Friday, October 30, 2009


What attractive and loving painting by artist Parker. This fair Pegasus and her baby are flying in front of a full moon accepted a castle. Take pleasure in Jeanie.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009



I am not a trained painter by any means; in information until freshly I tried to paint anything moreover abstract designs or simple stuff like cup cakes. But now I've tried to do a commission of two cute little girls and let me tell you faces are the hardest object to paint.

To be clever to show depth and skin tones and hair colors as sensible is so hard. Perhaps if I had gone to art educate and spent many hours of proper training doing nothing but this I wouldn't feel so panicky by this but anyway I am receiving off the track...

I am leaving to post the original picture that I finished up painting from, it's unusual from the one I thought I would use to start with. Then I will post the trail up paintings and hopeful the finishing painting when I am totally done.

Thursday, October 22, 2009


Village Paintings encompass within themselves not just colors and subjects, but also an overpowering sense of homesickness, longing for a way of life, which is or the majority cases has already rapid disappearing. Colorful images of costumed men and women planting, hoeing, harvesting, watering their crops or possibly heading to the market, projects a rather idyllic delusion of a village life, and yet they direct to make us yearn for something which is/in all probability never there.

Village Painting is not a very easy type to pin down. After all it's a topic which almost every traditions and people has dealt with –whether its the ode on a Grecian pot that Keats so expressively talks about in his poetry or the rural Warli paintings of Maharastrian tribal societies, Village paintings have had different and distant flung practitioners.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009


Using the rules of perception to create an illusion of depth is only one style of painting. In both medieval and modern paintings in Western art tradition, for instances, artists have presented their subjects without this, in a much flatter, unnaturalistic or unrealistic manner.

But let's bounce the in-depth analysis of perspective and the use of the picture plane, to rather focus on my key point: using perspective to create an illusion of depth in a painting is but one option available to you. You don't have to divide a painting into a foreground, middle ground, and background if you don't want to. You can adapt and change it as you like.

In these optical illusions, the brain interprets what the eye sees in a way that differs from measurable certainity.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009


A piece of canvas art can breath new life into a newly decorated room, or even an existing room that is lacking in any real feature. If it’s a working space, a piece of canvas art can really do justice on an office wall space. It can help create a calm working environment or a focal point in which to get you lost in during your lunch breaks.

Canvas paintings generate such an ambience in itself that even in the corner of your eye, you know that in the hustle and bustle of everyday life, you can take five minutes to gaze out and escape into an imaginary window of vivid colours, contours and brush strokes.


There is an ever-growing collection of modern art, canvas art, original canvas paintings and canvas prints available to one, so your choice in investing in a piece of canvas art is limitless. Who says you should only have one? Why not create and abundance of colors in your living space and place a canvas painting in each room to either match your surroundings or your mood. Create a focal point for you and your guests to admire and tell the world that canvas paintings are an essential piece of interior wall candy.

Monday, October 5, 2009


It can be dangerous knowing what to say when a friend asks you what you think about their latest painting or to give a critique. But there are some things you should never say if you value your friendship.
  • What is it?
  • Do you paint like this because you don't know how to paint real things?
  • Why don’t you use more paint? Why did you use so much [insert color]?
  • It looks so real, did you trace it?
  • Why didn’t you just take a photo?
  • The colors will match the curtains in my living room nicely. (The context of your conversation is art, not home decorating.)
  • Show it to me again when it's finished. What are you still planning to do with it?
Saying something pleasant about a painting rather than finding fault or giving 'helpful' suggestions doesn't mean you haven't looked properly or that you're ignorant about art nor unsophisticated. Ill-considered comments can be hurtful in ways you never intended. The person showing you their paintings is showing you something that's important to them, that they've spent time creating. Be happy for them that they're enjoying what they're doing, even if you don't like the result.

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