The artwork, called Eyes in the Sky, was drawn by Nathan Lowndes. Featured in this artwork is a green dragon who is hovering in the clouds above a vast city. The dragon is on the left side of the drawing and appears to be wearing silver and gold armor. Clouds cloak the outer edges of the artwork as well as part of the dragon. The city takes up the rest of the artwork and is surrounded by mountains and forests. Trees are spread throughout the city and there is a canal system running through the center of the city. A few dragons can be seen flying below the green dragon 's wing in the background of the top center of the drawing. There is also a red dragon flying across the center circle of the city. Some roads in the city are straight, some curve, …show more content…
Visual elements that stand out in Eyes in the Sky are color, lines, texture, motion, and space. Colors used in the artwork are green, tan, and white, gold, silver, red, and blue. The color green is found on the dragon and within in the city with the grass and trees. Tan is on the canal system and roads. White can be found in the clouds, on some buildings, and in the center of the canal. Silver and gold make up the dragon 's armor. Gold is also used in the web of the dragon 's wings, and on his horns. The only spot of red is the dragon flying across the city 's center. Blue is mostly found in the rivers and the canal. There is also a small dark blue dragon flying below the green dragon 's wing in the top of the artwork. There is a mixture of curved, straight, thick and thin lines in the artwork. Curved lines are everywhere in the drawing: on the dragon 's wings, the city 's walls, the roads, the mountains, and among the rivers. Straight lines are mostly in the city and make up the canal system, buildings, walls, and roads. There are a few straight lines that form the bend in the dragon 's wings, legs, and horns. …show more content…
Also, looking at the artwork, I saw a lot of the elements that were covered in class. The artwork expresses freedom in that the dragon can freely fly around, as well as responsibilities because his job is to defend the city. I love colors that contrast, and the vivid greens contrasting with the tan color give it an earthy look and seemingly brings the artwork to life. I like how Lowndes chose to do an aerial perspective, and makes the gap between the dragon and the city 's ground so vast. It really shows how high up he is in the sky; so high up that he is touching the clouds. I also like the expression on the dragon 's face because he looks serious, yet content. The green dragon reminds me of the cover of a book called The Fire Within by Chris d 'Lacey. This is because the dragon depicted in it is green and slightly resembles this
Through the use of complementary colors, she achieves great contrast. Contrasting hues develop a theme of light vs. dark, or in Liu’s case, expectations vs. reality. Dark colors are used to suggest the harsh, chaotic conditions experienced by the workers; while light, less saturated colors illustrate the calm passivity of traditional Chinese customs and ideas. The sky surrounding the stylized women contrasts greatly with the surroundings of the exhausted men. The dark hues establish heavy visual weight below the figures and the light tones of the sky create a sensation of weightlessness and help to further distinguish the fantasy like qualities. Liu also includes the application of analogous colors, primarily to make the traditional figures less dramatic and to help unify the surrounding
I selected this picture because as soon as I walked into the Evans wing it jumped right out at me. The painting's huge size and grandeur drew my attention. I like the use of bold colors and strong details. The painting evokes an image of power with the muscled Automedon holding two giant horses.
My favorite thing about this piece is the depiction of the New York skyline during a starry night. This is because I am in love with the city at night time. It makes me feel warm. My least favorite thing is the floral border. At first glance, it looks dumb and out of place. I did not understand the purpose of this border until further research was done on the piece of art. I do not think the artist was successful at achieving her goal. I think this because at first I didn't even notice the young girl flying above the bridge. Once I noticed her, I could not tell she was the same girl laying on the rooftop. This made the wild background not make much sense to me. If I were to do something differently about this piece, I would make the flying girl bigger, or put her into more of the focus. Also, I would do something special to show that they are the same girl. Maybe a unique outfit or something would do the job. During the time this artwork was created, Ringgold played a role in the organization of protests and actions against museums that did not show the work of women and people of color. She usually used “overly political paintings” to present her anger (Spector, Nancy). Within this work, she used a story quilt. Everyone loved it! She turned down her angry theme to show this light hearted example of a “spirited heroine”(Spector, Nancy). Women in this time period’s society loved to see a young colored girl
The colors he uses to create this harmony are green, blue-green, and blue. The green color is mostly located on the bottom part of the painting and the left side, while the blues are present at the top in the sky and the middle as the river. Derain’s piece has complementary color harmony, which is when one or more pairs of colors that are located directly opposite of each other on the color wheel, dominating the painting. The colors used are yellow-orange, green, red-orange, and blue. The red-orange and yellow-orange draw your eye instantly in this painting and are located mostly in the middle, while the blue and greens are along the
The artwork is on a white and grey background with lines going across that looks like water and the sun. There are also two trees without leaves and with leaves fallen on the floor with text all over the artwork.
In literature, insights into characters, places, and events are often communicated to the reader through the use of imagery within the text. Thus is the case with "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight". The Pearl Poet's use of imagery runs rampant within the work culminating to set forth the theme of mysticism and/or the supernatural. In this Medieval romance, the types of imagery used are that of the season or climate, the colors and textures of fabrics and jewelry, and that of the introduction of the Green Knight himself.
To begin, he uses an array of colors that allows each color in the sky to blend and transition harmoniously. Church also uses primary and secondary colors within the sky that consists of teal-green, reds, and bright yellow next to each other. This creates a contrast between the darker red shades in the cloud and the lighter shades of bright yellow in the sun. Besides the different shades that are being used, Church uses both neutral values and saturation. The neutral scheme can be seen in the black and gray-brown values of the trees and shadows in the bottom part of the painting. This, in comparison to the high saturation levels of the colors in the sky create a contrast. The colors in the sky are in their purest hue which means they are bright, and this being next to the dull and dark colored mountains and trees creates a contrast and more of an emphasis on the brightly colored sky. Those different colors also fall under complementary and analogous colors. The red cloud complement the blue-green colors of the sky they are in. There is also a heavy use of reds, oranges and yellows, all falling next to each other on the color wheel shows Church’s use of analogous
In the novel The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, there are many important themes in the eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg. The billboard was constructed to advertise a business of an oculist, symbolizing the growth of commercialism in America. The eyes watch the main characters as they pass the billboard on their way towards New York City, almost like a godly figure. At the beginning of the novel we see the setting as being described as a very terrible, grey land. As the eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg appear over the hills people notice the billboard featuring a colorful blue background and the large eyes that give a sense of a godly figure in the heavens. As the eyes look down below they also see all of the lost morals and disdainful actions people do, thus symbolizing the corruption of the people. At the beginning we only see a billboard, but towards the end, the eyes mean so much more than that.
From the piece of artwork “Rain at the Auvers”. I can see roofs of houses that are tucked into a valley, trees hiding the town, black birds, clouds upon the horizon, hills, vegetation, a dark stormy sky and rain.
My interest in satellite surveillance did not really appear to after I saw the movie "Enemy of the State" in 1998. The synopsis of the movie is: Robert Dean (Will Smith) is a labor lawyer who is unknowingly in possession of evidence related to a serious politically motivated crime. Government agents eager to hide their guilt believe that Dean is on to them, and proceed to turn his life upside-down, ruin his reputation, and frame him for various incidents, thanks to the latest in high-tech government surveillance techniques. In an attempt to clear his name and reclaim his life, Dean teams up with the reclusive Brill (Gene Hackman), a former federal employee who has as much high-tech equipment and expertise as the government itself. Smith scores as a man who is desperate to reclaim his identity and prove his innocence. This intense technological thrill-ride from director Tony Scott questions how much access the government should have to the communications of private citizens, and leaves the viewer with the unsettling feeling that Big Brother is definitely watching. After this movie I was amazed that we have the capability in our hands to do this. I have two scenes from the movie that show the technology at work.
“Jason” Elen called out to it. The human-sized dragon turned around to face her. It was Jason. Elen could feel him. What irrefutably revealed it to Elen was the dragon’s face. More specifically, the dragon’s eyes. Jason’s eyes.
Color is used to draw attention to important characters and objects in the painting. The red of Mary’s shirt emphasizes her place as the main figure. A bright, yellow cloud floating above the room symbolizes the joy of the angelic figures. De Zurbaran uses warm colors in the foreground. The room, used as the background for the scene, is painted in dark colors utilizing different hues of gray and brown.
“Dragons. Four fully grown, enormous, vicious-looking dragons were rearing on their hind legs inside an enclosure fenced with thick planks of wood, roaring and snorting- torrents of fire were shooting into the dark sky from their open, fanged mouths, fifty feet above the ground on their outstretched necks.” (p286)
In Toni Morrison’s “The Bluest Eye” the young African American protagonist, Pecola Breedlove, has an