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art
mixed media collage ceramic childrens art handbuilt pottery photos painting greeting cards landscapes Illustration Friday animals Fun Stuff food general ![]()
May 2008
April 2008 February 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 September 2007 August 2007 July 2007 June 2007 May 2007 April 2007 March 2007 February 2007 January 2007 December 2006 November 2006 ![]()
I couldn’t wait
Oil? more poppies Another cityscape Seventh in the Flowers and Fireflies series Flowers and Fireflies 6 Flowers and Fireflies 5 Flowers and Fireflies 4 Flowers and Fireflies 3 For Illustration Friday : Wrinkle HypnoBird is back…. Flowers and fireflies Possible new series : Flowers and Fireflies Rocks 7 Rocks Series : Rocks 6 ![]() |
December 12, 2006 @ 02:19 pm
Silent Night
mixed media collage on watercolor paper
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December 03, 2006 @ 02:25 pm
November 21, 2006 @ 10:55 am
From Robert Genn twice weekly newsletter: Leonardo da Vinci’s life was a living demo of his “seven virtues.” For those artists of life and of art who might plot to develop higher levels of accomplishment and greater self-realization, here are his seven virtues, as I understand them: “Curiosita"--an attitude of curiosity and continuous learning. What, when, where, why, and how? “Dimostrazione"--an ability to learn and to test knowledge by experience. Experimental nature. “Sensazione"--a development of awareness and refinement of sight and other senses. High sensitivity. “Sfumato"--a tendency to embrace and accept uncertainty, ambiguity and paradox. Free thinking. “Arte/Scienza"--a development of balance between science and art, logic and imagination. Whole-brain thinking. “Corporalita"--a calculated desire to achieve poise, fitness and ambidexterity. Physical action. “Connessione"--a recognition that all things are connected. Systems thinking.
“How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci: Seven Steps to Genius Every Day,” by Michael J. Gelb, and, “The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci,” edited by Pamela Taylor, are two of the noteworthy sources of Leonardo insights. In the latter, the first chapter, “The Painter,” is particularly valuable. For example, Leonardo neatly divides perspective into three types: “Linear perspective"--scientific diminution of objects as they recede from the eye; “The perspective of colour"--variations in colours as they recede from the eye; and “The perspective of disappearance"--the increasingly unfinished rendering of objects as they become more remote. Could anything be clearer?
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~ ~Artists online community with soooo much information
~ ~Illustation Friday ~ ~Jacek Yerka ~ ~List of links for writing anything and everything ~ ~Vladimir Kush ~ ~Wish Jar Journal ![]() ![]()
~ ~Copyright laws
~ ~Identity Thieft and Credit Repair Information ~ ~Perscription Medication Assistance ~ ~Perscription medication assistance II ![]()
~ ~Charels and his licking problem
~ ~COWS!!!! with guns ~ ~fun with cats and captions ~ ~More animal photos ![]() |
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