Showing posts with label flower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flower. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Abstract Flower Art

Abstract flower art might seem to be a contradiction in terms. If something looks like a flower then can it be abstract and if it's completely abstract, can it be a flower? Yet artists such as Georgia O'Keeffe, Arshile Gorky and Andy Warhol have done it. Taking their inspiration from nature, they have found ways to reinterpret the familiar, retaining its essence and enhancing the viewer's experience. The flower is repositioned, shown from different angles, examined up close. Carefully examined leaves, petals, stamens become the subject of an entire painting and take on a new meaning.

Georgia O'Keeffe wanted to grab the attention of busy New Yorkers when she produced her first flower paintings and she succeeded. Using her eye as though it were a zoom lens, she examined the flower up close and personal. The resulting paintings are rich, sensual and powerful celebrations of nature, reflecting both its simplicity and its complexity.

Abstract expressionist artist Arshile Gorky's beautiful painting Water of the Flowery Mill is a colourful and poetic composition which draws on his response to nature and nostalgic reminiscences of the garden he knew as a child. Gorky, was happiest when he was close to nature in Connecticut and found the landscape there evoked memories of this childhood home in Armenia. In this painting, he captures the essence of a vibrant, living garden that is as uplifting and joyful as a walk in the real thing.

Pop artist, Andy Warhol, also used flowers in an abstracted form as subject matter for a series of paintings entitled simply Flowers. Using a photograph of a small flower (the rare and endangered Mandrinette) by nature photographer, Patricia Caulfield, Warhol placed a series of coloured cut-outs of the flower head against a dark background, creating a simple but highly effective image that creates the illusion of flowers floating towards us.

Dutch artist, Greetje Feenstra, produces abstract flower art which is soft, subtle and romantic. Her work, like that of Georgia O'Keeffe, creates a larger than life image of a flower so that its beauty and intensity are magnified and stretched across the space of the canvas.

Scottish conceptual artist, sculptor and painter, Bruce McLean, is known for his witty and often subversive take on modern art but he has produced some fine abstract art inspired by gardens. His prints, Healing Garden, Pink Beach Towel and Pink Cava Lily are beautiful interpretations of the natural world as seen by the artist.

These artists are representative of just some of the many artists who have been inspired by garden flowers and foliage to create abstract art that is both intriguing and accessible. To experience something as familiar to us as the colour and greenery of our garden in an abstracted form is to refresh our appreciation of it and celebrate its ability to uplift and inspire us.

To see some inspiring examples of abstract flower art by the artists mentioned in this article see the page at http://www.abstract-art-framed.com/abstract-flower-art.html

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

The Beauty of Acrylic flower paintings

Acrylic flower paintings look very pretty and beautiful. People generally tend to purchase the original ones but even the reproduced aren't poor at all. With advanced printing technology, the imitated ones seem exact like the originals and also produce particularly brilliant colour combinations. These appeals to a lot of people as flowers have naturally vivid colours and people like to see it in their paintings.

Furthermore, printing technology has progressed to such a level that one can purchase enormously first rate canvas prints which look totally like the originals while keeping the actual brilliance of the painting safe too. The state in which a canvas print is made is same that of the standard paper prints excluding the fact that it is of museum quality canvas. They cost less while keeping everything same overtly. This is the reason why they are becoming awfully popular among people all over the world.

Due to its growing demand in the market, in addition to evolving art reproduction technology, purchasing acrylic flower paintings has become a very easy and pleasurable task. There are a number of art websites featuring artists from all round the world who submit high quality digital images of their finest pieces of art. Art for sale by artist do no limit themselves to only a few topics. In fact, it is wide ranging and limitless. The digital images when demanded are printed to produce first class art prints.

One just has to simply Google 'acrylic floral painting' and one will come across dozens of websites that deal with the same. There is no lack of artists or talents in the world and there is a fairly good chance of one finding one's perfect painting.

However, one must be careful before trusting any online store. There are some criteria that it should follow, example it should offers premium acid free canvas on which the image is to be printed, the ink used must be U.V. resistant and there should be customer reviews. Acid free canvas is vital as it resists staining and deterioration and the resistant to U.V means that the ink will not fade away due to the ultra violet fall out of the sun.

There are several talented acrylic flower painters in today's world. Whether one likes abstract floral, impressionist or realism style, one can be sure of finding a good one. Most websites also provide offer acrylic flower paintings in a selection of frames and sizes, depending upon what one needs. Hence, they are highly preferred.