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Tôi yêu Vangogh

Chủ đề trong 'Mỹ Thuật' bởi artistman, 15/07/2002.

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  1. Relax

    Relax Thành viên quen thuộc

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    Title: Japonaiserie
    Date: 1886-88
    Location of Origin: France
    Medium: Oil on canvas
    Style: Post-Impressionism
    Genre: Nature

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  2. Egoist

    Egoist Thành viên rất tích cực

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    bức này của một hoạ sĩ nhật mà
    dù tranh khắc gỗ có ảnh hưởng nhiều đến ấn tượng,hậu ấn tượng nhưng không phải là trường phái đó

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  3. redant

    redant Thành viên quen thuộc

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    một hoạ sĩ tiêu biểu của trường phái ấn tượng là Monet,
    Love was wrong, nothing right !
    Welcome to Tomb Raider Club
  4. artistman

    artistman Thành viên mới

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    Chào các bạn.Thành thật xin lỗi nha.Goya không phải là hoạ sĩ thời phục hưng.Ông là hoạ sĩ thuộc thế kỉ 18-19,ông là một hoạ sĩ cung đình.Tôi rất thích tính cách của ông ta.....thôi.Tam biệt nha.
  5. meomeo-manowar

    meomeo-manowar Thành viên quen thuộc

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    hiih
    to cu~ng thich Van Gogh
    ne`
    co' ai biet ve` buc' tranh Vuo`n nho do? ko
    noi' cho to' biet voi'
    do' la` bu'c tranh duy nhat' ma` Van da~ ban' duoc trong 1 trien lam
    to chua duoc. chiem nguong la`n na`o
    ban na`o biet cho to' hoi tham cai'
    :D
    ca`n quai gi` phai co chu ki co* chu' meomeomeo
  6. Relax

    Relax Thành viên quen thuộc

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    Van Gogh and Japonisme
    http://www.artelino.com/articles/van_gogh_japonisme.asp
    The term Japonisme came up in France in the seventies of the 19th century to describe the craze for Japanese culture and art. Van Gogh like so many other Impressionist and Post-Impressionist artists was one of the admirers of Japanese art. The Japanese influence is obvious in his art work.
    The Fad For All Things Japanese
    With the treaty of Kanagawa in 1854 between the American delegation headed by Navy commander Matthew Calbraith Perry (1794-1858) and the Japanese shogunate government, a period of 216 years of Japanese isolation ended. In the years following, huge numbers of Japanese artifacts and handicraft articles flowed to Europe, mainly to France and the Netherlands. The Paris Exposition Universelle in 1867 had a Japanese stand and showed Japanese art objects to the amazed public.
    All things Japanese were suddenly stylish and fashionable. Shops selling Japanese woodblock prints, kimonos, fans and antiquities popped up in Paris like mushrooms. The Impressionist painters and Post-Impressionists like Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec or Paul Gauguin were attracted and impressed by Japanese woodblock prints. In 1875 Claude Monet created his famous painting La Japonaise, showing his wife dressed in a Kimono and holding a Japanese fan. He later contemptuously called his own painting "trash".
    The Shop of Samuel Bing

    Van Gogh saw Japanese prints for the first time in 1885 in Antwerp and bought a few. In the years ahead he should buy many more. Japanese prints were cheap at that time. Many were reproductions made only for export to Western countries.
    In 1886 Vincent van Gogh moved to Paris. Van Gogh's brother Theo ran an art gallery in Montmartre. He too brought Vincent in contact with ukiyo-e. In Montmartre there was a little shop with Japanese prints, called the Bing Gallery after its owner Samuel Bing. Mr. Bing kept thousands of Japanese prints on stock. The Bing Gallery was next to van Gogh's apartment and Vincent spent days in the shop and became an avid collector of ukiyo-e.
    Copying Japanese Prints
    In 1887 van Gogh's admiration for Japanese art forms led him to paint copies of two famous designs of Hiroshige, the great Japanese landscape printmaker. One print is the Bridge in the Rain and the other shows a Plum Tree in Bloom. Hiroshige was one of the few artists who had used some Western elements in his print designs - the most obvious Western element was the use of perspective, visible in the Bridge in the Rain.
    These two Vincent van Gogh paintings after Hiroshige are rather free transcriptions. Vincent added frames to the originals and decorated them with what he considered to be Japanese characters. And van Gogh's use of colors was not very close to the originals. Instead he used his concept of complimentary colors like the green against the red.
    "I envy the Japanese artists for the incredible neat clarity which all their works have. It is never boring and you never get the impression that they work in a hurry. It is as simple as breathing; they draw a figure with a couple of strokes with such an unfailing easiness as if it were as easy as buttoning one's waist-coat."
    Van Gogh in Arles
    In 1988 Vincent van Gogh moved to Arles in Southern France. He arrived in springtime and the strong colors and the light of the landscape gave him new energies. He painted continuously - landscapes, still life and portraits of ordinary people. The influence of Japonisme is obvious in his paintings. The use of black contours is a typical element of Japanese woodblock prints. It reinforced the expressive power of the paintings of his last 4 years.
    Van Gogh's health and mental stability deteriorated. He shaved his head to "look like a Japanese monk". In Arles he was feeling himself like being in Japan. He wrote to his sister:
    "Theo m'a ecrit qu'il t'avait offert des estampes japonaises. C'est assurement le meilleur moyen pour reussir a comprendre la direction qu'a prise actuellement la peinture claire et coloree. Ici, je n'ai pas besoin d'estampes japonaises, car je me dis toujours que suis ici au Japon. Et c'est pourquoi je n'ai qu'a garder les yeux grand ouverts et peindre les impessions que je recois."
    "Theo wrote that he offered you Japanese woodblock prints. That is certainly the best way to understand which direction the light and colorful painting has taken. Here I need no Japanese woodblock prints, because I am here in Japan. This is why I only have to open my eyes and paint the impressions that I receive.
    In 1890 van Gogh shot a bullet into his chest and died several days later on October 29, 1890.

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  7. pinkgirl2507

    pinkgirl2507 Thành viên rất tích cực

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    Hix,to khong pót duoc khong thi cung cho ay xem cai Vuon nho ruc chay voi nhhung nguoi nong dan dang cong lung hai nho ay.Ay co nho buc Tieng thet voi bau troi van vu ,cuon xoay nhung gam mau nong khong?Day!Vuon nho do cung la nhung gam do va cam nhu vay,ruc chay luon!40 dola,khon kho cho VG!
    Pink-Quynh Nga
    http://photos.yahoo.com/pink_g_2507
  8. DACAM

    DACAM Thành viên rất tích cực

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    Ấy bức "Tiếng thét "có phải của Van Gogh đâu của Munch đấy chứ.
    DACAM
  9. xuanthao_happy

    xuanthao_happy Thành viên mới

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    ẺM CHAO MOI NGUOI A
    EM THAY MOI NGUOI NOI VE CAC DANH HOA HAY QUA
    NHAT LA VANGOGH
    MOI NGUOI CHO EM TAHM GIA VOI DC KO
    NHUNG CO MOT DIUE EM VAN CHU BIOET NHIEU VE TIEU SU CUA ONG AY
    EM CHI BEIT VE CAC BUC HOA CUA ONG THOI
    EM CAM ON ẢTÍTMAN VA CA GORILLAZ VA MOI NGUOI DA CHO EM HIEU DC THEM FAN NAO VE ONG
    ANH HOA NOI TIENG VONGOGH
    EM CO Y KIEN THE NAY MOI NGUOI XEM CO DC KO NHE
    CHUNG TA SE THANH LAP MOT ROOM CUA CHUNG TA NHUNG NGUOI YEU THICH HOI HOA
    VA CHUNG TA SE CO MOT BUOI TRHAM LUAN VE NGHE THUAT HOI HOA VA MOI NGUOI HAY GIOI THIEU CAC TAC FAM MOI CUA MINH
    NEU AI DONG Y HAY TRA LOI CHO EM NHE
    EM CAM ON MOI NGOI
    CO BE THICH HOI HOA CHAO CA NHA NHE
    BYE
    HEN GAP LAI
    happy
  10. Egoist

    Egoist Thành viên rất tích cực

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    mà cũng có cả lô tiếng thét ấy chứ, chả biết nói đến cái nào!!!
    muốn biết thêm về hoạ sĩ cung đình ( tôi tởm mấy bác này lắm lắm) F. Goya nên đọc tiểu thuyết:" bức hoạ Maja khoả thân" của Samuel Edward ( nhưng bìa lại vẽ bức maja mặc áo)
    ... rõ thật là

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