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<p>[QUOTE="lloyd249, post: 874220, member: 1211"]do you agree with this statement ?</p><p><a href="http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/category/general-posts/" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/category/general-posts/" rel="nofollow">GENERAL POSTS</a></p><p><font size="6"><b>BRUSHSTROKES ARE THE PAINTER’S FINGERPRINTS</b></font></p><p><a href="http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/2014/05/23/brushstrokes-are-the-painters-fingerprints/" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/2014/05/23/brushstrokes-are-the-painters-fingerprints/" rel="nofollow">MAY 23, 2014</a> <a href="http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/author/admin/" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/author/admin/" rel="nofollow">RYAN WILLIAMS</a> <a href="http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/2014/05/23/brushstrokes-are-the-painters-fingerprints/#respond" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/2014/05/23/brushstrokes-are-the-painters-fingerprints/#respond" rel="nofollow">LEAVE A COMMENT</a></p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p>Have you seen the Google Art Project? Wow. That is something I could truly get lost in for a couple of hours at a time. The project provides the opportunity to not just look at the most famous works of art, but examine them in a manner of closeness that’s unavailable when standing in front of them in a museum – well without being grabbed by security at least. When you look at a painting you are learning about the subject of the painting and the intent of the artist. When you look closer, down to the texture of the canvas, you learn about the artist himself.</p><p>Just as every human has a unique fingerprint, artists have a unique brush style. The brush strokes tell a story much like a words in a book. Each stroke is a sentence. The strokes are weaved together in a section to form a paragraph. The sections form the entire painting or plot of the story. Each stroke must coordinate with the next one in order to create that visual harmony that so many of the world’s most famous paintings possess. What do these strokes tell us about these artists?[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="lloyd249, post: 874220, member: 1211"]do you agree with this statement ? [URL='http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/category/general-posts/']GENERAL POSTS[/URL] [SIZE=6][B]BRUSHSTROKES ARE THE PAINTER’S FINGERPRINTS[/B][/SIZE] [URL='http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/2014/05/23/brushstrokes-are-the-painters-fingerprints/']MAY 23, 2014[/URL] [URL='http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/author/admin/']RYAN WILLIAMS[/URL] [URL='http://ryanwilliamsart.com/artblog/2014/05/23/brushstrokes-are-the-painters-fingerprints/#respond']LEAVE A COMMENT[/URL] Have you seen the Google Art Project? Wow. That is something I could truly get lost in for a couple of hours at a time. The project provides the opportunity to not just look at the most famous works of art, but examine them in a manner of closeness that’s unavailable when standing in front of them in a museum – well without being grabbed by security at least. When you look at a painting you are learning about the subject of the painting and the intent of the artist. When you look closer, down to the texture of the canvas, you learn about the artist himself. Just as every human has a unique fingerprint, artists have a unique brush style. The brush strokes tell a story much like a words in a book. Each stroke is a sentence. The strokes are weaved together in a section to form a paragraph. The sections form the entire painting or plot of the story. Each stroke must coordinate with the next one in order to create that visual harmony that so many of the world’s most famous paintings possess. What do these strokes tell us about these artists?[/QUOTE]
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