A group I'm in shares art, education, and life with each other. One of my friends in that group mentioned the last time I shared a picture that I have a great eye for art, which made me start pondering what attracts my attention and makes me like a picture.
It's not about beauty. With this one, it was easy. I caught my breath as soon as I saw it and knew I had to share it.
Pondering this made me think of something I read yesterday. The creator of the Bruce Lee ping pong ad, Polly Chu, was being interviewed, and this comment jumped out at me:
"Effective viral relies on an idea that is ‘very’ – very amazing, very funny, very disgusting, or very rude etc. Only when people find it interesting enough, they will spend time with it and share it to others. That makes it ‘viral’."
Rude or disgusting doesn't really do it for me, but "Very" is a great word to describe art when it really affects you, I think. I'm not even sure it needs any other word to follow it, because sometimes you can't really identify anything beyond the fact that it is Very.
I like the first one a lot. In all three I see movement, a sense of the subject and the background melding a bit so it's hard to tell where one ends and the other begins. The tones in the first one are amazing and warm. The second is beautiful texturally and also has the subject/background synchronicity, but it feels colder and more distant to me.
The water is beautiful in the third one, and it makes me feel the boat is a bit lost in the water, but it doesn't have much in common (to my eye) with the first two.
I find this subject particularly interesting because I have, on my Tumblr feed, a ‘classic artworks’ blog (more or less) and lately they’ve been posting a lot of paintings that I find really beautiful. Most have been of female subjects, but I don’t think gender has anything to do with it beyond that men in the time periods represented
I read someplace recently, and if I see the quote again, I'll post it: artists of all kinds, poets, painters, sculptors, musicians, all have good taste, and are rarely satisfied with what they create, so they keep working and working until they begin to match the reality with the image in their heads.
The first one caught my eye because it's dynamic, and the third was alright, but the second one held my attention and elicited the most visceral reaction. It's unsettling as I can't tell if the woman is emerging or being consumed. Then I noticed the dark smear on the right is a landscape and now I see a story here but can't tell what it is and I'm curious.
uschi
: I've seen something like that recently as well, except it was more of an encouragement to those just starting out. It said not to be discouraged because skills need time to develop even if the concept is already there. I liked that
Pondering this made me think of something I read yesterday. The creator of the Bruce Lee ping pong ad, Polly Chu, was being interviewed, and this comment jumped out at me: