Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Renoir's moment.

File:Jeanna Samary-Renoir.png

This is a painting by Renoir.

It's beautifully crafted. The composition, the light, and the color are all delightful. And, it immediately catches your eye as a perfect portrait of a elegant woman at the dawn of the twentieth century.

I love most of Renoir's work.  He created many dreamy portraits and social scenes that vividly capture the culture and the mood of this key turning point in history. Yet, this one stands out to me as a landmark, not only in his career, but of all portraits. He captured a pure expression. An expression of expectancy, of satisfaction, and of light. Throughout the history of portrait painting, there are countless images of overly posed subjects, who lack raw emotion and who are frequently expressing an idea that someone has chosen for them or that they have artificially created. This painting shows a woman who was caught up for a moment in the hallway as she was on her way to an extravagant party. This portrait looks like a real moment of her life, which is especially unique at a time when cameras weren't all too easy to cart around. Moments couldn't truly be captured in their most basic, intriguing form. The light on her face looks natural, like it wasn't perfected in a studio. Her hands look as though she just clasped them in lighthearted exasperation. And, her face calmly asks you to hurry up, because you're going to be late.



The following images are portraits that are beautiful, but just not the same.














Sunday, February 23, 2014

Why people?


Recently, someone observed that my art focuses on people.
And, it, almost exclusively, does.
This man, shown above, is the subject of the next painting that I have in mind. In contrast to the excited girl and the pensive boy, this man is older and has a look of experience and perhaps a little annoyance. Similar to the other photos that I've painted from, this was taken on the streets of Manhattan. I've found that I've been seeing certain connections between the two finished pieces and this idea of one. The boy and the man both have an object (the boy has a train), and they are both looking at something to their right. The girl and the boy both have white shirts and have youthful poses. The man looks utterly weary, but his clothes have similar textures to those seen in the first two pieces. These are random observations, but they connect to my passion for people.
 I've always loved observing, studying, and understanding people. This passion is evident in almost all of my work as it highlights expressions, characteristics, and movements (one of the reasons that I love dance is that it's art you can actually be as a person). While the following observation is a less art related, I think I belong to a people-obsessed generation, with Humans of New York becoming a world wide phenomenon, personality quizzes consuming the internet, and the drastic rise of psychology majors in colleges and universities. And, as someone who religiously follows HONY, completes numerous personality quizzes daily, and may very possibly become a psychology major, I think people are the best subjects for art. I think art should be a beautiful idea, whether that beauty looks ugly or strange, art conveys a thought. And, people are endlessly confusing and intriguing all at the same time, so I continue to obsessively photograph, paint, and observe them, as creepy as that sounds.


And, that is why- people.











Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Watercolor experiments.


   I am currently working on finding a subject for my third multi - canvas painting. So, I decided to take this awkward-in-between place to show two small paintings that I did in my spare time.         

    These are two watercolor pieces that I did at home. I have very little experience with watercolor, but I've always loved it. The paint is unpredictable and magnificently sneaky. I found the most control when I used slicker paper because I could move the color and dilute it more effectively. I liked the way I could push the color around when making the structure of the face. It's very easy to create bone structure by diluting the color at the highest points of the bone and then by having softer shadows. More generally speaking, watercolor is great for shadow. You don't have to have ten different shades of the same color (as you would have to have with other paints), because you can simply add water. You can also add water that is tinted with a different color, which creates a more unique shadow. Under the cheek bone of the second woman's face, you can see that I shaded her face with red, which is not the color of her skin. 
With the first face, I was attempting to capture the features of my friend by exaggerating her eyes and her mouth. I was focusing on the style of my favorite New Yorker cover artist, who uses watercolor and ink. He frequently paints people who are well known, and he makes them recognizable by exaggerating their features in a way that still leaves a layer of the painter's vision while still having the click, in the viewers brain, of who the person is. I also wanted it to look like the blue was enveloping her. 
The second face is from the cover of a book. I left half of the face two dimensional to emphasize the drama of the other half. The brown strip along the side stemmed from an accident with her hair, and the blue bow-like object stemmed from my obsession with blue. The drip going down her neck was also a mistake, but I was excited about it because it's another unique benefit of working with watercolor. 

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Number 2.






          This is the piece that I just finished. It is the second of this collection. All of the paintings in this collection are each made up of multiple canvases put together, and each will be of a single figure. My last one was the boy looking over his shoulder. So far I plan to create a third, and then see if I'd like to do another one after that. The boy looks pensive and curious. The girl looks ecstatic. I'd like the next one to have a new idea or a new emotion so that the three contrast each other.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

         This is the boy who is photographed below. I am almost done with this piece. My last step is to paint the white part of the background with chalkboard paint. My goal, with the the chalkboard paint, is to have the viewer actually be able to write on the pavement with chalk.
     

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Next Painting


This is the next photo that I'm painting. I took it in Manhattan, last summer. So far, I have him on six different small canvases, and I'm thinking of adding more on the bottom (where the chalk is). I had the idea to use chalkboard paint for the ground, and then viewers could draw in what the chalk designs are, but I'm not sure if it will work. 
I love the movement in his body. You can tell that he just spotted something, or noticed the drawings. The light hitting the side of his face is also really lovely. And, overall, he's quite darling. 

I'll post a photo of the painting when it's a little farther along. 

Tuesday, November 12, 2013



This is the piece that I am just finishing up. For this piece I started with a photograph that showed the little girl dancing in the street. I was looking for a new image of dance, and I love her effortless, dramatic pose, but I wanted to paint it in a way that gave her action meaning. While looking for other images, I found a painting of the woman seen in the background. In the painting, she is leaning against a wall in an alley, with a gun in her hand. I like how everything about her seemed strong, dangerous, and dark. So, I decided to combine the two figures to create a juxtaposition of the different qualities. I'm planning to paint smoke in the background.