Part A:
Representational Art - Artwork that is clearly recognizable for what it shows.
Realism - Artwork that is precisely detailed to the actual image the artwork is being modeled after.
Impressionism - Using small, thin, but visible brush strokes with accurate light depictions for artwork.
Idealism - Artwork created from what we think, and like, things to look like instead of what they actually look like.
Stylization - Artwork created by using a more simplistic, non-detailed form of the original art that it is being modeled after.
Part B.
After watching Alexa Meade's "Your Body Is A Canvas", I couldn't believe how she made an actual person look like a three-dimensional image on a two-dimensional surface. That is the coolest and most creative thing I have ever seen anyone do. I thought it was interesting to see that she painted the lighting and shadowing to generate a three-dimensional effect even though there is already light and shadowing from the light in the room the actual guy in the picture was. The thing I took away from this video is that you can make anything appear three-dimensional by adding light and shadowing to generate depth, even if the artwork is already three-dimensional.
Part C:
Representational Art - Artwork that is clearly recognizable for what it shows.
Realism - Artwork that is precisely detailed to the actual image the artwork is being modeled after.
Impressionism - Using small, thin, but visible brush strokes with accurate light depictions for artwork.
Idealism - Artwork created from what we think, and like, things to look like instead of what they actually look like.
Stylization - Artwork created by using a more simplistic, non-detailed form of the original art that it is being modeled after.
Part B.
After watching Alexa Meade's "Your Body Is A Canvas", I couldn't believe how she made an actual person look like a three-dimensional image on a two-dimensional surface. That is the coolest and most creative thing I have ever seen anyone do. I thought it was interesting to see that she painted the lighting and shadowing to generate a three-dimensional effect even though there is already light and shadowing from the light in the room the actual guy in the picture was. The thing I took away from this video is that you can make anything appear three-dimensional by adding light and shadowing to generate depth, even if the artwork is already three-dimensional.
Part C:
This is a piece of realism artwork created by Jean Francois Millet. It depicts a very detailed working lifestyle of what appears to be slaves.
This realistic artwork was done by Gustave Courbet. It shows, in precise detail, the purity and freedom of animals, deer in this case, and the nature they dwell in.
Starry Night is a famous painting created by Vincent Van Gogh. The small brush strokes signify its impressionist style.
This impressionist style painting is called San Giorgio Maggiore at Dusk. It was created by Claude Monet.
This is a still life forged by Paul Cezanne's. Although it may seem as a realistic piece of art, it actually represents idealism because he didn't actually look at these items. He made it completely based on what he thought it looked like.
This is another idealistic piece of art that is modeled after Saint Catherine of Alexandria. Not really looking at her, Raphael, the creator, made this painting from the image of her in his mind.
This piece of art is a form of stylization. Instead of an actual detailed fox, this fox was made entirely based on simplified shapes.
Just like the fox in the previous image, the lion on the bottom is a form of stylization. I chose this image to show the difference between a detailed lion and a lion created from the style of stylization. You can see that the detail was really simplified into basic shapes.