View allAll Photos Tagged Modigliani,
i've tried drawing modigliani's "reclining nude" on the pear, using water color pencils. i know it's not really recognizable, but trust me: drawing on fruits is not as easy as it sounds
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Identificazione di una donna ~ Paris ~ MjYj
Amedeo Modigliani
Femme à la cravate noire
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Urban Chronicles ~ Paris ~ MjYj©
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Thanks everyone, thanks for all the votes, comments,
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The long journey nears its end as UPs donation train passes the small town of Durant, Iowa and the cemetery beside it. As our train nears the homestretch, one can't help but marvel at the whole thing. Long-dead locomotives and even rollingstock, each one carrying with it plenty of history and stories alike, now have a fresh chance at life they wouldn't have gotten otherwise. The Challenger has been dormant for a dozen years, and the 5511 five times that. Even the DDA40X, not pictured here, hasn't been roaming around for a fair few years now. It will be one hell of a day when they and the rest of the equipment have new life breathed into them.
I can't even imagine how insane the roads and photolines will be when those days come. Oh, boy. At least they were somewhat manageable here. More than once, people came and parked right in front of my shot, but thanks to another railfan intervening, we got the space cleared for our shots, and we got that striking view of the slow moving train. The days storms can be seen back behind the dormant steamers, and in fact some of those clouds were just overhead. Very, very narrow timing granted us a sliver of clear sky and the light we needed for our shots. Nice when things work out that way, eh?
SHE says : My participation for the Petit Punch Challenge !!!! i love this challenge so much, so inspiring !!!
Well... fake polaroids :
i printed a large picture and cut the parts i wanted to keep
then cut a cardstock (without texture) in polaroid usual dimensions
i finally glue the little pictures in the pola-like paper and reconstitute the original picture ;)
and add some "my sweet spuds" stuff ! ;) and more, but guess you know what ;)
David Hockney is the artiste who used this "art technique" in paint and photography... i loooove his art !
At the beginning of the twentieth century, during the Belle Époque, many artists had studios or worked in or around Montmartre, including Salvador Dalí, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Piet Mondrian, Pablo Picasso, Camille Pissarro and Vincent van Gogh. Montmartre is also the setting for several hit films. This site is served by metro line 2 stations of Anvers, Pigalle and Blanche and the line 12 stations of Pigalle, Abbesses, Lamarck - Caulaincourt and Jules Joffrin.
This is a photo of a three foot tall, carved and painted, wood African sculpture of a huge bird by my front door. I am sure you are not thrilled, but I am because it looks nothing like this. I am enjoying how moving the camera distorts reality to the point that it looks like something totally different than what it is. Thanks for looking. You are brave souls.
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Thank you for your comments! I have had another look at this. I now see the possibility of a face. The long nose is already there. I am going back into Lightroom with this today to see if I can paint in dark eyes with the targeted adjustment brush to make a portrait, ala Modigliani.
See the preceding photo which is after I added eyes and lips. A picture of the African sculpture is included so that yo can get some idea of how much ICM can change everyday reality.
A Montmartre neighbourhood nightclub, visited in the early 20th century by famous artists as Modigliani, Utrillo and Picasso (and also a not yet famous writer and a not at all famous photographer in the early 21st century).
tutti conoscono la baldini ....
(su flickr )
magari un po meno modigliani ..
poveraccio ...
,mikka è un tipo da social (lui)
...a ben guardare ; oltre al viso stile modigliani e la gallina nel manico del cucchiaio,c'è un terzo viso ,se...come occhi prendiamo in considerazione le 2 uova a lato del manico e...come bocca le zampe di gallina...;-)
ah! dimenticavo :
buona pasqua.....;-)
In my conservatory, but reflected in the window and mingled with the garden, this was carved by Peter - it cracked all down the face, which we decided adds to the pathos...
Torino - Lingotto: The "scrigno" (jewel box),designed by Renzo Piano, hosts the Giovanni and Marella Agnelli art gallery, a permanent collection with works by Tiepolo, Canaletto,Bellotto, Canova, Manet, Renoir, Matisse, Balla, Severini, Picasso and Modigliani.
A favourite spot for struggling artists and writers, including Picasso, Modigliani, Apollinaire, and Utrillo.
Watercolours / pens
For Macro Mondays' "pareidolia" theme: faces in everyday objects. My original idea was she was peeking through a heavy curtain of hair, but other ways to interpret this "portrait" have occurred to me since then.
As MM's coordinator Janet Towbin explains that "Pareidolia is a psychological phenomenon that makes a simple sound or image into something far more noteworthy. The human brain is masterful in organizing visual data into meaningful and significant shapes. . . For this theme, you are to look for and photograph faces in everyday objects or in your surroundings."
L'immagine di un celebre quadro di Modigliani è proiettata sulla facciata delle terme di Livorno (città natale dell'artista) in occasione della mostra a lui dedicata nel centenario della morte.
The image of a famous painting by Modigliani is projected on the facade of the former thermal baths in Livorno (his birth place) in occasion of the exhibition marking the centenary of his death.
Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920) - Le jeune apprenti [The young apprentice] (1918-1919). In the Walter-Guillaume Collection at the Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris.
Obra de Modigliani. Esta obra se exhibe en la Sala de las Alhajas de la Fundación Caja Madrid y procede del museo de Arte Moderno de Estocolmo. Fue donada por Oscar Stern en 1951. Destaca por su elegancia en un fondo neutro entre de azules y grises, gama cromática que dota al cuadro de una gran belleza.
It's really interesting that Steve and Linda and I were standing at exactly the same place and yet we saw or created different images of these fascinating Modigliani type figures (note particularly the head in this link). www.flickr.com/photos/sugarbearsteve/426580052/ and this.
Happy SPRING!!!
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Zagreb - Klovićevi dvori - Izložba: Od boemstva do vječnosti
Amedeo Modigliani: Annie Bjarne, 1919
Grave of Amedeo Modigliani and his fiancé Jeanne Hébuterne, who killed herself in grief over his death.
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Paris hier et aujourd’hui. Boulevard du Montparnasse. Left to right; Amedeo Modigliani, Max Jacob, Andre Salmon and Oritiz de Zarate. This photo was part of a series of images taken by Jean Cocteau on 12 August 1916, between 12h30 and 16h30. Cocteau’s 20 plus photos were based on Pablo Picasso, his friends and the Montparnasse neighborhood. (Below, as a comment, I reposted another post of a photo from that day). The building behind them was constructed at the beginning of the 20th century. It was originally a post office (a faded sign still exists above the main door), it then housed the headquarters of the General Secretariat for Civil Aviation, which became in 1976 the Directorate General of Civil Aviation. Today it is used for social housing. One thing I love about the old photo, when I took my photo, I’m basically standing exactly where Modigliani stood all those years ago. It’s the little things……………..