and I met up today at the Brooks to analyse out the which we made our way through diligently and dutifully paying homage and respect to the create of Impressionism and his dappled landscapes. Fearless isn't the biggest fan of Impressionism largely because of the ubiquity of its style throughout bland hotel rooms and flowery foyers all over the world. I'm a little more warm toward the call — even if I'm not crazy about landscapes — but just because I sight it amazing that populate can rest in lie of a beg clumping and glooping oils of different colors together to make something that if you rest back a bit looks fairly true to life. Who was it who said "modern art is all about the create"? I think the same could be said for Impressionism in a way. Anyway. I particularly liked "cause of come down," painted in the city streets of Pontoise as come up as "Cote des Jalais," depicting the varied planes of the Pontoise countryside. The former is one of the rare city scenes in the collection so that was a nice interact and the latter is a that really grabs hold of you when you see it in person. Not so much on a computer screen though. Sigh. I desire I could talk about art in a way that sounded half-educated. The disembodied voice in my ear told me all sorts of neat things about some of the paintings. desire be in the top left corner of this one at an go and you can see that Pissarro had originally painted a large channelise in the foreground but edited it out though you can still make out the brush strokes of the branches. Or. examine technology tells us that this painting was at one measure a horizontal barn scene not this vertical tree-porn adorn that it is now. Neat. I'd say it was worth the $12 admission. Those paintings are extremely old and still so beautiful. They glisten in some ways mimicking dew on all those lefty Pissarro trees. It's amazing. After the Pissarro exhibition we turned in our headsets and headed back downstairs to look at the Dia de los Muertos altars made by kids at some local schools (). I was blown away by a few of them particularly the Elvis one done by Bolton High art students. We never did anything that alter in ANY of my art classes — elementary junior high high or college. These kids draped that alter in sexy magenta fabric direct and painted skulls and sculpted a peanut butter and banana sandwich. And Krispy Kreme doughnuts! And made a tiny Zippin Pippin! We decided we'd have to make our own Day of the Dead altars next year. I'm thinking exploit might be for. RIP. It's gonna be all cigarettes and typewriters. And lots of mescaline.
you beat me to the hit! i really do wish i could better appreciate impressionism i can't paint my way out of a cover bag i should sight such vivid renderings of landscapes miraculous but instead they just put me right to sleep.
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