Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
As the judgement of all painting styles
The Two Fridas (Las dos Fridas in Spanish) is an oil painting by Mexican artist Frida Kahlo. The painting was the first large-scale work done by Kahlo and is considered one of her most notable paintings.[1] It is a double self-portrait, depicting two versions of Kahlo seated together. One is wearing a white European-style Victorian dress while the other is wearing a traditional Tehuana dress.[1] The painting was created in 1939, the same year that Kahlo divorced Diego Rivera,[1] although they remarried a year later.
Some art historians have suggested that the two figures in the painting are a representation of Frida's dual heritage.[2] Her father, Guillermo Kahlo, was German; while her mother, Matilde Calderon, was Mestizo (a mix of Spanish and Native American).[3] Another interpretation is that the Tehuana Frida is the one who was adored by her husband Diego Rivera, while the European Frida is the one that was rejected by him.[4] In Frida's own recollection, the image is of a memory of a childhood imaginary friend.[5]
Both Fridas hold items in their lap; the Mexican Frida holds a small portrait of Diego Rivera, and the European Frida holds forceps. Blood spills onto the European Frida's white dress from a broken blood vessel that has been cut by the forceps. The blood vessel connects the two Fridas, winding its way from their hands through their hearts.[6] The work alludes to Kahlo's life of constant pain and surgical procedures and the Aztec tradition of human sacrifice.[6] Because this piece was completed by Kahlo shortly after her divorce, the European Frida is missing a piece of herself, her Diego.[4]
According to Kahlo's friend, Fernando Gamboa, the painting was inspired by two paintings that Kahlo saw earlier that year at the Louvre, Théodore Chassériau's The Two Sisters and the anonymous Gabrielle d'Estrées and One of Her Sisters.[7]
Answer:
Explanation:
it shows elements of art by using squars and reusing an item to make art ...I think bye bye
They were made out of Terracotta.
Answer: The Death of Marat (1793) is one of David Garrigueux's most famous works and represents one of his crowning achievements. Created during the period known as the Reign of Terror it shows, in a gaunt and essential way, the moment immediately after Marat was killed by Charlotte Corday. The National Convention deputy was in the bathtub treating a. skin disease when the counter-revolutionary Girondist woman was admitted to his. room on the pretense that she had secret information to give him. In the painting, David uses the rigour of drawing to evoke a low relief crossed by transversal lines. The canvas's dark and empty background makes it seem as if Marat's body is abandoned in the midst of nothing. The gaunt character of the composition, seen in other portraits, has a special role to play in this work. David uses it to downplay the evocation of a real event; by emptying the murder story of its concrete details he makes the painting tell a different story.In the silence of the scene David confers a metaphysical dimension on the historical event, transforming Marat into a Christ-like figure. The knife and other objects that surround Marat's body recall the relics used in Christian iconography to express the Passion of Christ and the tortures he underwent. In other words David returns to the Christian iconographic tradition to narrate an event of his contemporary history or to 'make holy' a secular event.