View allAll Photos Tagged Abstracted
Beethoven Symphonies Abstracted: Mo Willems Exhibit at John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Hall of Nations at 2700 F Street, NW, Washington DC on Thursday afternoon, 27 January 2022 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Beethoven Symphonies Abstracted: Mo Willems Exhibit website at www.kennedy-center.org/whats-on/mo-willems-beethoven-exhi...
Elvert Barnes Public Art 2022 at elvertxbarnes.com/public-art-2022
Trip to / from Washington DC for Catering at Kennedy Center
Elvert Barnes January 2022 at elvertxbarnes.com/january-2022
There were some cool icicles hanging off this light on the side of Hatcher, but the shot was pretty overexposed and it didn't work out so well.
This flower was too pretty to just let wither. It was from a boquet that we bought from the supermarket.
I though that the synthetic version came out ok too. For some reason I had to think f the LHC (large hadron collider) - the deeper symmetry in nature is one thing that the LHC may reveal.
If you can stand it, there's neat stuff on the second and third page... I just took SO many pictures on our trip.
2011 MA VTB 123 fff
Beethoven Symphonies Abstracted: Mo Willems Exhibit at John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Hall of Nations at 2700 F Street, NW, Washington DC on Thursday afternoon, 27 January 2022 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Beethoven Symphonies Abstracted: Mo Willems Exhibit website at www.kennedy-center.org/whats-on/mo-willems-beethoven-exhi...
Elvert Barnes Public Art 2022 at elvertxbarnes.com/public-art-2022
Trip to / from Washington DC for Catering at Kennedy Center
Elvert Barnes January 2022 at elvertxbarnes.com/january-2022
Beethoven Symphonies Abstracted: Mo Willems Exhibit at John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Hall of Nations at 2700 F Street, NW, Washington DC on Thursday afternoon, 27 January 2022 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Beethoven Symphonies Abstracted: Mo Willems Exhibit website at www.kennedy-center.org/whats-on/mo-willems-beethoven-exhi...
Elvert Barnes Public Art 2022 at elvertxbarnes.com/public-art-2022
Trip to / from Washington DC for Catering at Kennedy Center
Elvert Barnes January 2022 at elvertxbarnes.com/january-2022
Los Angeles Music Center (Welton Becket and Associates, 1954-1964/67). Kind of just a bag of midcentury institutional cliches: the round pavilion in the pool, the overscaled and abstracted colonnade, arbitrary but vaguely space-age columnar forms, dull "object faces object" site planning. I'm sure this has major fans, and I'm a major fan of plenty of other buildings that tick some of the same boxes, but this is one for the Mid-Century Mundane file, if you ask me.
Built in 1959-1961, this Organic Modern-style building was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for the congregation of Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, founded in 1906. One of the last commissions that Wright received, the building was based on traditional Byzantine architecture, which was reinterpreted by Wright for a modern context, informed by the Greek Orthodox background of his wife, Olgivanna Lloyd Wright. The building draws from the traditional domed form of Greek Orthodox churches, with a Greek Cross-shaped footprint, with abstracted and simplified forms with a heavy emphasis on arched openings.
The building features a concrete exterior with a large blue dome featuring a Greek cross at the center, arched openings with stained glass windows, decorative trim around the perimeter of the dome with arched openings, four pillars at the corners of the church, sunken courtyards to the southeast and northwest, a sunken wing to the northeast, and an entrance plaza to the southwest, flanked by urns and a fountain. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. Today, the building remains in service for the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church congregation.
One of a photo collection taken at the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Ariznoa. They have an amazing collection, and a friendly and knowledgeable staff. We had a great day there with the whole family. The kids love it… and so do the grown-ups. I had not been since I was a child… anyway. I hope you enjoy the image.
Wilshire/Vermont Station
Bob Zoell (2004) - Bob Zoell has abstracted the appearance and arrangement of typographic design symbols to create a bold and graphic series of ceramic tile murals. The artwork covers four columns at station platforms: two on the upper level and two in the lower. Each column is approached as a four-sided painting. Zoell favored a palette of citrus yellow, velvety black, crisp white and vivid pea green to deliberately frame his composition of stenciled syllables and symbols. The artist worked carefully to establish an animated and playful dynamic between his characters. Text appears to dance at it’s own happy pace, while other figures run off kilter as if ready to jump off the columns to greet commuters. Both pairs of columns also serve as symbolic gateways announcing the arrival and departure of passengers. Clown-like faces composed of punctuation marks grin at commuters on the platform entrance sides, while the sides facing the tracks feature a circus of letters “go”-“ing” “by”-by”.
Abstracted Nude 3
by Koola Adams
Deco Style, Cubist Style ink drawing on paper.
Frame and mount not included.
Copyright reserved by the artist.
Dispatched by trackable post.
www.contemporary-artists.co.uk/paintings/abstracted-nude-3/
Contemporary Artists
Abstracted detail of one of Darren's abstract paintings. I was looking for things for the squared circle group but this wasn't circular enough. I liked it anyway.
Kindergarten Paul Klee
Geometric Dreamscapes:
Kindergarten students explored the bold work of Swiss painter Paul Klee, who utilized large blocks of color and abstracted shapes to create dream cities and images of remembered gardens. The kindergarten students applied a study of color theory using primary, secondary, tertiary, analogous and complementary colors to create interesting combinations in their own work.
Ask yourself: What type of dreams do these paintings depict? If you could paint your dreams, what would they look like?
Beethoven Symphonies Abstracted: Mo Willems Exhibit at John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Hall of Nations at 2700 F Street, NW, Washington DC on Thursday afternoon, 27 January 2022 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Beethoven Symphonies Abstracted: Mo Willems Exhibit website at www.kennedy-center.org/whats-on/mo-willems-beethoven-exhi...
Elvert Barnes Public Art 2022 at elvertxbarnes.com/public-art-2022
Trip to / from Washington DC for Catering at Kennedy Center
Elvert Barnes January 2022 at elvertxbarnes.com/january-2022
127 x 127 cms 50” x 50” oil on stretched canvas 2007-2008
World Tree Abstracted, in its seventh stage, seeks to portray the energy of the World Tree forming and unforming, being and feeding the earth and its own later incarnations as decaying matter, birthing humanity and other creatures, and living on in spirit despite not being believed in any longer, as in deities like place have memory. This final image was intentionally envisioned—after an original meditative state of painting the World Tree that was very much appreciated and enjoyed, it was painted over consciously to try to better it—which a dissatisfaction with that second stage resulted in five progressive stages of painting over the image or supplementing it, depending on stage. During the second stage, the form of a strangler fig was added as the necessary element that would speak to the sacrificial aspect of the world tree not often explored, as well as a miniature world tree meant to be Yggdrasil, and some loosely painted “figures” in an almost waterfallish profusion meant to evoke the Mayan world tree imagery and painted in their predominant color schemes. The only leftover from the original painting is the turquoise blue on the edges where it mixes with red.