Ruben Studdard Essays

  • Teen People Magazine

    1104 Words  | 3 Pages

    audiences. To appeal to the more visual oriented audience, the magazine uses exotic photography in the advertisements for Self Esteem, Secret Deodorant, and Ralph Lauren. For the more text oriented audience, the magazine includes celebrity profiles on Ruben Studdard as well as both Nick Lachey and Jessica Simpson. Whether the audience is visual or text oriented, Teen People’s main objective is to create an animated and enjoyable magazine for young female readers. The advertisement for the clothing line

  • Fernando Botero

    1541 Words  | 4 Pages

    admires, Peter Paul Rubens. Rubens represents the epitome of the standard notions of the "baroque". His own fleshy, eroticized figures exist in a world of exuberance and plenitude in both the realms of the sacred and the profane. Like Rubens, Botero is an individual whose intense engagement with the world around him enriches his perceptions, heightens his discernment of both the material and spiritual nature of specific things, places and people. Also in the manner of Rubens, Botero celebrates the

  • Ruben Dario Research Paper

    1836 Words  | 4 Pages

    March, 11, 2016 Ruben Dario: The Father of Modernism in Latin America Literatures Ruben Dario was the most influential Nicaraguan poet, known as the father of “Modernism.” Modernism is a late 19th century Spanish-language literary movement that rose from a reaction against the literary naturalism and against the wider bourgeois conformity and materialism of the Western Society. He was born in Metapa, Nicaragua (now Ciudad Dario) on 18 January 1867. His parents named him Felix Ruben Garcia Sarmiento

  • Paul Rubens and the Baroque Period

    1047 Words  | 3 Pages

    Paul Rubens and the Baroque Period For this formal analysis paper I would like to talk about a painting done by the artist named Peter Paul Reubens. The piece itself is entitled, "The Apotheosis of Henry IV and the Proclamation of the Regency of Marie de Medicis on May 14, 1610." The painting was completed in the year 1610, and today it is on display at the Louvre in Paris, France. This painting was one of many that I had to choose from when I was deciding on what to write about. Many internet

  • Peter Paul Rubens

    661 Words  | 2 Pages

    Peter Paul Rubens was the painter of the first part of the 17th Century in Catholic Europe. How he became so is an interesting story. Rubens was educated to be a humanist but like all great artists choose his profession for himself. The combination of first-rate classical education with an innate visual genius made for an unprecedented combination in an artist. It has been said that no artist has ever been as well educated as Rubens. After training with three minor artists in Antwerp. Rubens set off

  • History of Portraiture

    673 Words  | 2 Pages

    History of Portraiture Portraiture is a visual representation of an individual people, distinguished by references to the subject's character, social position, wealth, or profession. Portraitists often strive for exact visual likenesses. However, although the viewer's correct identification of the sitter is of primary importance, exact replication is not always the goal. Artists may intentionally alter the appearance of their subjects by embellishing or refining their images to emphasize

  • Watteau paper

    628 Words  | 2 Pages

    city had belonged to the Spanish Netherlands in the decade leading up to the birth of Watteau. Because the city had been part of the Netherlands for so long, Watteau’s art had a great amount of Dutch influence, especially the famous Flemish painter Rubens. In addition to the Flemish influences, a lot of French as well as some Italian elements are seen in his work. His hybrid style which drew from many schools of art, including the Baroque, led to him being a pioneer in the new Rocco style of ...

  • The Fallacy of Bellori's Views on Caravaggio

    759 Words  | 2 Pages

    It does not seem to be true that Caravaggio, as stated by Giovanni Bellori, “advanced the art of painting”. At first, based off of Caravaggio’s primary contribution to art, tenebrism, one may conclude that he was an innovative painter of his time. This happens to be very similar to the views of Bellori, who argues that Caravaggio was innovative in that he introduced realism and abandoned the conventions of preceding painters. In this case it seems that Caravaggio’s “Boy with a Basket of Fruit” would

  • An Explication of W.H. Auden "Musee Des Beaux Arts"

    661 Words  | 2 Pages

    In poetry, the use of allusions is very common. There are briefs, usually indirect references to another work or to real or historical events or persons, traditionally as a way of connecting those elements as well as enriching the meaning of the current work through associations with the other. In his poem "Musee des Beaux Arts", W.H. Auden uses allusions as a way of drawing connections between his poem, Peter Brueghel's painting " The Fall of Icarus", the myth, and the humanity indifference toward

  • Christ Triumphant Over Sin and Death by Peter Paul Ruben

    707 Words  | 2 Pages

    Christ Triumphant Over Sin and Death by Peter Paul Ruben Man has been painting since the beginning of existence. In fact, it was one of the very first methods of expression and communication ever used by humans. Art has been used to represent diverse kinds of religion, beliefs, and points of from all around the world as a form of expression that could last forever and speak every language. At this time I am going to refer to a specific form of art. This type of art is painting. I am also

  • The Baroque Period and Famous Composers

    1240 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Baroque Period and Famous Composers The baroque period was characterized by a heroic, dramatic and emotional theme. With well know names like Rembrant, Bach, Pennini, Caravaggio, Bernini, Tintoretto, Velasques, Poussin, Handel, and Rubens, the period produced many popular pieces of music and art. The art of the period was filled with movement, light versus shadow, and the use of the whole surface. The composers incorporated new ideas into their music such as different major and minor

  • Critique of The Raising of the Cross

    844 Words  | 2 Pages

    Paul Rubens. This piece was painted between 1609 and 1610 with oil on canvas in life size with the centerpiece of the triptych measuring 15’2” by 11’2”. It is now displayed in the Cathedral of Our Lady in Antwerp, Belgium (Dunton, 164). Peter Paul Rubens was a Flemish artist that painted in Baroque style, his paintings were mostly of religious and mythical origin and his skill in such has been highly regarded in his lifetime and since. (www.peterpaulrubens.com) Born June 28, 1577, Rubens development

  • How Did Peter Paul Rubens Influence His Work

    1048 Words  | 3 Pages

    Also known as Pieter Pauwel Rubens; Pedro Pablo Rubens; Petrus Paulus Rubens. Peter Paul Rubens was one of the most famous and successful European artists of the 17th century, and isknown for such works as "The Descent from the Cross," "Wolf and Fox Hunt" and "The Garden of Love." Ruben's style contains a great deal of vivacity that surpassed even the most influential artists of his time. He had a vivid imagination and was successful in transforming the Baroque style into an international art form

  • Peter Paul Ruben's Prometheus Bound

    1129 Words  | 3 Pages

    Peter Paul Ruben and Frans Snyder’s use of exuberant colors, movement and dramatic contrast of light and dark enhances the sense of drama in Prometheus Bound. Categoriezed as a baroque painter, Ruben was born on June 28, 1577 and traveled to Italy early in his life to develop his skills further. Ruben was in his early adulthood when he returned from Italy, in the early 1600’s, and shortly after began work on the painting between the years 1611-12. His venture to Italy can be viewed in this artwork

  • Baroque Art

    1432 Words  | 3 Pages

    After the Protestant Reformation began to take hold, the Catholic Church responded with their own Counter Reformation. To combat the spread of Protestantism, the Church developed a new style of art that was dramatic, full of emotion, and very realistic. This new style, which came to be known as Baroque, contrasted with the genre paintings of the Protestant North that were often used to teach moral lessons (Sullivan). Originating in Italy in the 16th century, it was used by the Church to retain followers

  • Massacre Of The Innocent By Peter Paul Rubens Essay

    616 Words  | 2 Pages

    Massacre of the Innocents Peter Paul Ruben is a talented artist of the Baroque period, who produced several theological Baroque paintings and sculptures highlighting biblical aspects of the Counter-Reformation. Ruben’s first series of paintings were two different paintings of the Massacre of the Innocents. Held and Posner illustrates Ruben’s elaborate approach to his later version of the Massacre of the Innocents 1637 also known as the Slaughter of the Innocent, as it exhibits expression, strength

  • Peter Paul Rubens The Holy Family With St. John

    683 Words  | 2 Pages

    PAUL RUBENS, Baroque Europe, 1609, Oil on Wood, 54 ½ x 47 ½ (138.43 x 120.65 cm), The piece of work is in prominent condition. Peter Paul Rubens was the most celebrated and creative 17th-century Flemish painter who constructed on the breakthroughs of the Italian Renaissance and Baroque masters to develop a truly unique pan-European painting style. Rubens received a classical and religious education and was one of the most linguistic, scholarly, and smartest artists of his time. Rubens becomes

  • Dante And Vigil In Hell

    886 Words  | 2 Pages

    another porcelain made by her that it shows the angel having a knife and cutting her leg. I can say that’s outside the box, but also it happens in reality with certain people or even kids that don’t know. The second artistic would be Peter Paul Rubens- Massacre of the innocent you may be wonder why it was named like this, but this is a painting where In this essay, I will be discussing the four movements and will be giving examples and the site sources. I will be discussing how the artist developed

  • Analysis Of Rubens Women By Wislawa Szymborska

    1206 Words  | 3 Pages

    Who decides what a woman should look like? Wislawa Szymborska’s poems “Rubens Women,” “Portrait of a Woman,” and “Over Wine” begin to answer this question. The ideal female body of today’s world is tall and skinny, but not everyone fits that description. Why can’t a woman decide for herself what she should look like? Szymborska was a Polish poet who was one of few females to win a Nobel Prize for her works. She is not known for feminist writing and she does not preach feminism in her works. Many

  • Influence On Peter Paul Rubens

    714 Words  | 2 Pages

    This essay will be about Flemish Baroque painter, Peter Paul Rubens. I will explain why Paul Rubens was highly influenced and impacted by the arts in the high renaissance time. Such as the works of Raphael, Leonardo Da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Titian, and how some of these artists ' works had an immediate effect on him during his time. I will answer this question by giving vast evidence of how Paul Rubens works are different based on contextual factors, but at the same time the same and under the