Posts Tagged ‘education’
Tuesday, May 4th, 2010
At Gadsden Elementary School, we are Setting the Stage for Excellence! We are honored to be a Title I Distinguished School, a Magnet School of Distinction, and a Magnet School of Excellence. We have been delivering a quality, Fine Arts education to students pre-K thru 5th grade for nearly 20 years. Due to budget cuts, our Fine Arts program is being taken away. We are applying through the Pepsi Refresh Project for a grant that will keep our award winning program alive. Please vote for us!
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Tags: Dance, drama, education, fine arts, Gadsden Elementary, inner-city school, Pepsi Refresh Project, Savannah, strings
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Monday, April 26th, 2010
Callanwolde Fine Arts Center is a non-profit community arts center offering classes for all ages in the visual, literary, and performing arts. Callanwolde presents arts events and is available for weddings and private events.
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Tags: Academy, Acrylic, acting, Adult, Arts, Atlanta, Ballet, Ballroom, Bridal, bride, Callanwolde, Calligraphy, camera, Center, children, classes, Coca, Cola, Dance, dancing, Darkroom, design, drama, Drawing, education, Event, Family, Fine, Fitness, Floor, Georgia, Historic, Jazz, Jewelry, Kindermusik, Knitting, Kundalini, Kung-Fu, landscape, Literary, Loom, Modern, music, oil, Painting, performing, photography, photoshop, Pilates, poetry, pottery, raku, Rental, Residence, Royal, sewing, Tango, Teens, textiles, visual, Weaving, Wedding, Writing, Yoga
Posted in fine arts | 1 Comment »
Monday, April 26th, 2010
You can now download this video to your computer to play offline anytime! At http://www.CullensAbcs.com find free children videos that are educational and entertaining, and activity idea videos for you. Also, learn more about Cullen’s Abc’s DVDs and add Cullen Wood as a friend at Facebook.
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Tags: abc's, art, Blot, child, children, Cloud, Crafts, Cullen's, development, education, kid, krafts, Painting, preschool, youtube
Posted in art paintings | 8 Comments »
Tuesday, April 13th, 2010
Students and faculty offer an inside look at the unique and exciting design area at the USC Roski School of Fine Arts.
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Tags: Angeles, art, Arts, california, college, design, education, Fine, Garner, Gayle, graphic, LA, los, of, Roski, school, Southern, University, USC
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Sunday, April 4th, 2010
Interdisciplinary Fine Arts Program | The Education / Consumption of Art
What and / or who is an educated comsumer of art?
interdisciplinary school education fine arts program consumption consumer standard art currency economy market
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Tags: art, Arts, consumer, consumption, currency, economy, education, Fine, interdisciplinary, market, Program, school, standard
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Friday, April 2nd, 2010
About: The Impressionists
A guide to the art movement known as impressionism in the 1800′s
Impressionism, French Impressionnisme, a major movement, first in painting and later in music, that developed chiefly in France during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Impressionist painting comprises the work produced between about 1867 and 1886 by a group of artists who shared a set of related approaches and techniques. The most conspicuous characteristic of Impressionism was an attempt to accurately and objectively record visual reality in terms of transient effects of light and colour. The principal Impressionist painters were Claude Monet, Pierre Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Alfred Sisley, Berthe Morisot, Armand Guillaumin, and Frédéric Bazille, who worked together, influenced each other, and exhibited together independently. Edgar Degas and Paul Cézanne also painted in an Impressionist style for a time in the early 1870s. The established painter Édouard Manet, whose work in the 1860s greatly influenced Monet and others of the group, himself adopted the Impressionist approach about 1873.
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Tags: About:, art, artists, degas, education, exhibition, facts, france, impressionism, Impressionists, knowledge, learn, Manet, monet, oil, Painting, Pissarro, salon, The, youtube
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Monday, March 22nd, 2010
This video is made for any person who wants to learn oil painting. This video will give you a solid base of knowledge. http://merrillk.com
Today, I am going to show you how to paint a puppy dog. I made this video for beginner to intermediate level artists, who wish to learn about traditional painting…I will try to show you how to paint. step by step. While I can imagine that painting a realistic looking puppy is intimidating for someone new to art, I will try to make my instruction as clear as possible, so that you can get in to great habits for the future. Once you are in good habits, you will progress very quickly.
I split this lesson in to four parts.
1.) Part one will cover what you need to know before you paint.
2.) Part two will give you an effective strategy for painting realistically The mentality of rendering (aka drawing what you see)
3.) Part three will walk you through the process of painting and I will give you tips while I paint. The process of “sculpting” a painting
4.) Part four will actually be a separate video and it will discuss glazing…a great finishing strategy. Glazing: Finishing a painting (Covered in another video)
Part 1.) I have two points to go over in Part 1-
1-1- First, pick a surface to work on. When I was learning painting, I would use cardboard in place of canvas to save money. Ten years later my original oil paintings are still in good shape. However, this would not be the case if I didn’t prime the cardboard with layers of Gesso. Without getting over technical, gesso gives your surface a protective layer that will prevent the oil from being over absorbed. Try to remember this silly saying, “Paint with cream, not with butter or milk!” No, im not saying that you should break out the dairy prodicts…..I am referring to the consistency of the paint. Cream is not a solid like butter …..and is not watery like milk. When you apply paint to a surface it should be creamy in texture. You can make the paint creamy by adding about three to four drops of painting medium to the paint that is sitting on your palette. The object in my hand right now is called a palette knife. I used it to mix the paint with the painting medium. For a long time, I considered this step trivial, but it makes a difference!
1-2 Oil Painters use mineral spirits to clean off their brushes and to thin out a paint mixture. Mineral Spirits is also known commercially as paint thinner and sold as an art supply called turpenoid for quadruple the price. You will only need a SMALL amount of Mineral Spirits because its very powerful. Use it sparingly when you wish to thin out your paint; because too much will make the paint runny and “milk-like” in consistency. Here is a great tip to remember when cleaning your brushes…..WIPE-DIP-WIPE. As silly as that sounds, commit it to memory….In other words….. wipe your brush with a paper towel…..Then dip it in to the mineral spirits and swish it around….followed by another wipe with the paper towel to take the extra spirits off your brush. The last wipe is especially important to prevent the excess mineral spirits from thinning out your paint too much
Part 2
Now you will learn a great strategy to help you paint what you see. I call this strategy, “jigsaw puzzle observation” because it is similar to putting a jigsaw puzzle together. Jigsaw puzzles are fun because you fit shapes together to create an image………I want you to think the same way when you paint. Try to see and identify shapes and then put them together like a puzzle. Painters sculpt and manipulate the paint on the surface of a painting until the shapes fit together as a recognizable image. Here….let me show you what I mean…..When you try this, I recommend that you get in the habit of looking at your reference image at least once for every five seconds; and then paint what you observed. After you get the bigger shapes in…..work your way down to the smaller shapes…….. If you feel that you cant work the paint any more. Let it dry and repeat this step on top of the dried paint. You have an advantage by using paint because it is opaque and it can cover over any mistake…… Take your time with this step. Skyscrapers cant be erected without solid supports and good paintings cannot be made without careful placement.
How to begin oil painting vido
Supply List
- Titanium White (paint)
- Raw Sienna (paint)
- Ultramarine Blue (paint)
- Ultramarine Purple (paint)
- Lamp Black (paint)
- Painting Medium (my favorite is called Liquin)
- Palette, Wax Paper or Aluminum foil (to mix the paint on)
- Mineral Spirits
- Canvas or Cardboard
- Gesso (white or clear)
- Paint Brushes (several sizes, tips, and softnesses……based on your preference)
- Cups for Mineral Spirits and Paint Medium
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Tags: artists, Beginner, brushes, by, canvas, cardboard, Demonstration, dog, education, for, gesso, ground, how, intermediate, liquin, mediums, oil, paint, paintbrush, painter, panel, Puppy, step, to, video, vido
Posted in art paintings | 8 Comments »
Saturday, January 2nd, 2010
What do the superstars of modern art have in common with the Vincent Black Shadow motorcyle? They share the stage at New York’s Museum of Modern Art, or MoMA. Produced for Public Television by Great Museums TV.
Duration : 0:56:37
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Tags: Abstract, architecture, art, cezanne, conservation, contemporary, cubism, dada, dadaism, dali, design, Drawing, duchamp, education, expressionism, film, gauguin, giacometti, gogh, lithography, matisse, media, miro, Modern, modernism, MoMA, museums, oldenburg, Painting, photography, picasso, pointillism, pollock, prints, screenprint, Sculpture, silkscreen, statuary, statue, surrealism, warhol, woodblock, woodcut
Posted in modern art | 1 Comment »