| Source: (consider it) | Thread: Works of art | 
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| Ariel Shipmate
 # 58
 
 
 |  Posted           Following a recent visit to London's National Gallery, I fell in love with  this painting all over again.
 
 I have a lot of favourites, classical and modern, but this one gives me particular pleasure at the moment. The small screen size doesn't do it justice. Admittedly the artist's perspective is a bit off on some of the tables, but to create a whole gallery of mini-paintings in the style of several other artists is a real show of skill. Seen close up in person it's amazingly well detailed.
 
 I hope others will link to their own favourite work(s) of art and share their enthusiasm on this thread for whatever painting, sculpture or other work of art may have particularly impressed them.
 
 (It doesn't have to be an Old Master or classical statue. Variety is the spice of life. It should just be something artistic that really impressed you.)
 Posts: 25445 | Registered: May 2001 
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| cattyish 
  Wuss in Boots
 # 7829
 
 
 |  Posted           I love  Banksy.
 Cattyish, stealing wherever it's good.
 
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 Ralph Waldo Emerson
 
 Posts: 1794 | From: Scotland | Registered: Jul 2004 
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| Kitten Shipmate
 # 1179
 
 
 |  Posted           I'll never forget my first sight of  this  painting several years ago, so much detail, I stood in front of it for ages.
 
 A more modern painting that I enjoyed meeting is  this
 
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 Maius intra qua extra
 
 Never accept a ride from a stranger, unless they are in a big blue box
 
 Posts: 2330 | From: Carmarthenshire | Registered: Aug 2001 
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| LeRoc 
  Famous Dutch pirate
 # 3216
 
 
 |  Posted         I saw The Matchmaker for real for the first time last year, and I really liked it.
 
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 I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)
 
 Posts: 9474 | From: Brazil / Africa | Registered: Aug 2002 
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| Curiosity killed ... 
  Ship's Mug
 # 11770
 
 
 |  Posted           When I visited the Wallace collection for the first time I was stunned by the number of famous paintings I was seeing for the first time - Titian, Rubens, Rembrandt, Fragonard, The Laughing Cavalier by Hals ...
 
 I went looking for the Bernard Palissy pottery
 
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 Mugs - Keep the Ship afloat
 
 Posts: 13794 | From: outiside the outer ring road | Registered: Aug 2006 
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| no prophet's flag is set so... 
  Proceed to see sea
 # 15560
 
 
 |  Posted             We have a Hurley, with different colours than this one, inherited from my wife's grandmother who neighbour to the artist.  Ours is more orange and deep purple shades, but this gives you an idea.
 http://www.mendel.ca/homeshow/portfolio/robert-hurley-58/
 
 The Canadian prairies are rather stark and we look to art to pull own perceptions into beauty, hence the like of warm colours and exaggerated angles.
 
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 Out of this nettle, danger, we pluck this flower, safety.
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 Posts: 11498 | From: Treaty 6 territory in the nonexistant Province of Buffalo, Canada ↄ⃝' | Registered: Mar 2010 
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| Moo 
  Ship's tough old bird
 # 107
 
 
 |  Posted           Here is one of my favorite paintings.
 
 Moo
 
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 Posts: 20365 | From: Alleghany Mountains of Virginia | Registered: May 2001 
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| Hedgehog 
  Ship's Shortstop
 # 14125
 
 
 |  Posted           I have a fondness for the Pre-Raphaelites, and  Isabella and the Pot of Basil is hanging over my sofa.
 
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 "We must regain the conviction that we need one another, that we have a shared responsibility for others and the world, and that being good and decent are worth it."--Pope Francis, Laudato Si'
 
 Posts: 2740 | From: Delaware, USA | Registered: Sep 2008 
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| cliffdweller Shipmate
 # 13338
 
 
 |  Posted         I love any of the works of Chinese artist
 He Qi
 
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 "Here is the world.  Beautiful and terrible things will happen.  Don't be afraid."  -Frederick Buechner
 
 Posts: 11242 | From: a small canyon overlooking the city | Registered: Jan 2008 
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| balaam 
  Making an ass of myself
 # 4543
 
 
 |  Posted             My favourite sculpture is of a  bear.
 
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 Last ever sig ...
 
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 Posts: 9049 | From: Hen Ogledd | Registered: May 2003 
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| Ariel Shipmate
 # 58
 
 
 |  Posted           Kitten, I like Brueghel a lot and your second link is just how Docklands would be if it were painted.
 
 A fascinatingly diverse selection altogether on this thread. (It would be great if people could say a little about why they like them?)
 Posts: 25445 | Registered: May 2001 
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| Jengie jon 
  Semper Reformanda
 # 273
 
 
 |  Posted             I keep returning to the work of Greg Dunn although I have only seen it on the internet.
 
 Jengie
 
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 "To violate a persons ability to distinguish fact from fantasy is the epistemological equivalent of rape." Noretta Koertge
 
 Back to my blog
 
 Posts: 20894 | From: city of steel, butterflies and rainbows | Registered: May 2001 
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| Firenze 
  Ordinary decent pagan
 # 619
 
 
 |  Posted         I rather regret that, many years ago, I didn't blue my life savings on a painting I saw in a gallery.  Now I am of the opinion that You Can't Look at Money, and will buy artworks when I can.  I am currently sharing a room with 5 works by 4 artists - 2 anonymous Nepalis, and 1 contemporary Scottish and 1 contemporary Irish artist.
 
 I'm not against reproductions, but I do find our motley collection of oils, pastels, watercolours, pen-and-ink and prints - quality variable - afford a satisfaction over and above the Great Paintings in a Gallery experience.
 Posts: 17302 | From: Edinburgh | Registered: Jun 2001 
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| Heavenly Anarchist Shipmate
 # 13313
 
 
 |  Posted           Father in law is an oil painter and we have one of his waterfalls in the kitchen (painted from one of my husband's photographs from Skye) and 2 paintings of Cambridge backstreets in the the lounge. But my favourite painting is by a friend from church, Heather Gardner,  it is a huge painting of Jesus Green in oils, beautiful pastel colours and almost mpressionist in style. It takes the central spot above the fireplace and was my birthday present from my husband last year. It makes you feel that you can step into the picture, it's very enticing. We also have one of her river paintings. I'll see if there is a photo online.
 My husband has his eye on a farm painting by another friend at church.
 
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 Posts: 2831 | From: Trumpington | Registered: Jan 2008 
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| Pigwidgeon 
  Ship's Owl
 # 10192
 
 
 |  Posted           My favorite sculpture of a  bear.
 
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 ~Tortuf
 
 Posts: 9835 | From: Hogwarts | Registered: Aug 2005 
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| Heavenly Anarchist Shipmate
 # 13313
 
 
 |  Posted           
 quote:I used to love visiting the Wallace Collection when I lived in London. And I thought the ladies' toilets were beautiful, best toilets in LondonOriginally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
 When I visited the Wallace collection for the first time I was stunned by the number of famous paintings I was seeing for the first time - Titian, Rubens, Rembrandt, Fragonard, The Laughing Cavalier by Hals ...
 
 I went looking for the Bernard Palissy pottery
 
 ![[Smile]](smile.gif) 
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 'I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by.' Douglas Adams
 Dog Activity Monitor
 My shop
 
 Posts: 2831 | From: Trumpington | Registered: Jan 2008 
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| Chorister 
  Completely Frocked
 # 473
 
 
 |  Posted           I prefer Wallace upstairs (e.g. Canaletto) to Wallace downstairs.  I can take only so much still life and shot pheasants before I run out gasping into the fresh air.  But my favourite gallery of all time is the National Portrait Gallery (always a lot less crowded than the National Gallery), particularly pictures of the past and present Royal Family.
 
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 Retired, sitting back and watching others for a change.
 
 Posts: 34626 | From: Cream Tealand | Registered: Jun 2001 
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| Albertus Shipmate
 # 13356
 
 
 |  Posted         Not to mention  this, which always turns my legs to jelly and leaves me blissfully gibbering...
 Posts: 6498 | From: Y Sowth | Registered: Jan 2008 
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| Adeodatus Shipmate
 # 4992
 
 
 |  Posted         The Wallace Collection is one of my favourite art museums. They have a roomful of 17th-century Dutch interiors that just makes me go all squealy.
 
 But, for an example of the genre in another gallery, I love  "A man seated reading..." at the National Gallery. Zoom in and look at the way the artist has rendered sunlight, passing through imperfect glass, onto a rough wall. It's a combination of thick, flat brush strokes combined with thin paint washed over - probably repeating the process several times to build up a combination of opaque and translucent layers. It's just gorgeous (and very modern).
 
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 "What is broken, repair with gold."
 
 Posts: 9779 | From: Manchester | Registered: Sep 2003 
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| Hawk 
  Semi-social raptor
 # 14289
 
 
 |  Posted             I like modernist and symbolic art, which attracts both the sense of beauty and the imagination. Vrubel's work is fascinating, and my favorite is the Demon Seated and the Demon Overthrown, which, I think, show ideally the conflicting feelings Russian intellectual class had over the last years of the Tsardom.
 
 Another favorite is Goya. All of his works have a terrible awful beauty to them but the black paintings and  Saturn devouring his son is especially powerful.
 
 For a less dramatic, yet equally melancholic bittersweetness I enjoy Lowry. Something like The Park or Seascape is fantastic, though makes you shiver and want to wrap a blanket around you just looking at them.
 
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 “We are to find God in what we know, not in what we don't know." Dietrich Bonhoeffer
 
 See my blog  for 'interesting' thoughts
 
 Posts: 1739 | From: Oxford, UK | Registered: Nov 2008 
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| Banner Lady Ship's Ensign
 # 10505
 
 
 |  Posted           Favourite art?  That's hard because TP & I have favourites in different periods.  16th century would be Vermeer for me - though I did love seeing this modern take on his style:    very clever!
 
 17th century - TP has many prints from the Wallace collection, but this is the one that makes him go weak at the knees.
 
 We also love Morris, Klimt and Bakst - I have lots of Ballet Russe prints around the house.  This  is my fave and hangs over the bed.
 
 Favourite Australian artists would be Christian Waller and Tudor St.George Tucker. Worth googling!
 
 I also love Banksy.
 
 [ 15. December 2013, 20:33: Message edited by: Banner Lady ]
 
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 Women in the church are not a problem to be solved, but a mystery to be enjoyed.
 
 Posts: 7080 | From: Canberra Australia | Registered: Oct 2005 
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| Adeodatus Shipmate
 # 4992
 
 
 |  Posted         
 quote:O my! Those are phenomenal!Originally posted by Firenze:
 For clotted gorgeousness, it's hard to beat Peploe.  He starts off  rivalling Velazquez,  Out-Cezannes Cezanne before  taking on the Fauves.
 
 
 The only one of the Scottish Colourists I'm even vaguely acquainted with is Francis Cadell. I always visit his  Interior with Lady Seated when I'm in Manchester City Gallery. I love how bold he is with the amount of white he uses, with dashes of bright colour that just jump off the canvas at you. (I think the Scottish Colourists are what you get when Fauvism comes to live in a cold climate.)
 
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 "What is broken, repair with gold."
 
 Posts: 9779 | From: Manchester | Registered: Sep 2003 
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| Eigon Shipmate
 # 4917
 
 
 |  Posted             When I looked at the Lowry link (thanks, Hawk) I noticed a picture of Clifford's Tower in York - I never knew that Lowry had painted in York before!
 One of my favourites is a local artist, Meg Stevens.  She paints very detailed grasses and flowers in the foreground, with a distant landscape beyond, usually round the Brecon Beacons.
 For sculpture, it's got to be Sally Matthews - she makes animals out of sticks and wire and wool and straw.  The first time we saw her work, we entered the gallery from the lower floor and came up the narrow stairs.  "What are Jenny's deerhounds doing in there?" my husband asked.  Then: "Hang on - they're not moving!"  The sculptures of the deerhounds really were that realistic.
 ( www.sallymatthews.co.uk )
 
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 Laugh hard.  Run fast.  Be kind.
 
 Posts: 3710 | From: Hay-on-Wye, town of books | Registered: Aug 2003 
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