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#oil on beaverboard
lovely-renard · 2 years
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hey congrats on ur milestone!! id love if u could do mine :>
pronouns: he/him
fandom: haikyuu (boy or girl idc)
about me: im autistic, i love painting and just art in general rlly. i love music, listening to music. my favorite genre is rock/metal. im trans ftm, im a leo sun!! and im an INTJ. im pretty introverted, i don't really like talking much around most people. the only people i really talk around are my family and my close friends. when i am with my friends i get loud though. i have shaggy, dark brown hair that's kinda curly. i wear glasses, i have grey eyes, and im not that tall LOLOL. im pretty chubby too. my friends say that im nice to be around when they need a good laugh and/or when they need to vent. im told that i smell like citrus (which makes me so happy ngl) my style is pretty tame. it's like a stoner bro vibe ive been told??? mixed with grunge. idk if that makes sense but yeah. im aloof and i say things that are on my mind when they come to my mind a lot without thinking.
hope that helps!!
anyway i hope you're having a lovely day and remember to drink water <33
I match you with ... Sugawara Koshi ♡
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Your relationship song : Loverboy (A-wall)
“This one looks weird…” you state, nose scrunches up and eyes squinting.
Sugawara stifles a laugh, your bluntness almost catching him off on guard. He should be used to it tho since he’s been with you for a while now.
“And why is that?” he asks you, glancing at the painting in front of you both.
“I don’t know… Something is off tho, that’s for sure.” You state, crossing your arms. Even if Sugawara doesn’t have the answer he asked for, he take your hand and leads you to another painting. “Alright, what about this one? Do you like it?”
You check the plate under the painting, the one where the information on the painting are : American Gothic. Grant Wood, 1930, oil on beaverboard.
“The guy totally looks like he’s going to murder someone with his pitchfork.” You comment, pointing the character on the right. Sugawara nods, adding his own comment “And the lady helps him choosing their victim. They probably discuss about their plans during dinner.”
You laugh, agreeing with him. “She also looks the type that like to stand by the window and gossip all day long. Look! you point at the window of the white house behind the two characters. I’m sure she just stands behind her curtains and observes anyone walking in the street.”
Sugawara meets your gaze and that’s enough to make both of you laugh hard, catching the attention of some of the tourists and people visiting the exposition. When you both calm down, you drag your boyfriend in another room, not wanting to be kicked out because you were laughing too loud.
“Wanna do it again?” Sugawara asks you. You tilt your head, not quite catching what he meant. “Make up stories about a painting?” he adds. You nod, squeezing his hand with yours. “Sure!”
This is the beginning of a new routine for each of your visit at a museum.
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xherrera2211993 · 1 year
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Zdzisław Beksiński (untitled, 1978, oil on beaverboard, 87 x 87 cm)
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Zdzisław Beksiński (1920-2005) "AA78" (1978) Oil on beaverboard Located in the Historical Museum, Sanok, Poland
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arinewman7 · 3 years
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Untitled
Zdzisław Beksiński
oil on beaverboard, 1973
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letsdancethepoch · 2 years
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The Man
The age flies by like a mad jet plane, containing a man hell-bent on suicide
he just doesn’t want to terminate himself but all around him, to diffuse the pain to as many as possible.
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kafkasapartment · 3 years
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Coldwell Bay, North of Lake Superior, 1923. Lawren S. Harris. Oil on beaverboard.
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designresearchy2 · 3 years
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Name: unknown, 1952
Artist:  Zdzisław Beksiński
Method: Oil on beaverboard
This piece by Beksinski 
Beksinski’s piece makes me wonder what this creature is, what the world it is in means. The piece features a chaotic and apocalyptical setting. With a grotesque creature walking on all fours. The creature’s face is covered with a cocoon like shape and almost resembles a dogs movements. The piece to me shows despair, chaos, isolation and sadness. The piece to me shows the chaos of life and what can happen inside it and how dark it can be in someone mind. 
There isn’t much known about the context of this piece or any definitive inspirations but it is known that he tried not to use inspiration from other artists to create his art trying not to create things similar. Although he was interested in artists Artur Grottger,  Paul Klee, Picasso and Henry Moore. He has credited music to be one of his main inspirations, funnily enough his art has been used for multiple music covers.  
It isn’t just the piece that captivates me only but the story of Beksinski, he lived a very hard life, he lost his son to suicide and also lost his wife a year later and along with that was killed in is own home over $100.
https://kafkadesk.org/2021/05/05/kafkagallery-zdzislaw-beksinski-devoted-his-entire-life-to-creativity/
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Lawren Harris; a smaller mountain sketch on the left and a larger studio interpretation on the right.
Left: Mountain Sketch (Lake and Mountain) c. 1928 Oil on Beaverboard, 11.75 x 14.75 inches
Right: Mountain and Lake, c. 1929, 36 x 45 inches
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mybeingthere · 2 years
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Lawren Harris (1885 – 1970) was a Canadian painter, best known as a leading member of the Group of Seven who asserted a distinct national identity combined with a common heritage stemming from early modernism in Europe in the early twentieth century. He played a key role in art in Canada, both as a catalyst and as a visionary of Canadian landscape art.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Lawren_HarrisHarris was absolutely committed to abstraction and to what he considered an experimental approach, but his classic winter and northern landscapes remain his most significant and resonant works. Harris’s sparse iconic landscapes of the north shore of Lake Superior, of the Rocky Mountains, and of the Eastern Arctic remain haunting and clear statements of an individual striving to go beyond the surface to a more profound reality.
https://hammer.ucla.edu/.../the-idea-of-north-the...
1. Lawren Harris, Lake Superior, c. 1923 Oil on canvas. 44 x 49 15/16 in. (111.8 x 126.9 cm). The Thomson Collection ©Art Gallery of Ontario ©Family of Lawren S. Harris..jpg
2. Lawren Harris, Lake Harbour, South Shore, Baffin Island, Morning, 1930 Oil on beaverboard. 11 7⁄8 × 15 1/16 in. (30.2 × 38.2 cm). National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; Purchased 1945. ©Family of Lawren S. Harris. Photo ©NGC.
3. Lawren Harris, Ice House, Coldwell, Lake Superior, ca. 1923 Oil on canvas. 37 1⁄16 × 44 15⁄16 in. (94.1 × 114.1 cm). Art Gallery of Hamilton; Bequest of H. S. Southam, C.M.G., LL.D., 1966. ©Family of Lawren S. Harris.
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art-now-poland · 3 years
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POLIS XIX, Miroslaw Trochanowski
I am inspired by my imagination, surrounding the world and life in many aspects. I am fascinated by the creation of expanse from geometric figures. I want to elicite unanswered questions. Questions with many answers. I want to evoke the mood of mystery I want the Viewer to feel the pleasure of watching. I like oil paints. I like a beaverboard.
https://www.saatchiart.com/art/Painting-POLIS-XIX/1029663/4018975/view
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MWW Artwork of the Day (8/17/21) Zdzislaw Beksinski (Polish, 1929–2005) AA78 (1978) Oil on beaverboard, 87 x 87 cm. Muzeum Historyczne, Sanoku (Poland)
Beksinski undertook painting with a passion, working intensely and whilst listening to classical music. He soon became the leading figure in contemporary Polish art. In the late 1960s, Beksinski entered what he himself called his "fantastic period", which lasted up to the mid-1980s. This is his best-known period, during which he created very disturbing images, showing a gloomy, surrealistic environment with very detailed scenes of death, decay, landscapes filled with skeletons, deformed figures and deserts. These paintings were quite detailed, painted with his trademark precision. At the time, Beksinski claimed, "I wish to paint in such a manner as if I were photographing dreams".
For more of this artist's work see this MWW gallery/album: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?vanity=TheMuseumWithoutWalls&set=a.3604231583015518
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clementhymelime · 3 years
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Zdzisław Beksiński (1920-2005)
“AA78” (1978) Oil on beaverboard
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xherrera2211993 · 1 year
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Zdzislaw Beksinski (untitled, 1973, oil on beaverboard, 122 x 98 cm)
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obsessivepropulsive · 4 years
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Tatooine Gothic (by me, a weirdo)
American Gothic, by Grant Wood, 1930, oil on beaverboard
Wood spotted the farmhouse and painted the people he imagined might live there, using his sister and his dentist as models.
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famous-paintings · 4 years
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American Gothic
Painter: Grant Wood
Created: 1930–1930
Period: Modernism
Locations: Royal Academy of Arts (2017–2017), Art Institute of Chicago Building (since 1930)
Media: Beaverboard, Oil paint
Subject: Farmer, Midwestern United States
Dimensions: 78 cm × 65.3 cm (​30 3⁄4 in × ​25 3⁄4 in)
Description;
American Gothic is a 1930 painting by Grant Wood in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. Wood was inspired to paint what is now known as the American Gothic House in Eldon, Iowa, along with "the kind of people I fancied should live in that house"
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starfleetsacademy · 4 years
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Grant Wood (b. 1891-1942) American Gothic, 1930 Oil on beaverboard
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