This may sound stupid, but it is genuine. I have questions.
Is this your work? If not, disregard the rest of this comment.
I always hated those instances in school of udsving to speculate / interpret the meaning of a piece of art. I can appreciate beauty and humour, but something like this has me utterly stumped.
What does this painting mean? What does it intend to convey to the viewer? Why? How?
You are all good, and yes this is my work, but it is heavily inspired by Yuyoi Kusawa’s infinity net paintings which really intrigued me when i was first exposed to them. The repeating pattern felt like it was vibrating off the canvas and I wanted to capture that effect in color pallets i found more interesting, the base layer is made up of 5 different colors of blue painted in an impression of a blue sky with a little bit of whispy clouds which allow the blue to peak through, it was a beautiful, but i wanted to draw a sharp contrast to it by going accross the color wheel and mixing a mostly red orange using a cadmium red hue and light cadmium yellow. Then i used that mixture to draw a repeating brush strokes and rotating the canvas to break up the pattern aftet i had a few rows put down. The goal was to create a painting that feels like the colors are vibrating off the canvas and for the viewer’s eyes to have no real point of focus allowing their eyes to dart around the painting viewing the sculptural like heaviy brush strokes. In short i was trying to create something i think is beautiful to hang on my wall. I never understood abstract expressionism untill i was heavily exposed to it after multiple museum trips and learning alot about what went into the art.
Ah, so it’s more of a study, more about how it felt to do the painting, than “what it means”? (I fear looking up who your inspiration is and all them what their art means… 😅)
Not all paintings are intended to have a literal or even metaphorical meaning. Expressionism was one of the first styles to do this. You’re not supposed to analyze or figure out deeper explanations of what it’s supposed to tell. You’re supposed to look at it and immediately feel what the artist wanted to express. It also doesn’t have to be a pleasant feeling, just that you can observe something and it making you feel anything is an art form. If you come by something like that in a museum you should give it a little more time and instead of trying to understand what the picture shows, try to observe how it makes you feel when looking at it.
OPs piece is some form of abstract expressionsim. The craftsmanship can be analysed and we could talk about how the pattern is repeating but not perfectly, so it creates a sort of unrest. The blue background stands out from the red, so much that even if the red is smeared heavily on top, it’s almost creating an illusion of the blue being on top. This also causes an unrested focus.
This might not be pleasant, especially for someone with trypophoiba, but if you were to hang it on a wall, it would probably create a visually attractive vibration. Abstract art can often be used functionally like that to change the feeling of being in a room.
Is it good or is it bad? I don’t know… neither a phone screen or an art museum would be the right way to see this. It should be placed in a room that needs it for it to work best.
This may sound stupid, but it is genuine. I have questions.
Is this your work? If not, disregard the rest of this comment.
I always hated those instances in school of udsving to speculate / interpret the meaning of a piece of art. I can appreciate beauty and humour, but something like this has me utterly stumped.
What does this painting mean? What does it intend to convey to the viewer? Why? How?
You are all good, and yes this is my work, but it is heavily inspired by Yuyoi Kusawa’s infinity net paintings which really intrigued me when i was first exposed to them. The repeating pattern felt like it was vibrating off the canvas and I wanted to capture that effect in color pallets i found more interesting, the base layer is made up of 5 different colors of blue painted in an impression of a blue sky with a little bit of whispy clouds which allow the blue to peak through, it was a beautiful, but i wanted to draw a sharp contrast to it by going accross the color wheel and mixing a mostly red orange using a cadmium red hue and light cadmium yellow. Then i used that mixture to draw a repeating brush strokes and rotating the canvas to break up the pattern aftet i had a few rows put down. The goal was to create a painting that feels like the colors are vibrating off the canvas and for the viewer’s eyes to have no real point of focus allowing their eyes to dart around the painting viewing the sculptural like heaviy brush strokes. In short i was trying to create something i think is beautiful to hang on my wall. I never understood abstract expressionism untill i was heavily exposed to it after multiple museum trips and learning alot about what went into the art.
Ah, so it’s more of a study, more about how it felt to do the painting, than “what it means”? (I fear looking up who your inspiration is and all them what their art means… 😅)
https://ocula.com/artworks/selections/yayoi-kusama-infinity-net-paintings/
Not all paintings are intended to have a literal or even metaphorical meaning. Expressionism was one of the first styles to do this. You’re not supposed to analyze or figure out deeper explanations of what it’s supposed to tell. You’re supposed to look at it and immediately feel what the artist wanted to express. It also doesn’t have to be a pleasant feeling, just that you can observe something and it making you feel anything is an art form. If you come by something like that in a museum you should give it a little more time and instead of trying to understand what the picture shows, try to observe how it makes you feel when looking at it.
OPs piece is some form of abstract expressionsim. The craftsmanship can be analysed and we could talk about how the pattern is repeating but not perfectly, so it creates a sort of unrest. The blue background stands out from the red, so much that even if the red is smeared heavily on top, it’s almost creating an illusion of the blue being on top. This also causes an unrested focus. This might not be pleasant, especially for someone with trypophoiba, but if you were to hang it on a wall, it would probably create a visually attractive vibration. Abstract art can often be used functionally like that to change the feeling of being in a room.
Is it good or is it bad? I don’t know… neither a phone screen or an art museum would be the right way to see this. It should be placed in a room that needs it for it to work best.
Oh good! I’ll copy paste this and show my teacher 25 years ago…! 😂
No, but thank you.