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Yuri [45]
3 years ago
5

The royal portrait figure of the kuba people shows the influence of Andy Warhol's silkscreens.

Arts
1 answer:
Mademuasel [1]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

The answer is "True."

Explanation:

Andy Warhol was an American artist who was popular for the <em>visual art movement. </em>He introduced the use of <em>"silkscreens,"</em> a process of putting the images of magazines and other paper media into canvass. This process allowed the duplication of people's art work which sounded similar to a screen printing machine but was only produced by hand.

He used this technique for the "Pop Art Movement." He chose several subjects and characters in order to portray his art. He also influenced the royal portrait figure of the Kuba People (an African tribe). This made the Kuba art more modern than all the other African art forms.

Warhol's technique influenced those in the African-Latin continents. It was followed by other methods which were more sophisticated such as those which used photo-silkscreen in darkrooms.

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how do you think the artist is communicating through the photographer portrait taking all the design elements into consideration
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by talking

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3 years ago
In pontormos the deposition of christ cross, what feature of mannerism can be seen?
Olenka [21]

It’s Easter weekend and so I have an excuse to present you with a strange yet elegant and beautiful version of the deposition of Christ from the cross. The Bible gave Renaissance artists ample stories to illustrate for church patrons none more so than the many scenes of Christ’s life and particularly his death and resurrection. I want to take you on a closeup journey through a favourite of mine – ‘Deposition’ by Pontormo. I’m always amazed that it was created in 1526-28, not closer to our own time.

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo (1494-1557), a Tuscan painter now familiarly known as Pontormo (the name taken from the town in which he was born), apprenticed in the workshops of a number of well known artists including Leonardo da Vinci and Piero di Cosimo. But it was the painter Andrea del Sarto who is considered his true teacher. (Click here to read my blog on this Renaissance master.) Pontormo was also heavily influenced by the work of his friend Michelangelo.

 

So let’s have a look at this intriguing painting. One thing I must say is that I don’t know what the accurate colour is for this painting but I looked at photos people have taken of it in situ and tried to match this image to those.

 

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, "The Deposition,"1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, “The Deposition,” 1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence

 

I’m going to bring a few things to your attention and then let you look further on your own.

Pontormo worked in the style of that would become known as Mannerism, a term describing a period of art between the High Renaissance  (think Raphael, Leonardo, and Michelangelo) and Baroque. Some of the qualities of this period can be seen in this painting by Pontormo where he uses contrasting colours, sometimes strange proportions, flattening of space, and an unstable perspective. There is less emphasis on a natural representation than there is on a painterly virtuosity and expression of drama.

 

In this painting you can see many bodies filling a space and yet, if you look closely, the space itself is so compressed that it’s difficult to imagine how all those figures can fit into it! Look at the figure whose head is above Christ’s. Just how is she supposed to squeeze in there? Where is her body and how do her arms attach to that body? And yet, somehow, Pontormo makes it work. This is part of the distortion seen in Mannerism.

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, "The Deposition,"1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence. Detail

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, “The Deposition,” 1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence. Detail

 

Further distortion can be seen in the curved bodies of Christ and the figure supporting him. Both have an elongated proportion and a serpentine, almost effeminate, curve that counterbalance each other.

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, "The Deposition,"1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence. Detail

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, “The Deposition,” 1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence. Detail

 

Another strangeness is how so many hands meet at the centre of the painting. Who does each arm and hand belong to? It’s hard to tell when you really start looking. Why would Pontormo create this confusion? Is this a reflection on the complexity of life?

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, "The Deposition," 1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence. Detail

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, “The Deposition,” 1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence. Detail

 

Furthering the idea that this isn’t a natural representation, let’s examine the skin-tight clothing that’s being worn. Most of the figures can be seen wearing this idea of clothing but its effect is most apparent on the almost androgenous figure top right.

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, "The Deposition," 1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence. Detail

Jacopo Carucci da Pontormo, “The Deposition,” 1526-1528, oil on wood, 313 x 192 cm (123 x 76 in), Capponi chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence. Detail

 

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7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
1.Why is exposure a subjective decision?
WINSTONCH [101]

Answer:

1.Why is exposure a subjective decision?  

Exposure is the amount of light you let in the camera to take the picture.  If you let in lots of light, the resulting picture will be bright and if, on the other way, you left only a little bit of light in the camera, the picture will be dark.

Although the camera could select the perfect exposure for a given photo, to enhance most/all details, the photographer should intervene to decide the amount of the light he wants in... to control the overall feeling/ambiance of the photo.  It's his photo, a second photographer might come in and make different decisions regarding the exact same location and composition.  Just like a painter will approach the empty canvas its own personal way.

2.How do our decisions about aperture and shutter speed influence the photography that we take?

Aperture and shutter speed are the tools used to control the amount of light in the camera, the exposure talked about in previous question.

The best way to discuss this is to take a classic example.  Imagine you want to take a photo of a fountain or a small waterfall.  There is movement there.  Is it better to take a photo with a very fast shutter speed to capture individual drops flying in the air, freezing the time?  Or to do a long exposure to show the flow of the water?  Maybe somewhere between those two extremes?  All these answers are good and depend on what the photographer wants to transmit as message.  That's where the subjectivity comes into play.  As you play with the shutter speed, you also need to adjust the aperture to control the overall exposure of the photo.

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