Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Color Schemes


Stephen Martin


21 April 2014

 Statement
 Color is considered to be one of the most vital elements to an artwork and tends to set the mood of a piece. The use of vibrant colors to emit a sense of liveliness contrasts with dark, warm colors that smother the audience. Many artists are inclined to repeatedly use the same color scheme in their work which approaches an overall theme for an artist. Studying the color tendencies of artists creates an interesting collection.

  Color Schemes consists of lively colors along with dim, shady images that give off different moods. Each artist has a distinctive characteristic that can be determined when viewing a collection of their work. Colors ultimately determine the viewers overall feeling towards the piece.   
Welcome to My Crib

         The first stop on the journey through my blog takes you through Takashi Murakami's exotic style of using vibrant colors and odd animations to liven the mood. From there, Jamie Williams Grossman exhibits her ability to display nature's colors in her still life paintings. After this, Michael Raedecker goes against the norm, displaying his paintings with an absence of color. The emptiness of his work is soon filled with Carrie Ann Baade's unusually colorful paintings. Her imagination combined with her color combinations emits a feeling that defies reality. Kehinde Wiley closes the collectoin by demonstrating his wide range of vivid color combinations. He confirms the idea that colors impact the mood of an artwork. 
Takashi Murakami

         Takashi Murakami's work involves numerous amounts of lively colors. His variety of colors energizes the mood of his work and his abstract ideas coincide with his exotic color schemes. Using bright, noticeable colors, Murakami accomplishes the ability to create a lively mood based on his color choice. 
Takashi Murakami
And Then……Green Truth
1999
Offset lithograph
19.7" x 19.7"


Takashi Murakami
Francis Bacon Study of George Dyer
2003
screenprint with platinum leaf
23.6" x 23.6"


Takashi Murakami
Gero Tan
2002
Acrylic on canvas mounted on board
11.9' x 23.7' x 2.5"


Takashi Murakami
Eco Eco Rangers Earth Force
2005
screenprint in colors on wove paper
14" x 19"


Takashi Murakami
Self-Portrait of the Manifold Worries of a Manifoldly Distressed Artist
2012
Acrylic on canvas mounted on board
59" x 59"





Jamie Williams Grossman 

        I chose Jamie Williams Grossman as my artists who is not found in the lecture due to her reocurring themes of nature and use of natural colors that we see as a part of Earth. Grass, water, dirt, and sky can almost always be found in her work; or a live animal such as a bird. Green is common in her paintings and her use of nature's colors creates a realistic feeling and the need to be at peace with nature.
Jamie Williams Grossman
Bathtime for Mango
2014
oils on Ampersand Gessoboard
7" x 5"


Jamie Williams Grossman
Contemplation
2013
oils on archival linen panel
12" x 16"


Jamie Williams Grossman
Path to the Cozy Cottage
2013
varnished acrylic on sealed, archival artboard
10" x 8"


Jamie Williams Grossman
Fishing on the Hudson River
2013
Golden OPEN Acrylics on canvas covered hardboard
12" x 12"


Jamie Williams Grossman
Beside the Babbling Brook
2013
oils on canvas covered hardboard
10" x 8"






Michael Raedecker

         Michael Raedecker's lack of color in his paintings describes his work as empty and open to one's own interpretation. In Brilliant Gloom, he uses some color, which draws all of the focus. Most of his black and white paintings look empty and in need of someone to color them in. This style differs greatly from vibrant artwork.
Michael Raedecker
Overnight 
1998
oil, acrylic, wool, wood veneer, and thread on canvas
73" x 58"


Michael Raedecker
Beam
2000
acrylic and thread on canvas 
80" x 68" 


Michael Raedecker
Reverb
1998
Acrylic and thread on canvas
24" x 32"


Michael Raedecker
Phantom
1999
acrylic and thread on canvas
48" x 58"


Michael Raedecker
Brilliant gloom
2004 
Acrylic and thread on canvas
74 3/4" x 122"





Carrie Ann Baade

         Carrie Ann Baade's paintings all contain several different solid colors that stand out to the viewer. In much of her work, different objects take on different solid colors that spread the focus around. Red, green, blue, and many more colors can be found in her work. Almost every color in the rainbow is always present.
Carrie Ann Baade
The Plague: An Allegory about Dating
2009
 oil on panel, 
16" x 20”


Carrie Ann Baade
The Temptation of the Penitent Medusa
2010
oil on panel
12" x 18" 


Carrie Ann Baade
Cupid Complaining to Venus
2005
oil on copper
8" x 10"


Carrie Ann Baade
The Slayer of the Snaalygaster
2005
oil on copper
9” × 12”


Carrie Ann Baade
Untitled (Hawk headed infant with frogs)
2005
oil on copper
9" x 12"





Kehinde Wiley is Lively

         Kehinde Wiley uses vibrant colors to create a sense of liveliness and exuberant emotion. His paintings all share a similar color scheme which allows one to draw a conclusion about his work and tendencies. The following images represent his style of painting and his usual color choice.
Kehinde Wiley
Duc d'Arenberg (Duke of Arenberg)

2011
Oil on canvas
108.25" x 90.5"


Kehinde Wiley
Equestrian Portrait of King Philip II (Michael Jackson)
2010
Oil on canvas
128" x 112"


Kehinde Wiley
Portrait of A Venetian Ambassador, Aged 59, II
2006
Oil on canvas
96" x 72"



Kehinde Wiley
Antoine, 'The Grand Batard de Bourgogne'
2011
Oil on linen
78" x 60.5"


Kehinde Wiley
Prince Tommaso Francesco of Savoy-Carignano
2006
Oil on canvas
96" x 96"