sábado, 31 de dezembro de 2011

sexta-feira, 30 de dezembro de 2011

quinta-feira, 29 de dezembro de 2011

Edward Hopper_Painter














Edward Hopper ( 1882 – 1967) was a prominent American realist painter and printmaker. While most popularly known for his oil paintings, he was equally proficient as a watercolorist and printmaker in etching. In both his urban and rural scenes, his spare and finely calculated renderings reflected his personal vision of modern American life.

Edward Hopper painted American landscapes and cityscapes with a disturbing truth, expressing the world around him as a chilling, alienating, and often vacuous place. Everybody in a Hopper picture appears terribly alone. Hopper soon gained a widespread reputation as the artist who gave visual form to the loneliness and boredom of life in the big city. This was something new in art, perhaps an expression of the sense of human hopelessness that characterized the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Edward Hopper has something of the lonely gravity peculiar to Thomas Eakins, a courageous fidelity to life as he feels it to be. He also shares Winslow Homer's power to recall the feel of things. For Hopper, this feel is insistently low-key and ruminative. He shows the modern world unflinchingly; even its gaieties are gently mournful, echoing the disillusionment that swept across the country after the start of the Great Depression in 1929. Cape Cod Evening (1939; 77 x 102 cm (30 1/4 x 40 in)) should be idyllic, and in a way it is. The couple enjoy the evening sunshine outside their home, yet they are a couple only technically and the enjoyment is wholly passive as both are isolated and introspective in their reveries. Their house is closed to intimacy, the door firmly shut and the windows covered. The dog is the only alert creature, but even it turns away from the house. The thick, sinister trees tap on the window panes, but there will be no answer.

I leave here my favourite paintings.

Aujourd´hui_Enchantes toi




Imagens que me prendem Hoje

quarta-feira, 28 de dezembro de 2011

General Motors Technical Center_by Eero Saarinen







1956
Eero Saarinen’s design for the GM Technical Center campus expressed the auto company’s focus on metal-working, precision, and mass-production. “Like the automobile itself, the buildings are essentially put together as on an assembly line, out of mass-produced units,” he wrote. “Down to the smallest detail, we tried to give the architecture the precise, well-made look which is a proud characteristic of industrial America.”

So Charming Girls Things










Only Girls Understand :)