I admire Picasso’s varying styles and his mastery of many different
forms of art, from his blue period to his cubist works and beyond.
I recently went to a exhibition of his work in Rome, which partly inspired me to create
the painting 'unfolding'.
Piet Mondrian
Mondrian is an artist with whom I have only recently become interested in after
having a few people online compare some of my paintings to his works, probably because
of the line and square which are present in many of my paintings. I like
how he creates interesting composition in a seemingly simple way.
Kandinsky
Kandinsky was one of the artists with whom their work instantly appealed, I loved the way his
paintings seem to be alive and brimming with life and activity. His main influence on me
has been on how I try to use colour and how I compose some of my paintings.
Mark Rothko
Rothko's work is an inspiration to me in the sense of how he uses colour and simple forms
to convey mood.
Jackson Pollock
I admire Pollock’s earlier work as well as his drip paintings. He has influenced me to strive
to think outside the box and explore new terrain when painting, as he did when producing
his drip paintings.
Michelangelo
I am in awe of the skill of Michelangelo and his grasp of the human form and expressing that.
I visited the Cistene chapel recently and that was an amazing experience. I am inspired by his
sheer artistic skill.
Paul Klee
I like Klee's visual poetry and the use of colour in his work.
Joan Miro
I admire Miro's relentless imagination and his forms which seem to dance. I aim
to one day be able to create the same energy he did in his compositions, in my own.
6 comments:
thanks for the comment :) I'll return the favour too. It's great to find people who inspire you and copy them a little putting your own ideas into it ;) This is so dumb...but there are other peoples blogs I want to follow, but cant find the 'follow' button on their blog anywhere! Andrew
just realised I did a similar thing on a note on facebook saying what I liked in each martial art that I have tried and tried to adapt it to my own style. "Your biological and technological distincitvness will be added to our own" hehe. later
Yeh I've had trouble finding the follow button on some blogs as well, seems the way some pople set them out make's it hard to find.
All art is theft to a degree I think, but everyone is gonna put their own spin on things that have come before, it's the way things evolve I guess. Adding more onto what has already been done, and doing it a different way.
Though true orignality rears it's head now and again.
thanks for the comments
Some of your pieces remind me of the geometric works of Kazimir Malevich. Do you have any influence from any recent artists?
Mo
Yeh Supremistim is an art movement I am aware of , but not one I know very much about. A lot of my work contains geometric shapes so I can see where you are coming from
As for the influence of recent artists, Im not sure really , most of the artists I like are the old abstract masters. Though abstract art is not the only style I appreciate of course.
I spose there are a few recent artists whose work i've seen on the internet whose work I would say I find inspiring in one way or another.
I would like to find more contemporary artists whose work I like, any suggestions for who you think I might find interesting??? I generally like art that connects with me on an emotional, visceral or technical level and expresses it's message or it's mood effecitivily.
thanks for your comments
When the new century began, I became obsessed with finding contemporary artwork to see what artists are doing now. There are two series of books I’d suggest to you: Art21 (4 books so far – PBS backed) and Art Now (three books so far – by Taschen). Four artists I follow more than others: Matthew Barney, Damien Hirst, Takashi Murakami (leader of “Super Flat” which has a manifesto) and Matthew Ritchie.
Since I frequent the art book section of my local Barnes and Noble, I’ve noticed a lot of books on graffiti art lately. A few years a go, a show came here that was in the cartoon direction, “Comic Release” – sort of where cartoons and fine art meet. Also, there are a lot of books involving installation artists. Four years ago in Boston I viewed a show curated with the theme “sentimental objects/kitsch.” Recently I joined a group of fiber artists. That type of art is where textiles, collage and mixed media meet. I wasn’t aware of the experimentation that is going on with those types of materials.
Usually I work in graphite, color pencil, acrylic, watercolor, collage and sometimes mixed media. I also enjoy photography and video. Sure I’ve used other media, but not as often. Of the postmodern ideas that are being kicked around, I’m interested in the idea of “recontextualization” – taking a cue from collage by changing the context of something pre-existing. Above all, I like experimenting with materials.
Mo
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