Comments (10)
Merilee wrote:
Wow! Julian! This is really beautiful! I love all those wonderful brushstrokes. I can feel all those grasses. And I particularly like the purple strokes. Just lovely.
Wow! Julian! This is really beautiful! I love all those wonderful brushstrokes. I can feel all those grasses. And I particularly like the purple strokes. Just lovely.
12.15.06
mary olivia wrote:
very nice...what is English translation of "Chemin Montant?"
very nice...what is English translation of "Chemin Montant?"
12.15.06
Leila Dorris wrote:
Love your colors in this. So very pretty.
Love your colors in this. So very pretty.
12.15.06
Julian wrote:
Thanks all, as for translations it's one of those phrases which is simpler in french perhaps "the climbing path" the "the steep track", any suggestions welcome. Julian
Thanks all, as for translations it's one of those phrases which is simpler in french perhaps "the climbing path" the "the steep track", any suggestions welcome. Julian
12.15.06
Tommy Thompson wrote:
Quite interesting, Julian. We admire your productivity as well as creativity. The color notes in this one are striking, reminds us of seagrass near the ocean.
Quite interesting, Julian. We admire your productivity as well as creativity. The color notes in this one are striking, reminds us of seagrass near the ocean.
12.15.06
josefina wrote:
Me gusta el colorido, y ese poco de sombra, que da profundidad.
Me gusta el colorido, y ese poco de sombra, que da profundidad.
12.16.06
Linda Warner Constantino wrote:
Julian, Evidently the famous artist of the late 19th James McNeil Whistler shared a Passion for Small Paintings, too. An ongoing exhibit of Whistler's small masterpieces are on view at the Freer Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. The exhibit includes 23 paintings that do not exceed 9 inches in either direction.
According to the article Whistler began to dedicate his work to creating small paintings in deference to equating size with importance.
They were received with mixed reviews when exhibited back in 1886. One inspired critic saw their beauty and called them pygmy paintings with big souls.
I love it! Linda
Julian, Evidently the famous artist of the late 19th James McNeil Whistler shared a Passion for Small Paintings, too. An ongoing exhibit of Whistler's small masterpieces are on view at the Freer Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. The exhibit includes 23 paintings that do not exceed 9 inches in either direction.
According to the article Whistler began to dedicate his work to creating small paintings in deference to equating size with importance.
They were received with mixed reviews when exhibited back in 1886. One inspired critic saw their beauty and called them pygmy paintings with big souls.
I love it! Linda
12.19.06
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