Two and a half years ago I posted this lesson about using Frank Stella’s artwork as inspiration for children’s drawings. I love Frank Stella’s work. After visiting an art museum and seeing an exhibit of the progression of his style, I was hooked. It is so fascinating and there is a lot to look at. The sheer size of these prints are stunning. In case you haven’t figure out by now, my favorite style of art is BUSY, abstract, super … Read more... →
Read THE DAILY PIC on the Metropolitan Museum's Lygia Pape show, and the similarities between her Brazilian works and ones from the U.S.
NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale is pleased to present Frank Stella: Experiment and Change, an exhibition that spans the artist’s 60-year career from the late 1950’s to the present. The exhibition, composed of approximately 300 paintings, relief sculpture and drawings will offer insight into his trajectory from minimalism (e.g. the geometry of the black paintings) to maximalism…
By Bruce Gray: Before moving to Los Angeles, I worked at an advertising agency in Boston as a graphic designer specializing in logo design. After a couple of years I started getting the itch to create my own designs, control my artistic destiny, and do work that was 3 dimensional and permanent. In 1989 I moved to L.A. and investigated having my first design, (the Pyramid Table) fabricated, but it was very expensive, so I bought a welder and taught myself how to use it. This gave me the freedom to totally...
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ダンボールと絵の具で、モネの名作がだれにでも表現できる! 私たちはHugkumの連載でもおなじみのアート活動団
In 1958, just a few years after graduating from Princeton, Frank Stella began his groundbreaking “black paintings.” These austere works were composed of parallel stripes determined by the proportions of the canvas and the width of the paintbrush. They had no meaning beyond their physical form; or, as Stella famously put it, “What you see […]
This is part 3 of a three-part post on the works of American artist Frank Stella. It covers the period 1988 - 2009: 1988 Yellow Journal 1989 Bene Come il Sale 1989 The Waves - Hyena 1993 The Affidavit 1994 Figlefia 1994 Spectralia lithograph 1995 Atvatbar mixed media 1995 Egyplosis I mixed media 1995 Plutusia mixed media 1996 Karathenburg III (study) printed paper collage 1997 Coxuria silksceen 1997 Juam 1999 Michael Kohlhaas panel #2 mixed media collage 1999 Stanz 2000 Aby Hureyra #3 2000 Michael Kohlhaas #3 acrylic on canvas 2000 Michael Kohlhaas #6 acrylic on canvas 2001 Hacilar aceramica epoxy and spray paint on cast aluminium 2002 Arpachiyah mixed media sculpture
This was one of the last projects we tried this past summer. I came across the artist Frank Stella on Pinterest. I had not heard of him before, but I was immediately drawn to his geometric artwork and his bright sculptures. I thought it would be fun to show the girls his artwork and create cardboard sculptures. I was first inspired to try this project after seeing this project posted on The Chocolate Muffin Tree blog Here are some examples of Stella's work that I showed the girls before we started our project: Source Source Source I thought it was fun to show them images with people in them so the girls could get a sense for the large scale of his artwork. Source And some of his sculptures: Source Source Source Source After I showed the girls Frank Stella's artwork, I showed them Chocolate Muffin Tree's cardboard project. Then I gave them a piece of cardboard and our bin of recycled materials and told them to get to it. We received how to use a hot glue gun safely and they were off! I think they really enjoyed the process of creating these sculptures. I love all the concentration you see in the photos as they are creating! I thought it was simply amazing how they manipulated the cardboard and worked the glue fun! I didn't help them with these AT ALL! Top image is my 9 year old's, bottom image is my (then) 6 year old's. After they were done creating their sculptures, I spray painted them white. And then they were going to paint them with acrylic paints. Ella picked cool colors. Lily picked warm colors. I admit that this project might have been a bit too ambitious for the end of the summer. Even though there was more than a week between when they created the sculptures and when they were going to paint them, the girls just were not that interested in painting the sculptures. They did a few tubes the first day. Then I tried to get them to keep going, but they just didn't feel like it. So unfortunately, we don't have a finished project. I still have them up in the closet. Maybe they will finish them someday. Maybe next summer. ;-) They absolutely LOVED the construction part of this though. I will have to remember that and see what I can come up with in the future that can feed off that.
Dépêché par le New York Times, Henri Dauman couvre, pour les lecteurs, la naissance du minimalisme américain, mouvement majeur de l’art contemporain. Dans les ateliers des pionniers du « Less is More », il photographie les jeunes artistes Frank Stella, Richard Artschwager ou Robert Morris en plein travail. The New York Times correspondent, Henri Dauman covered the birth of American minimalism, a major movement in contemporary art. In the workshops of the pioneers of the “Less is More” movement, he photographed young artists such as Frank Stella, Richard Artschwager and Robert Morris as they worked.
Considered one of the great intellects among painters, his titles are replete with...
The seminal painter and sculptor Frank Stella is commanding considerable attention amidst the frenzied opening of the art season. Preceding his retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art, Che
Arundel Castle. Tomlinson Court Park. Die Fahne Hoch. Marriage of Reason and Squalor.
本日1/15(土)14:00-16:00ワークショップクラスでは、
See Frank Stella’s Big Bold Art, at the Link!