger colleague. He felt betrayed, and painted the scene in several paintings.

In the 1940’s, the Nazi’s officially took over the government, and he feared for his art even more. The pieces that had been in German Museums had been removed, and either destroyed, put into warehouses, or smuggled out to the Netherlands. Edvard died on January 23, 1944.

French Famous Artist Edouard Manet

   
Edouard Manet was a French painter. One of the first 19th-century artists to approach modern-life subjects, he was a pivotal figure in the transition from Realism to Impressionism. Edouard Manet was born on January 23 of 1832 in Paris, France. His father was Auguste Manet, who worked at the Ministry of Justice, and his mother was EugEnie-DEsirEe Fournier. 

In 1839, he went to school at Canon Poiloup in Vaugirard and studied French and the classics. He went to College Rollin in 1844. In a year, his interest was only in drawing courses. His father didn’t allow Edouard to be a painter, instead he wanted him to be a lawyer but Edouard refused. Edouard also took an entrance examination for naval college, but he failed twice so his father gave in to his son’s desire to paint.
In 1850, Edouard joined the studio of a classical painter named Thomas Couture and after six long years, Edouard was able to set up his studio which he shared with a painter named Albert de Balleroy. He painted “The Boy with Cherries” in 1858 and “The Absinthe Drinker” in 1859. In 1865 one of his paintings, called Olympia, which was created two years ago, brought about a scandal. It was a painting with the use of oil on canvas. This created scandal because they judged it as a painting which displays immorality.
From 1870 to 1871, during the German-Franco War, Edouard Manet served as one of the National Guard’s staff deputy and attested Paris siege. And in February 1871, he went home to his family, but returned to Paris before the Commune. He saw his studio half-destroyed, but he had stored his canvases in a safe place. An art dealer named Paul Durand-Ruel bought nearly everything in Manet’s studio, paying 50,000 in francs. In year 1872, he went to the Netherlands where he was influenced by Frans Hals’ work. As a result, Edouard painted Le Bon Bock (“The Good Pint” 1873), which was a great success at the Salon’s exhibition in 1873.
In 1877, Edouard was inspired by the lady of demimonde when painting the art “Nana”. He also painted “The Plum” which was considered one of his key artworks. In “The plum”, a lonely woman rests her thin elbows on a marble top of a certain cafE table. Along with this, he also painted “The Blonde with Bare Breasts” in 1878 and “Chez le Pere Lathuille” which was yet another one of his major works (created on 1879 as well). From then on, Edouard did several numbers of pastels. He took George Moore under his wing in 1879. Moore was an Irish future painter and novelist who frequently joined Edgar Degas and Manet at CafE Nouvelle-Athenes.
In 1880, Eduardo had an exhibition at the periodical La Vie modern, but unfortunately, his legs were affected by a problem that seemed to be fatal. In April 6th of 1883, after painting lilacs and roses, Edouard took to his own bed. Gangrene had developed in his left leg. Not long after, he died and was buried in Passy's cemetery. His early masterworks, The Luncheon on the Grass and Olympia, engendered great controversy and served as rallying points for the young painters who would create Impressionism.

2018年3月21日星期三

Photo To Paintings Custom Portraits For High School Or College Graduation Party

If you have a high school or college graduation party coming up, think how nice it would be to present the parents or grandparents with a black and white or colored pencil portrait drawing of your special graduate. Day Day Paint's design editors work together with their expert pencil portrait artists to create portraits that are guaranteed to pleased you.

Successful portrait drawings capture the essence of a subject with an economy of line and space. Talented pencil portrait artists, either by natural talent or training, are able to convert lines into personality and shading into character and mood. Experienced artists can do this whether their subjects are in motion, posing live, or in photographs.

Day Day Paint , the highly successful on line art gallery photo to canvas website, employs many artists, each one specializing in particular styles or art media, and among these are experienced pencil portrait artists creating custom portrait drawings from digital photographs. The daydaypaint.com offers custom Graduation Portraits in a full range of media: oil, watercolor, acrylics, pastels, charcoal, and pencil. And there are kinds of sizes and frames to suit any taste. Another amazing thing about portrait drawings is very cheap.

Photo to Beautiful Oil Portraits On Canvas

Day Day Paint put together a talented group of professional artists, editors and technicians to create real paintings from photographs, we never imagined we'd have the worldwide success we now enjoy. It is successful supplying photos on canvas in an amazing variety of styles. Ans we also offer Oil Painting Reproductions, genuine oil painting duplicates of fine art masterpieces created by professional artists using the highest quality oil paints and canvas.

Day Day Paint has a huge variety of choices in oil, acrylic, pastels, watercolor, charcoal, and pencil
museum quality paints, canvas, and framing services,
hundreds of gift ideas and suggestions for every occasion,
excellent technical support at every phase of execution,
easy ordering and payment procedures,
prompt shipment worldwide, including express shipment, and
guaranteed customer satisfaction (we don't ship your items untill you confirm okay)

The following is just a few of Day Day Paint's gift ideas:
A wedding portrait in oil as a gift for newlyweds painted by hand by one of Day Day Paint's talented artists and guaranteed to become a family heirloom.
A family reunion group photo using our photos to canvas process (and we can work from more than one photo to get the best shot of everyone).
A watercolor portrait of a favorite pet, framed and ready to hang, for the perfect birthday gift.

Whether you want an oil painting, a watercolor portrait, a photos on canvas print of your favorite landscape, a gift painting to commemorate an important event, or just simply a self portrait in charcoal or pencil from your favorite photograph, you will find everything you want at surprisingly affordable prices.

Whether you're looking for photos to canvas, genuine oil paintings from photos, or photos on canvas altered according to a specific style, you'll find one-stop shopping with Day Day Paint.

Landscape Paintings Is Not Hard To Creat

Landscape Paintings, the earliest forms of art around the world depict little that could really be called landscape, although ground-lines and sometimes indications of mountains, trees or other natural features are included. A landscape painting captures the feel and the beauty of a certain special place. A good landscape painting will make the viewer feel that they are right there in the painting. They feel as though they can breathe the very air of the painting and reach out and touch the landscape as if it were real. But to make an audience feel this way when they view your landscape painting, you are going to need a bit of practice.

A landscape painting should make you feel like you are in a deep space. When viewing it you should feel as though you were right inside the painting. It should be both spellbinding and beautiful. To attain this, there are some tricks to it. The first trick is to use clarity. An example of this is to show a thick fog over some hills in the distance, and have the fog fade as you get to the hills towards the front. A second trick is to use a winding path, such as a trail, a creek, or a river. This makes people feel as though they are deep within the painting. A third trick is to use size to your advantage. A tree up close should be large, while a tree far away should be small. This enhances the viewer's feel of the distance and expanse of the landscape.

One thing you have to remember about a landscape painting is that it doesn't have to show exactly everything you see. If you don't want to paint every tree you see, then don't. If you want to put a bird in the sky, then put a bird in the sky. If you don't like the color of some flowers, then feel free to change the color to one you approve of. If you don't like to include the people you see in the landscape, then take them out. If you want to change the color of the sky from a grey evening to a dark evening, then change away.

Use your imagination and do as you will. It is all up to you. Your goal with the landscape painting is to dramatically capture the feel of the landscape, not to show everything in it. If a landscape painting was supposed to be an exact duplicate it would be called a photograph, not a painting. A great landscape painting will enhance your artist capabilities. It can also help you make some extra pocket change being how popular these paintings are. Anyone would want a beautiful landscape painting to compliment there home or office. With all of these tips and tricks in mind, you should be on your way to creating a masterful landscape painting. It isn't hard to creat, you also can do it!

Famous Artist Leonardo Da Vinci

Leonardo Da Vinci was an Italian Renaissance polymath: painter, sculptor, architect, musician, scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist, and writer whose genius, perhaps more than that of any other figure, epitomized the Renaissance humanist ideal. Leonardo has often been described as the archetype of the Renaissance Man, a man of "unquenchable curiosity" and "feverishly inventive imagination".

Leonardo Da Vinci was born in an Italian town called Vinci. He lived in a time period called the Renaissance, when everyone was interested in art. Even though Da Vinci was a great artist, he became famous because of all the other things he could do.

He was a sculptor, a scientist, an inventor, an architect, a musician, and a mathematician. When he was twenty, he helped his teacher finish a painting called The Baptism of Christ. When he was thirty, he moved to Milan. That is where he painted most of his pictures. DaVinci's paintings were done in the Realist style.

2018年3月20日星期二

Handmade Oil Painting Reproductions To Decorate Your New Home

Home decorating is an art. If you are in the process of decorating your first home or apartment but don't have the budget to buy designer furniture, genuine heirloom carpets or even one fine art oil painting to hang on the wall, you do still have options to create a beautiful home environment for much less money.
With your decorating ideas in hand and some patience to shop, you will find that there are middle range and discount home furnishing stores and warehouses selling good quality copies of designer furniture and fittings, and a careful selection of well-coordinated pieces will help you obtain the tasteful and fashionable decor you desire.

When it comes to choosing accent pieces and artwork for your walls, there is a valuable source of fine art oil paintings as accessible to you as your nearest computer with Internet - Oil Painting Reproductions, a service of Day Day Paint, the premier on line art gallery website offering photo to canvas and paintings from photos, as well as genuine 100% hand-made fine art oil paintings of masterpiece works of art.
If your new living room would be perfect with a framed landscape by Claude Monet hanging over the fireplace, you can have it in as little as ten days, and at a remarkably reasonable cost.
 
The Day Day Paint team of talented and experienced artists recreate line-for-line and stroke-for-stroke the great fine art oil paintings of the masters using the highest quality oil paints and canvas. They have hundreds of masterpiece works in their gallery for you to choose from, and a wide selection of canvas sizes and frames. Day Day Paint is so certain that you will be pleased with your oil painting reproductions that they make!

2018年3月19日星期一

Photo to Painting Portrait Drawing

Portrait is a painting, photograph, sculpture, or other artistic representation of a person, in which the face and its expression is predominant. Portrait drawing dates back in history to the ancient cave drawings, almost exclusively depicting animal forms that had been created by artists in prehistoric times. Portrait drawings of the human form were found later in the tombs of ancient Egypt and in feudal Europe and Asia, but portrait drawing only came into its own as an art form during the Northern and Southern European Renaissance and Baroque periods.

Now, the best skills of the camera and artist can be combined to produce portrait drawings of the highest quality without the subject ever posing for the artist. Day Day Paint offers portraits from photo images painted in oils, watercolors, acrylics, pastels, charcoal and pencil. They employ talented artists specializing in the various media to ensure an accurate and beautifully finished portrait painting or portrait drawing every time.

Portrait drawings in pastels, charcoal or pencil make elegant, personalized gifts for holidays, anniversaries, birthdays, graduations and weddings and you will be pleasantly surprised at how reasonably priced they are. Custom paintings from Daydaypaint.com, everything is so simple and easy!

Difference Between PU Frames And Wooden Frames

Which material of Frame will you choose? The two main materials used in framing paintings are PU and wood. This is a manmade material used in various products like foams, toys, fabrics, belts, sandals, bags and more. Many factories have started manufacturing PU frames. These frames are used to frame nearly every medium from oil paintings to charcoal and pastel drawings.

There are three main advantages of using PU frames:

PU frames are much lighter than wooden frames.
PU frames are relatively cheaper than wooden frames.
PU frames are unaffected by insects.

The three main disadvantages of PU frames are:

They sometimes have a “cheap” look.
They break easily.
While framing, they are more sensitive and therefore harder to handle.

The second framing option is using wood.  Wood is a strong material with the ability to creates a variety of colors, designs and textures.  The wood can be covered by paper, plastic, PU and by paint. Low quality wood is usually covered by other materials whereas, high quality wood is typically only covered by a transparent varnish.   Wooden Frames for Sale

There are 3 advantages in using wooden frames:

The wood has a natural look.
It is strong and can be used for large paintings.
It is more flexible during the framing process.

The disadvantages of wooden frames are:
It is heavy.
It is more expensive than PU frames.
Wood can warp as the climate changes.

So when you choose a frame for your painting, you should consider the price, weight, design and strength. If you order your paintings from Daydaypaint.com,they will supply you free frames and more kind advices.

Napoleon Crossing the Alps by David

French painter Jacques-Louis David painted Napoleon Crossing the Alps in 1800. This painting's original dimension is 261 cm × 221 cm. And it is located at the Musee national du chateau de Malmaison,in Rueil-Malmaison, France. Do you know this painting's background? Here, let me tell you this history.

In 1799, Napoleon determined to return to Italy to reinforce the French troops in the country and retake the territory seized by the Austrians in the preceding years. In the spring of 1800 he led the Reserve Army across the Alps through the Great St. Bernard Pass. The Austrian forces, under Michael von Melas, were laying siege to Massena in Genoa and Napoleon hoped to gain the element of surprise by taking the trans-Alpine route. By the time Napoleon's troops arrived, Genoa had fallen; but he pushed ahead, hoping to engage the Austrians before they could regroup.The Reserve Army fought a battle at Montebello on 9 June before eventually securing a decisive victory at the Battle of Marengo.

The installation of Napoleon as First Consul and the French victory in Italy allowed for a rapprochement with Charles IV of Spain. While talks were underway to re-establish diplomatic relations, a traditional exchange of gifts took place. Charles received Versailles-manufactured pistols, dresses from the best Parisian dressmakers, jewels for the queen, and a fine set of armour for the newly reappointed Prime Minister, Manuel Godoy.

In return Napoleon was offered sixteen Spanish horses from the royal stables, portraits of the king and queen by Goya, and the portrait that was to be commissioned from David. The French ambassador to Spain, Charles-Jean-Marie Alquier, requested the original painting from David on Charles' behalf. The portrait was to hang in the Royal Palace of Madrid as a token of the new relationship between the two countries. David, who had been an ardent supporter of the Revolution but had transferred his fervour to the new Consulate, was eager to undertake the commission.

On learning of the request, Bonaparte instructed David to produce three further versions: one for the Chateau de Saint-Cloud, one for the library of Les Invalides, and a third for the palace of the Cisalpine Republic in Milan. A fifth version was produced by David and remained in various of his workshops until his death. Different people have different view to the Napoleon Crossing the Alps,some people think it stiff and lifeless,some people think it is the promotion for Napoleon,some people hate it badly,they think it is David paintings life end,for David became Nanpleon’s sole artist. In my opinion,the paintings show a very nice image of Napleon portrait.It can express the Napleon’s confidence to cross the Alps to get more triumph. Especially the turning horse let the Vicotry atmosphere out apparently.

How to Choose Oil Paintings for Your Rooms

Nowdays Internet has significantly changed the art market. Perhaps, now more than ever we truly have the choices to purchase an artwork that touches our heart. Yet, while the Internet can offer us an unprecedented number of options, buying art online has its own nuances. However if you use the power of Internet, an artwork that you find irresistible is right at your fingertips. Oil Paintings Online Store
Making any purchase is an emotional behavior. Normally when you make a purchase you should use logic as opposed to acting on impulse so that you get a good deal and purchase the item that best suits your needs. However, art is personal and beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Therefore, in this instance I believe you should forget about logic and use your emotions to choose your artwork. Heeding your gut instinct is always a good idea when purchasing art, but there are some practical considerations to take into account as well.
What subject matter interests you ? What colors do you prefer ? You don’t need to be exact about the theme because as you are browsing you’ll find many subjects that will interest you. For example, for an office you may want subjects such as inspirational, motivational or vintage. For a kitchen you may want to browse subjects such as still life or cuisien. There are a wide variety of subjects available. It is probably best to have a specific subject or piece already in mind and then locate it on the internet.

Giuseppe Arcimbold Paintings Are Fantastic

Giuseppe Arcimboldo was an Italian painter best known for creating imaginative portrait heads made entirely of such objects as fruits, vegetables, flowers, fish, and books – that is, he painted representations of these objects on the canvas arranged in such a way that the whole collection of objects formed a recognizable likeness of the portrait subject. Arcimboldo is known as a mannerist in the 16th century. The Mannerism was a transitional period from 1520 to 1590, which adopted some artistic elements from the High Renaissance and influenced the other elements in the Baroque period . The Mannerist tended to show close relationship between human and nature.
                           
Arcimboldo also tried to show his appreciation of nature through his portraits. In The Spring, the human portrait was composed only of various spring flowers and plants. From the hat to the neck, every part of the portrait, even lips and nose, was composed of the flowers while the body was composed of the plants. On the other hand, in The Winter, the human was composed mostly by the roots of the trees. Some leaves from evergreen trees and the branches of other trees became hairs while a straw mat became the costume of the human portrait.
               
Giuseppe Arcimboldo, was not only creative in his work but also way ahead of his time. He created beautiful portraits with drawings of vegetables, fruits, flowers, leaves, books, fish on a canvas in such a manner that the whole arrangement of these items made splendid paintings.

You can keep gazing at his work and be amazed at how he’s made grapes look like hair, or apples representing cheeks, or potato used as the nose, quite fascinating! Archimboldo was often referred to as the ‘Father of Surrealism’, because his paintings had the element of oddness around them and at the same time he had an innovative style that probably set him apart from other artists during the Renaissance period. Another painting based on the four seasons is called ‘Autumn’ made from potatoes, grapes, carrots etc., I like the way he has shown the beard and moustache with some kind of fern. Elements of nature form an important part in his paintings. This one is called Water, and doesn’t it look a bit creepy, made from 60 species of marine life, like seals, turtles, sharks, crabs, oysters and coral. Arcimboldo was certainly imaginative!

Van Gogh The Starry Night Painting


The Starry Night was painted by Vincent Van Gogh in 1889. Widely hailed as Van Gogh's magnum opus, the painting depicts the view outside his sanatorium room window at night, although it was painted from memory during the day. Since 1941 it has been in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.

Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh has risen to the peak of artistic achievements. Although Van Gogh sold only one painting in his life, the aftermath of his work is enormous. Starry Night is one of the most well known images in modern culture as well as being one of the most replicated and sought after prints. From Don McLean's song 'Starry, Starry Night' (Based on the Painting), to the endless number of merchandise products sporting this image, it is nearly impossible to shy away from this amazing painting.

The center part shows the village of Saint-Rémy under a swirling sky, in a view from the asylum towards north. The Alpilles far to the right fit to this view, but there is little rapport of the actual scene with the intermediary hills which seem to be derived from a different part of the surroundings, south of the asylum. The cypress tree to the left was added into the composition. Of note is the fact van Gogh had already, during his time in Arles, repositioned Ursa Major from the north to the south in his painting Starry Night Over the Rhone.

Gustav Klimt Painting The Sunflower

The Sunflower was painted by Gustav Klimt in 1907. The Sunflower is unusual in Klimt's paintings of trees and flowers in that there seems to be a certain anthropomorphic element. Once immediately thinks of Van Gogh's sunflowers, which were almost self-portraits. However, Klimt's flowers are still in situ, growing in the garden, while Van Gogh's have been picked and arranged in a vase.

Van Gogh's sunflower paintings are still lifes, whereas Klimt's images are details of the landscape. The shape and leaves in The Sunflower is remarkably like the form of the lovers in The Kiss. The two works were exhibited for the first time in 1908 at the Art Show Vienna.

Unlike the earlier landscapes from around 1898 to 1902, the painting of sunflowers are no longer concerned with mood; rather, Klimt is fascinated in a more objective way by the organic life that simply exists, independent of human intervention. The geometrical composition of his painting is no longer merely used for decorative effect, but to reinforce the artist's deatched observation of the scene while delighting in the opulence and abundance of nature.