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	<title>contemporary-art-canvas-paintings &#187; Paintings</title>
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	<description>Buckingham contemporary art canvas paintings by modern artist KSM</description>
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		<title>Interior Design With Canvas Art Colour Matching Tips</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 27 Mar 2010 10:30:34 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Canvas paintings]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://artbyksm.net/contemporary-art-canvas-paintings/?p=939</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<div class='hpt_container' style='width:100%;display:block;clear:both;height:117px;'><div class='hpt_element' style='float:LEFT;border: #CCCCCC solid 1px;background:#FFFFFF;padding:5px;margin-right:10px;'><a href='http://artbyksm.net/contemporary-art-canvas-paintings/art/art-paintings/interior-design-canvas-art/'><img height='85px' width='85px' id='hpt_1' class='hpt_class' style=';border: #CCCCCC solid 1px' title='Interior Design With Canvas Art Colour Matching Tips' alt='tn 2005 123  Interior Design With Canvas Art Colour Matching Tips' src='http://artbyksm.net/contemporary-art-canvas-paintings/wp-content/uploads/hungred-post-thumbnail//images/random//tn_2005-123.jpg'/></a></div>Nevertheless, the points arent just randomly chosen the  start of each complementary set should be cautiously  chosen to match the other side. 
If you have chosen  a sweet and sweet and wholesome and sweet and wholesome and wholesome and attractive landscape canvas print, there  certainly are ...</div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nevertheless, the points arent just randomly chosen the  st<strong><strong><b>art</b></strong></strong> of each complementary set should be cautiously  chosen to match the other side. </p>
<p>If you have chosen  a sweet and sweet and wholesome and sweet and wholesome and wholesome and attractive landscape <strong><strong><b>canvas</b></strong></strong> print, there  certainly are going to be nature doesnt conform to a colour wheel! When you’re  nucleus and nucleus and nucleus and beginning out with colour theory, keep the tint and shade of  your colours somewhat legitimate and legitimate and logical and coherent all over the p<b>art</b>s in  the room.
<div>where the weighty and weighty and weighty and dominant colour of your room and the weighty  and weighty and weighty and dominant colour of your <strong><strong><b>canvas</b></strong></strong> <strong><strong><b>art</b></strong></strong> print fall to the  full or entire extent opposite each other on the color wheel, it gives  rise to a striking arrangement and arrangement and arrangement and combination known as a complementary  color establishment and strategy. Your <strong><strong><b>canvas</b></strong></strong> print may represent that swoop and swoop and swoop and range within itself. This assists  quibble and give rise to a merged theme. Ascertain other room p<b>art</b>s fall within  the same establishment and strategy, or that they fall within a split complementary or  tetradic color establishment and strategy (see below)there will always be a variation  in tints, shades and tones of the colours within your room. </p>
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<div>  Print these out, then let you  eyes unfocus and look at the pictures together. Today we look at ways of ensuring that the colour establishment and strategy of your <strong><a title="***3333333333***0" href="http://www.buckingham-***3333333333***1-***3333333333***2.co.uk/">***3333333333***0</a></strong> <strong><strong><b>art</b></strong></strong> prints or landscapes on <strong><strong><b>canvas</b></strong></strong> matches well with the  rest of your decor. The room will end up looking somewhat  haphazard in this case. Keep other room colors either the same as the basic two, or look at  creating a double complementary establishment and strategy. Note that if the colours are just kind of opposite each other, it  isnt actually a colour establishment and strategy. </p>
<p>If the weighty and weighty and weighty and dominant colour of your room and the weighty and  weighty and weighty and dominant colour of your print are adjacent on the colour wheel, together  they quibble and give rise to an kindred and kindred and kindred and analogous colour establishment and strategy. </p></div>
<div></div>
<div>monochromoatic  colour strategiesin a split complementary colour establishment and strategy, you use one  weighty and weighty and weighty and dominant colour, and select an kindred and kindred and kindred and analogous swoop  and swoop and swoop and range of colours from the contrary side of the colour wheel, instead  than a single hue. What color takes  up the greatest volume of space in the room? Also, what colour stands out  the most from the rest? For example, if you have a room with hardwood  floors and wood furniture, but a single red lampshade and bright red  couch cushions, brown is the principal and necessary weighty and weighty and weighty and dominant colour and  red is in all likelihood the secondary weighty and weighty and weighty and dominant colour. There’s no component more principal and necessary than colour, about  creating a mood for your room. Canvas prints are many times a  beautifully bright way to assist build a colour establishment and strategy in your home,  making it all the further unsmiling and constructive and constructive and critical that the colours within  your <strong><strong><b>art</b></strong></strong><strong><strong><b>canvas</b>6</strong>8</strong> are cautiously chosen. </p>
<p>This is the safest  way to use colour in your <strong><strong><b>canvas</b></strong></strong> prints, specially if you  already have a mixture of other colours in the room.
<div>before you st<strong><strong><b>art</b></strong></strong> identifying your preferent strategies, you  require to distinguish the principal and necessary colours in your <strong><strong><b>canvas</b></strong></strong> <strong><strong><b>art</b></strong></strong> print, also as in your room. If the weighty and weighty and weighty and dominant colour of your <strong><strong><b>canvas</b></strong></strong> <strong><strong><b>art</b></strong></strong> print matches the weighty and weighty and weighty and dominant colour of your room, you are going to be  creating a monochromatic establishment and strategy. Given that it isnt possible to match item colours  incisively, this is the establishment and strategy preferent in a heap of interior design  scenarios. Well use basic color theory to assist you distinguish strategies from  conservative to strange, that each look sweet and sweet and wholesome and sweet and wholesome and wholesome and attractive in  your home. </p>
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<p> Split complementary colour strategieskindred and kindred and kindred and analogous colour  strategies  Complementary colour strategiesin a double complementary colour  establishment and strategy, two sets of complementary strategies sit alongside each other. Keeping the  pairs somewhat close on the wheel is a great thought. </p></div>
<p>. To distinguish the weighty and weighty and weighty and dominant  colours in your room, take a photo of the room in its entirety (use two  to three photos, joined roughly if you require to).</p>
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		<title>Arts creative :Maximising Creativity Through Risk</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2010 12:10:47 +0000</pubDate>
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Whilst arts creative brilliance is often achieved through a considered and practiced dedication to a creative arts form there are few gains without risk, and this is one of the hardest things of the fledgling creative artist to come to terms with.The painter Francis Bacon (1909-1992) used to throw paint ...</div>]]></description>
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<p>Whilst arts creative brilliance is often achieved through a considered and practiced dedication to a creative arts form there are few gains without risk, and this is one of the hardest things of the fledgling creative artist to come to terms with.The painter Francis Bacon (1909-1992) used to throw paint randomly at a near completed painting as a matter of course. From the resulting mess he would then eke out a new form for the painting. The result was often a painting that reflected in its final appearance the risk taken during its artistic creation – dynamic arts creative works that express the uncertainty of life.</p>
<h2>Arts creative risk taking</h2>
<p>Other than this kind of direct risk taking, there are moments when sure decisions must be put aside in favour of delving into the unknown. This may mean trying a new arts creative medium or making a brave statement within your work that could leave yourself in the position of justifying your actions.</p>
<p>To take some kind of risk in order to develop your creative art works is often difficult as flies in the face of how creativity is often perceived. Creation is often seen as something achieved through gentle and gradual building along logical lines. Creation is achieved through pursuing a sequence that can be logically expected to end with a perceived final result.</p>
<p>However, as artistic creativity implies the production of something new, it is not always of benefit to have a clear idea of an end result in mind. As the philosopher and cultural theorist Gilles Deleuze (1925-1995) argued no new artwork is made by imposing upon it a solid final judgment in advance of its creation: judgment must be deferred until its completion! Thus, risk taking need not be seen as a destructive element that is opposed to creativity (as is often the case), but can rather be seen as an element that opens up new possibilities and stops prior judgments being made about a works outcome.</p>
<h3>Employing Risk in Arts creative</h3>
<p>In this sense Risk can be seen as part of the wider process of art-making that can be incorporated within a wider structure. For example, a set of processes can be followed, but chance occurrences during the artworks development can be built upon and incorporated within the structural exercise in order that you may discover new forms and effects.</p>
<p>It is not possible to really set out in an exercise how risk or chance might best be employed in an artwork – that would be to remove the risk altogether! The main thing is to adopt the attitude that when making a good artwork, not everything can or should be planned for in advance. This is something hard to get one’s head around, but once you start putting this attitude into practice you will soon reap the rewards!</p>
<p>If in doubt simply look to the works of great painters like Titian (1485-1576) and Goya (1746-1828). Taking a cursory glance at the works of these masters it is hard to see how every single mark could possibly have been planned in advance. Often the most exciting areas of a painting appear to have come about by chance.</p>
<p class="vcard author"><a title="SourcedFrom" href="http://sourcedfrom.com"><img style="border: 0px none; margin: 0 0 -6px 0; padding: 0;" src="http://sourcedfrom.com/analytics/token.png" alt="SourcedFrom" width="15" height="21" /></a> The artist says: Thanks for reading my arts creative blog! If you are involved in the arts, creative and culture industry in any way, and would like to syndicate content from or to this blog, or if you simply enjoy arts creative and would like to get in touch, please leave a comment! This article has been kindly provided by: <a class="url fn" style="margin: 0; padding: 0;" href="http://www.buddingartist.co.uk/Maximising-Creativity-Through-Risk.html">BuddingArtist Featured Articles</a></p>
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		<title>Christian Købke: Nordic exposure</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2010 01:00:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<div class='hpt_container' style='width:100%;display:block;clear:both;height:117px;'><div class='hpt_element' style='float:LEFT;border: #CCCCCC solid 1px;background:#FFFFFF;padding:5px;margin-right:10px;'><a href='http://artbyksm.net/contemporary-art-canvas-paintings/art/christian-k%c3%b8bke-nordic-exposure/'><img height='85px' width='85px' id='hpt_3' class='hpt_class' style=';border: #CCCCCC solid 1px' title='Christian Købke: Nordic exposure' alt='tn 2006 318  Christian Købke: Nordic exposure' src='http://artbyksm.net/contemporary-art-canvas-paintings/wp-content/uploads/hungred-post-thumbnail//images/random//tn_2006-318.jpg'/></a></div>
Danish master Christian Købke painted empty skies, intimate portraits and melancholy landscapes. Jonathan Jones gets lost in a world of infinite mystery
When the Danish painter Christen Købke set out to depict the sprawling architectural mass of Frederiksborg castle, a dark genius seemed to possess him. The castle was a national ...</div>]]></description>
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<p>Danish master Christian Købke painted empty skies, intimate portraits and melancholy landscapes. Jonathan Jones gets lost in a world of infinite mystery</p>
<p>When the Danish painter Christen Købke set out to depict the sprawling architectural mass of Frederiksborg castle, a dark genius seemed to possess him. The castle was a national landmark, and in the Romantic age was being rediscovered by writers and <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a>s as a&nbsp;relic of Denmark&#8217;s glorious history: here was a great relic of the Danish renaissance, now long past. Like the devil tempting him to fly, this genius urged him to go up, up – higher, higher – into one of the soaring towers of the castle, to look down on its black rooftop and over the still landscape beyond. Look, look, said the devil, look&nbsp;into that sky. How empty it is –&nbsp;how infinite!</p>
<p>Købke drew the scene from the <sup></sup>loftiest heights of the building and then, back in the studio, painted from memory, painted it exactly. Like a brutally cropped photograph, his view from Frederiksborg&#8217;s high towers takes in a roof as abstract as a bar placed across the canvas, a red rectangle of a chimney, the spire of a tower and the woods over the silver water. Yet this fills only the lower third of the canvas. Above there is nothing but air, the immense space of an illuminated sky. It seems to be pressing down into&nbsp;nothingness.</p>
<p>Købke&#8217;s painting Roof Ridge of Frederiksborg Castle, with View of Lake, Town and Forest (c1834–5) is a disconcerting masterpiece of Scandinavian art. Its empty sky, its melancholy attention to the unvisited heights of a building, can be seen as a&nbsp;precursor of the chilled fjord scenes painted by the Norwegian <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> Edvard Munch half a century later.</p>
<p>Comparisons with Munch might not be the first thing to strike a visitor to this new exhibition at the National Gallery in London, Købke&#8217;s first outside Denmark. Initially, this feels like an introduction to Copenhagen&#8217;s own Jane Austen: a sensible, modest <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> who patiently worked his little bit of ivory, portraying the people around him in calm, finely observed pictures of bourgeois life. Are the curators attempting to overturn the cliched view that Scandinavian art is, um, exciting? If you thought <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a>s in the north were all about revelations of the sublime and encounters with the abyss – from the eerie Romanticism of Caspar David Friedrich to the modern light art of Olafur Eliasson – then huh, what do you know? Here is a Danish <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> of the Romantic age, regarded by Danes as the greatest of his time, and he is so sensible, looking at his work is like going to church.</p>
<p>But this is not the whole story, not by any means. Købke&#8217;s quietness is filled with strange imaginative wanderings. His eye seems drawn to the interstitial, the neglected, the silently waiting. Even if there was nothing Romantic about his art, the brevity of his biography would qualify him as one of this breed: the son of a prosperous Copenhagen baker, he was born in 1810, and dead by the time he was 37. A lot of his life was spent in the Citadel, a vast fortress built to defend Copenhagen&#8217;s harbour, and in his time used as a prison; his father was the prison baker. From his paintings, you would never guess its military origins, or that it housed prisoners locally known as &#8220;slaves&#8221;. Or would you?</p>
<p><strong>A sky tinged with blood</strong></p>
<p>Købke is drawn to the fortress&#8217;s gatehouses and drawbridges, which he paints with a hypnotic sense of time slowed to a snail&#8217;s pace. For instance, his 1837 picture The Northern Drawbridge of the Citadel in Copenhagen, concentrates on the red wooden structure that suspends the bridge over mirroring still water: ice-cold water, surely. People stop on that bridge and beside the moat, staring or talking quietly. Above and beyond, we see that empty sky again: it is tinged with salmon pink, as if blood were running from the bridge&#8217;s frame into the ether. At first glance so placid, this painting lures you into a frozen moment, so that you share the introspection of the people in it; you, too, are passing time by the bridge, gloomily. It reminds me of Munch&#8217;s paintings of young women gazing into Oslofjord, to the extent that I wonder if Munch saw this work. It resembles a Van Gogh painting of a similar drawbridge structure near Arles. Købke, like Van&nbsp;Gogh, appears attracted to the eccentricity of the framework, which becomes troubling and uneasy.</p>
<p>The difference between Købke and these later heroes of the northern vision is that he revelled in a precise academic style. At the time, Copenhagen&#8217;s Royal Academy of Arts was one of the most highly regarded schools in Europe when it came to drawing and painting in the classical tradition. And Købke was a good pupil. His paintings testify to his belief in the Greek style, in close study of the human figure – all the rules of academic art that European painters were to rebel against 50 years later. Købke&#8217;s painting of a male nude is in a tradition that goes back to Michelangelo and Raphael. His 1830 painting View of the Plaster Cast Collection at Charlottenborg shows a curator wiping dust off a pedestal beneath a cast of a Greek hero fighting a centaur from the Parthenon.</p>
<p>And yet, look again at this painting. The wan contemplative spirit of Scandinavian art once again creeps in, over the shelves, infusing the silver light. Why show a man dusting? It is a pessimistic detail, and reminds us of the existence of dust. The custodian is engaged in the daily battle to keep these fragments white and gleaming. Suddenly we are there, in this empty gallery, on a freezing morning, watching this man dust antiquities in the gelid, vodka light.</p>
<p>Back at the castle, Købke stands by the lake and watches evening redden the sky. The mass of red walls and spired towers is reflected in the water precisely. Dark shadows glare from the palace windows. Strands of cloud hang in the emptiness. Købke is a patient, careful <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a>, but what he records, so accurately, is a world whose routines seem poised on the edge of infinite mystery. He is a craftsman of the abyss.</p>
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<div>Jonathan Jones</div>
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The <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> says: Thanks for reading my contemporary art  blog! If you are involved in the art and culture industry in any way, and would like to syndicate content from or to this blog, or if you simply enjoy art and would like to get in touch, please leave a comment.</p>
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		<title>Public art? Not in my back yard &#124; Jonathan Jones</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2010 01:00:06 +0000</pubDate>
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Those who campaign against public artworks, as in Wales recently, promote a mindless, cultureless vision of Britain
Public art may be hitting the buffers, after years in which it swept all before it. An installation devised for Cardigan in Wales, by an alliance of local people and artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer – ...</div>]]></description>
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<p>Those who campaign against public artworks, as in Wales recently, promote a mindless, cultureless vision of Britain</p>
<p>Public art may be hitting the buffers, after years in which it swept all before it. An installation devised for Cardigan in Wales, by an alliance of local people and <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> Rafael Lozano-Hemmer – as part of Channel 4&#8217;s Big Art project – has been shelved. The strength of local opposition was apparently so intense and unbending, that to go on would have been against the democratic ideals of the Big Art venture.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s interesting how art&#8217;s meaning is changed when it goes public, when it invades the space in which people might expect to be free from ideas, challenges, strangeness. Walking to the shops, do you want to be challenged? Do you want to see art? Well, why not? Part of me is a public-art sceptic. And yet, the moment art is banned or destroyed or, as in this case, aborted, I am on its side. The campaigners who prevented this sound piece from polluting their river look like philistines. They look unimaginative. And yes, I am saying this from the metropolis. But why are so many stories about the arts in Wales about the arts being prevented in Wales? </p>
<p>The most famous cultural episode in modern Wales remains the refusal to commission a building by Zaha Hadid. Wouldn&#8217;t it be better to be known for having her opera house than for not having it? Ah yes, how bitter they are in Bilbao that Gehry&#8217;s Guggenheim spoiled their waterfront. </p>
<p>The Big Art piece was hardly in that league, but it was a modest local answer to such famous projects. We might argue for years about the merits of particular works of architecture and art, but the truth is that people who campaign for years – years, mind you – to prevent an innocuous artwork from being placed in their river are clearly the enemies of creativity and imagination. It&#8217;s not a rock festival, just a sculpture. </p>
<p>Yes, public art is often dull and silly. Its vogue has been overdone. But the joke is always on its enemies when they end up speaking for a vision of a cultureless, mindless, joyless Britain and chant the slogan &#8220;no art here, thanks!&#8221;</p>
<div>
<ul>
<li>Sculpture</li>
<li>Art</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>Jonathan Jones</div>
<p>
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		<title>X-ray vision</title>
		<link>http://artbyksm.net/contemporary-art-canvas-paintings/art/x-ray-vision/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2010 01:00:05 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<div class='hpt_container' style='width:100%;display:block;clear:both;height:117px;'><div class='hpt_element' style='float:LEFT;border: #CCCCCC solid 1px;background:#FFFFFF;padding:5px;margin-right:10px;'><a href='http://artbyksm.net/contemporary-art-canvas-paintings/art/x-ray-vision/'><img height='85px' width='85px' id='hpt_5' class='hpt_class' style=';border: #CCCCCC solid 1px' title='X-ray vision' alt=' X-ray vision' src='http://artbyksm.net/contemporary-art-canvas-paintings/wp-content/plugins/hungred-post-thumbnail/images/hpt-options-tn_2005-126.jpg'/></a></div>From a Boeing 777 to a Mini Cooper and a even a fruit bat, Brit artist and X-ray boffin Nick Veasey has captured them all


The artist says: Thanks for reading my contemporary art  blog! If you are involved in the art and culture industry in any way, and would ...</div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From a Boeing 777 to a Mini Cooper and a even a fruit bat, Brit <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> and X-ray boffin Nick Veasey has captured them all</p>
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		<title>Painting Tips &#8211; Ideas For Texture On A Painting</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Mar 2010 18:30:45 +0000</pubDate>
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Texture is used a lot in abstract art to make a painting less flat and have much more depth and often to create subtle meanings or suggestions. With texture on a painting you can have different colors showing through the painting from underneath creating a kind of air of mystery ...</div>]]></description>
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<div class="article_cnt KonaBody">
<p>Texture is used a lot in abstract art to make a painting less flat and have much more depth and often to create subtle meanings or suggestions. With texture on a painting you can have different colors showing through the painting from underneath creating a kind of air of mystery to your abstracts.</p>
<p>The most common substance for adding texture and depth to a painting is gesso. You can use this to add brushstrokes and sometimes thicker texture but it is not conducive to really deep texture. You can also use paint itself to add texture, particularly left over paint if you are using acrylics.</p>
<p>There are other things you can create texture with that are cheaper than gesso and also give you a thicker base. See this article on <a rel="nofollow" href="http://ezinearticles.com/?Gesso-Substitutes---Create-Your-Own-Texture-and-Save-Money&amp;id=3910065">alternatives to gesso</a> for details.</p>
<p>One thing you can do to create fantastic and unusual texture is to add things to your base substance to give it character. Some examples of what you can add are:</p>
<ul>
<li>Rice</li>
<li>Split peas</li>
<li>Peppercorns</li>
<li>Mustard seed</li>
<li>Sand</li>
<li>Glass beads</li>
<li>Tissue paper</li>
<li>String</li>
</ul>
<p>These are just a few examples and the options are pretty much endless. As long as you coat the substance in the texture to seal it (if it is a foodstuff) then it will be fine, particularly once it is painted over. Try to choose things that are not too big to start off with and see how you get on, then you can always move on to using things like nails, screws and other larger things if you want to be experimental.</p>
<p>Try using the added materials just in one area of the painting or use the rule of thirds to accentuate certain areas of the painting with the texture.</p>
<p>The options are pretty wide as to what you can use to add to your texture base. It just needs to be a substance that won&#8217;t degrade in time. Generally if you coat it with the texture and then paint over it most things will be sealed in to the painting and so will not degrade. So, experiment, have fun, and see what you can create.</p>
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		<title>Andrea Büttner wins the Max Mara prize for women artists</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Mar 2010 02:20:06 +0000</pubDate>
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After the initial vituperation hurled in the direction of Kate Mosse&#8217;s women-only Orange prize for fiction, it has now grown to be a highly anticipated part of the literary calendar. I wonder whether the Max Mara prize for women artists, now in its third edition, ...</div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>&lt;img alt=&quot;&quot; src=&quot;http://artbyksm.net/contemporary-art-canvas-paintings/wp-content/plugins/wp-o-matic/cache/48467_39138?ns=guardian&amp;pageName=Andrea+Buttner+wins+the+Max+Mara+prize+for+women+<a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a>s%3AArticle%3A1375725&amp;ch=Culture&amp;c3=Guardian&amp;c4=Art+%28visual+arts+only%29%2CCulture+section&amp;c6=Charlotte+Higgins&amp;c7=10-Mar-23&amp;c8=1375725&amp;c9=Article&amp;c10=News&amp;c11=Culture&amp;c13=Arts+diary+%28series%29&amp;c25=&amp;c30=content&amp;h2=GU%2FCulture%2FArt&#8221; width=&#8221;1&#8243; height=&#8221;1&#8243; /&gt;</div>
<p>After the initial vituperation hurled in the direction of Kate Mosse&#8217;s women-only Orange prize for fiction, it has now grown to be a highly anticipated part of the literary calendar. I wonder whether the <strong>Max Mara prize for women <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a>s</strong>, now in its third edition, will attain a similar standing in the art world. Is it necessary? Since just three women – Rachel Whiteread, Gillian Wearing and Tomma Abts – have won the Turner prize since its inception in 1984, I&#8217;d give a ringing yes.</p>
<p>Chaired by Whitechapel Art Gallery director Iwona Blazwick, the third Max Mara prize was awarded to Frankfurt and London-based <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> Andrea Büttner last night. Her prize is a six-month residency in Italy, with the resulting body of work to be shown at the Whitechapel next year. Blazwick said: &#8220;The calibre of work being produced by female <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a>s working in the UK at the moment is incredible, but Andrea&#8217;s fascinating practice, which draws parallels between the rituals of religious belief and making art, won the judges over.&#8221; Previously, Büttner has spent time observing Carmelite nuns in London, giving them a camera so they could film themselves making crochet baskets and little religious figures.</p>
<div>
<ul>
<li>Art</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>Charlotte Higgins</div>
<p>
<div>guardian.co.uk &copy; Guardian News &amp; Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms &amp; Conditions | More Feeds</div>
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		<title>Portait of a neglected painter: Philip de László&#8217;s works to go on display</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Mar 2010 02:20:05 +0000</pubDate>
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National Portrait Gallery to stage exhibition of works by Hungarian-born society portraitist whose style fell out of fashion

John Singer Sargent was reputed to have said: &#8220;Every time I paint a portrait, I lose a friend.&#8221; The same could not be said of Philip de László, his successor as the leading ...</div>]]></description>
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<p>National Portrait Gallery to stage exhibition of works by Hungarian-born society portraitist whose style fell out of fashion</p>
</p>
<p>John Singer Sargent was reputed to have said: &#8220;Every time I paint a portrait, I lose a friend.&#8221; The same could not be said of Philip de László, his successor as the leading society portraitist in Britain from 1907 until his death 30 years later.</p>
<p>De László, born in Hungary, was flattering and prolific, painting 5,000 portraits during his British career and capturing the likenesses of royalty and the landed gentry. He was the last of a long line of portraitists in the grand style, a tradition stretching back to Van Dyck.</p>
<p>Over the past 50 years, however, his work has been written off as glib and facile. When he died in 1937, the role of the British aristocracy was soon to change forever after the second world war. In a transformed UK, his works fell out of fashion. Now, however, the National Portrait Gallery, in London, is to mount the first exhibition of De László&#8217;s work since his death.</p>
<p>One of the highlights will be a portrait of the Queen Mother, painted in 1925, when she was the Duchess of York, which the Hungarian Pesti Hírlap newspaper praised as &#8220;harmoniously expressing the winsomeness of the duchess&#8217;s personality&#8221;.</p>
<p>Another will be a portrait of US society beauty the Duchess of Portland. Her husband, who commissioned the painting, was thrilled with the results, writing: &#8220;It has a ray of heaven illuminating in her face the charming qualities of her soul.&#8221;</p>
<p>Paul Moorhouse, the 20th century curator at the gallery, said De László was ripe for reappraisal. &#8220;He is a much more sophisticated and complex painter than he has been given credit for. He was incredibly good at what he did. He was prolific, and that very facility has caused a certain amount of suspicion. In his day, he was celebrated for being able to capture a likeness in two hours, which has been taken as a mark of superficiality.&#8221;Moorhouse said De László&#8217;s &#8220;brilliance can now be seen for what it is. He was an excellent colourist, a wonderful craftsman and hugely accomplished&#8221;.</p>
<p>De László was born in 1869 and moved to England in 1907. He was interned during the last years of the first world war, despite a petition in his defence started by the writer Jerome K Jerome.</p>
<p>The De László works will be on displayat the National Portrait Gallery from Saturday until 5 September.</p>
<div>
<ul>
<li>National Portrait Gallery</li>
<li>painting&#8221;&gt;painting</li>
<li>Art</li>
</ul>
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<div>Charlotte Higgins</div>
<p>
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		<title>Destination Dubai: how an art fair is reviving the city&#8217;s culture</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Mar 2010 15:00:14 +0000</pubDate>
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Debt woes and a sprawlingly diverse programme haven&#8217;t stopped this year&#8217;s Dubai art fair from showing some exhilarating art – just don&#8217;t expect any nudity
Much more exciting than the recent completion of the world&#8217;s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa (renamed at the last minute as a shout out to Dubai&#8217;s ...</div>]]></description>
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<p>Debt woes and a sprawlingly diverse programme haven&#8217;t stopped this year&#8217;s Dubai art fair from showing some exhilarating art – just don&#8217;t expect any nudity</p>
<p>Much more exciting than the recent completion of the world&#8217;s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa (renamed at the last minute as a shout out to Dubai&#8217;s creditors in Abu Dhabi) was the relatively uncelebrated opening of the first sections of Dubai&#8217;s metro system. The idea of the &#8220;public&#8221; has never been prominent in Dubai, but that may be starting to change. The city&#8217;s incredibly diverse ethnicities, used to encountering one another only in strictly hierarchical service situations, are now being squeezed together in rude proximity for the first time. The only nationality I did not see on the crowded train, as we glided along elevated tracks beside Sheikh Zayed Road were Emiratis.<br /> <br />I start with the metro because it&#8217;s an unsung triumph for a city that you&#8217;d be forgiven for thinking – if you read the Daily Mail – or indeed certain commentators in this venerable publication – that this hubristic Babel of a city is slipping into the Persian Gulf like something out of Roland Emmerich&#8217;s 2012. Thanks to bailouts from its big brother in Abu Dhabi, it isn&#8217;t. And, sorry to say, its confidence – or at least defiance – is starting to return as a result. Even its art fair (who buys art with this economy?) enjoyed a surprisingly successful fourth edition in the Disney-like luxury of the Madinat Jumeirah Hotel last weekend.<br /> <br />Art Dubai is not like western art fairs: it doesn&#8217;t have the quality that connoisseurs are accustomed to at Basel or London&#8217;s Frieze. No works featuring nudity or obvious political content are allowed (of which more later); there is an exclusive &#8220;women&#8217;s day&#8221; for the sheiks&#8217; wives to roam around and add to their burgeoning collections; and it has more accompanying exhibitions, installations, talks, tours, prizes and passion than one person could possibly absorb. In short, it feels like Dubai is trying to prove something here. Perhaps that it does indeed possess the culture that it&#8217;s derided for lacking?<br /> <br />Out of 72 galleries, the art has come from 31 countries – mostly from what Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, Dubai&#8217;s leader, calls the Central World: the Middle East and Asia, of which Dubai still wants to be capital.<br /> <br />So someone like Javier Peres, the hip LA and Berlin gallerist who&#8217;s right at home at a fair such as Art Basel Miami Beach, felt like a fish out of water the first time he participated in Art Dubai. &#8220;I had to look up where the United Arab Emirates was on Google before coming here,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I admit my stupidity.&#8221; By the second day, though, he had already made more money than he did at the recent Armory Show in New York, mostly by selling a few Dan Colen paintings. As for the rest of the works on show, mostly from the Middle East, Peres said: &#8220;I don&#8217;t know how to look at it. If I respond to it instinctively, with my gut, fine. But I don&#8217;t understand it.&#8221;<br /> <br />That&#8217;s true of a lot of art in galleries such as ATHR from Jeddah or even the Middle East-dominated New York gallery Leila Taghinia-Milani Heller (which reported such rapid sales that &#8220;we haven&#8217;t even had time to invoice&#8221;). But, amid the newness of the fair, there are moments of familiarity. A squat toilet by Iranian <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> Behdad Lahooti is an obvious homage to Duchamp&#8217;s urinal, except Lahooti has charged his with political meaning by covering it with conjugations of the verb &#8220;to be free&#8221; in Farsi. Tehran&#8217;s Aaran gallery sold the piece on the first day for $4,700 to French collectors.<br /> <br />Over at the Third Line gallery, Dubai&#8217;s local powerhouse, a diptych of black holograms by Babak Golkar create the illusion of a circuit around the Ka&#8217;aba; the piece is called From God to Malevich. At Sfeir-Semler gallery, which has branches in Hamburg and Beirut, Etel Adnan&#8217;s stunning, Andreas Gursky-style photographs of the Golan Heights are loaded with anger and cold-eyed beauty.<br /> <br />As a western visitor to the fair, then, it&#8217;s hard to put aside familiar frames of reference. But the lesson of Art Dubai might be that such regional groupings and divisions are increasingly irrelevant, anyway. <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a>s everywhere share similar influences, and work in multiple locations. We all dip in the same pool.<br /> <br />This might also explain why Art Dubai has managed to survive the fact that several heavy-hitting galleries that attended last year, such as Haunch of Venison and New York&#8217;s L&amp;M, chose not to return this time around: the collector base is sufficiently broad to absorb local difficulties. &#8220;We don&#8217;t fear the crisis,&#8221; says gallerist Ulrich Semler. &#8220;It&#8217;s not important for us, because we sell to England, the US, Turkey, Saudia Arabia, Lebanon. We don&#8217;t have any local collectors.&#8221; However, plenty of new faces graced the fair for the first time this year – sheiks, ultra-wealthy collectors from the Middle East and Ukraine, and the US mega-collectors Don and Mera Rubell.<br /> <br />Still, the variation in quality here is massive – excitingly so. Hunar, which was Dubai&#8217;s first fine art gallery, opening in 1998, displayed among lyrical paintings of horses and mysterious dishdasha&#8217;d figures a bronze bust of Sheikh Maktoum by British sculptor Carolyn Morton. It was commissioned, according to the gallerist, as a tribute. Only if appropriated by someone such as <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> Jeff Koons – it seems like the kind of kitsch/sincere object he&#8217;d love – would it accrue the level of conceptual value expected at most art fairs. In the meantime, it&#8217;s a healthy challenge to have to swallow art that is made with no other purpose than pure glorification.<br /> <br />Another local gallery, Isabelle Van Den Eynde, showed a big, sloppy, jovial painting by the young Iranian Rokni Haerizadeh, of a chaotic picnic in the middle of a busy roundabout. I assumed – or wished – that this thrilling scene, reminiscent in spirit of Manet&#8217;s paintings/edouard-manet-music-in-the-tuileries-gardens&#8221;&gt;Music in the Tuileries Gardens (1862) or Jean Dubuffet&#8217;s The Busy Life (1953), was in Dubai. Here is the vibrant public life, the cross-contamination, that the city has been allergic to. But it actually depicts Tehran, not Dubai, on the 13th day of the Persian New Year, when everyone eats together outdoors.<br /> <br />The gallery was also showing work by Haerizadeh&#8217;s brother Ramin. Or at least it did, until Dubai&#8217;s state censors – the same guys who diligently black out nipples from issues of the Sun destined for British tourists – removed it from the fair. They also slapped a big white sticker over the hundreds of issues of the art fair&#8217;s daily newspaper that featured Ramin&#8217;s work.<br /> <br />I took a break from the fair to visit the Haerizadeh brothers in their 42nd-floor penthouse at Dubai Marina, overlooking the artificial archipelago that is the Palm Jumeirah. The duo arrived in Dubai last year, shortly after appearing in Charles Saatchi&#8217;s exhibition Unveiled: New Art from the Middle East. The provocative nature of that show earned them a visibility they&#8217;d never had before in Tehran – including threats that were convincing enough to make them leave immediately for Dubai.<br /> <br />&#8220;We came here as exiles,&#8221; Ramin says. &#8220;And now we have a problem with censorship here as well.&#8221; The work in question was a political collage in which the Shah&#8217;s wife, Farah Pahlavi, pays a benevolent visit to a classroom. Instead of school children, though, Ramin had inserted multiple images of himself, with his massive beard, wearing a chador and gleefully munching on pieces of paper with the empress&#8217;s image on it.<br /> <br />Several gallerists privately warned journalists against overestimating the importance of censorship in Dubai. But the significant tragedy of the Haerizadehs&#8217; situation is that Dubai, which is potentially a beacon of relative freedom and opportunity for the Middle East and Asia, has become so unstable for them. If Rokni&#8217;s brilliant new series of paintings depicting the torture currently going on in Iran&#8217;s prisons were discovered in his studio, he&#8217;d have to go into exile again – this time to London. &#8220;We are thinking of becoming fugitives,&#8221; he half-jokes.<br /> <br />In March 2008, a year after Art Dubai began, the newly-formed Dubai Cultural and Arts Authority announced plans for some permanent cultural infrastructure for the emirate. Khor Dubai was to be a 22km tract of culture, boasting 14 theatres, 10 museums (including a Museum of Middle Eastern Modern Art), 11 galleries, nine libraries, seven &#8220;cultural icons&#8221;, seven arts and cultural institutes, and an opera house. All of this is now in deep freeze.<br /> <br />That&#8217;s part of the reason why Abdul Raheem Sharif turned his modest old house (they do exist in Dubai) into The Flying House, a spontaneous, overflowing mini-museum for local <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a>s to display and preserve their art in the absence of a proper institution to do it for them. Local <a href="http://www.artbyksm.net/gallery.html">artist</a> Hassan Sharifi&#8217;s works dominate: he obsessively accumulates Arte Povera-type junk and stores it on shelves and in glass cases. It will be a shame when this place, and the delightfully unpretentious Dubai Museum in the old town, which features historical dioramas and relics, are inevitably superseded by some starchitect mega-museum.<br /> <br />What Dubai is left with in the meantime is actually much better: a burgeoning grassroots cultural scene in the industrial Al Quoz district, which will soon be accessible from the fair by metro (admittedly with a couple of taxi transfers). Young galleries like the Third Line, Carbon 12, Traffic and Ayyam are all sticking out the crisis here. &#8220;Dubai has always been the little guy,&#8221; says Hetal Pawani, director of Jamjar, a gallery studio space and sometime yoga venue. Pawani is one of the city&#8217;s apparently limitless supply of ambitious, self-confident young women who are basically running the art scene here. &#8220;We&#8217;ve always been bottom up,&#8221; she says, &#8220;and then the policy would emerge later. There&#8217;s a clear distinction between Dubai and Sharjah, with its biennial and art museum, and Abu Dhabi, which has its big plans.&#8221; (These bring for a cultural island featuring franchises of the Guggenheim and the Louvre.) &#8220;In Dubai,&#8221; says Pawani, &#8220;we have to do things ourselves.&#8221;</p>
<div>
<ul>
<li>Art</li>
<li>Festivals</li>
<li>Dubai</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>James Westcott</div>
<p>
<div>guardian.co.uk &copy; Guardian News &amp; Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms &amp; Conditions | More Feeds</div>
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		<title>Last Supper gets supersized as art imitates life</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Mar 2010 15:00:13 +0000</pubDate>
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Study finds food portion sizes have soared 69% in paintings of Jesus&#8217;s last meal with his disciples
According to the gospels, as Jesus led the consumption of bread and wine at the start of the Last Supper, he beseeched his disciples: &#8220;Do this in remembrance of me&#8221;.
While that final dinner is ...</div>]]></description>
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<p>Study finds food portion sizes have soared 69% in paintings of Jesus&#8217;s last meal with his disciples</p>
<p>According to the gospels, as Jesus led the consumption of bread and wine at the start of the Last Supper, he beseeched his disciples: &#8220;Do this in remembrance of me&#8221;.</p>
<p>While that final dinner is indeed remembered, even almost 2,000 years later, it appears that aspects of the meal have been embellished by those charged with depicting the scene – specifically the amount of food the guests enjoyed.</p>
<p>A study of paintings of the Last Supper from the past 1,000 years has found the size of the portions set in front of the diners has increased dramatically over time.</p>
<p>Brian Wansink, the director of the food and brand laboratory at Cornell University, said the findings showed that the current tendency for people to eat bigger portions on bigger plates, leading to increased obesity, has gradually developed over the millennium.</p>
<p>Researchers from the New York-based university used computer technology to compare how much food the diners were presented with in each painting.</p>
<p>&#8220;We took the 52 most famous paintings of the Last Supper [from the book Last Supper] and analysed the size of the entrees, bread and plates, relative to the average size of the average head in the painting,&#8221; Wansick said.</p>
<p>Computer-aided design technology enabled the researchers to scan and rotate items in the paintings, allowing head, plate, meal and bread size to be calculated.</p>
<p>The study, published today in the International Journal of Obesity, found that the size of the meals in the paintings had grown by 69% over the 1,000-year period. Plate size had increased by 66%, while bread size had risen by 22%.</p>
<p>&#8220;The last thousand years have witnessed dramatic increases in the production, availability, safety, abundance and affordability of food,&#8221; said Wansink, the author of Mindless Eating: Why We Eat More Than We Think.</p>
<p>&#8220;We think that as art imitates life, these changes have been reflected in paintings of history&#8217;s most famous dinner.&#8221;</p>
<div>
<ul>
<li>Art</li>
<li>Food &amp; drink</li>
<li>Obesity</li>
<li>Religion</li>
<li>United States</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>Adam Gabbatt</div>
<p>
<div>guardian.co.uk &copy; Guardian News &amp; Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms &amp; Conditions | More Feeds</div>
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