Louise Bourgeois
The works make me think about what mother's love means to the artist. The red ink makes me feel about blood.I am wondering if this is about mother and child have been family violence or abandon.
The artwork only shows in two colors: gray and red, I think it means that mother's love is strong and whatever happens,mother will never leave the child.
I would like to try using simple illustrates in my artwork, although it's simple its touched.
MAKE UP STYLE IN 1920s
I think the make up in 1920 is the most sexiest in the history ,especially the eyes mackup.
charming and intoxicating
EYEBROWS-Arched and thin with a colored pencil
EYES- Eyeliner and mascara on top lid only .EYE SHADOW has to be exaggerated dark, deeply set,smokey.
LIPS- dark red
BLUSH-rosey red circle on the center of the checks
Bebe Daniels /American actress, singer, dancer, writer and producer
Ron Mueck
When I saw this artwork, I feel it shows lonely and depressed.
A mother should be strong and full of love, feeling excited because of the newborn.
She is depressed, might be waiting for her husband or maybe her child isn't healthy.
The sculpture is huge, while I can't fell any vitality from the mother.
Why the sculpture is so detail and real? I think because he wants the audience feel what the sculpture feel, people, are easy to be affected by others feeling.
I would like to try adding detail in my artwork, sometime audience can't understand what is the meaning that the artist wants to convey if the work is too abstract. Maybe add some detail or make the work realistic will be more interesting.
Sarah Lucas
When I walked into the exhibition and saw the artwork, I just know its body, Sexual intercourse body.
I think the most successful of the work is that audiences can't see any heads, hands or legs(body part) in the artwork, while "this is a body" just Intuitively sow out in my mind.
I would like to try using imperfections in my own works and I would like to experiment with the way that different materials can show imperfections.
Pierre Bonnard: Nude in the Bath
Audiences can't see the whole body of the naked women, the works make me think about "peeping tom".
I think artist want to show"audiences = peeping tom", people are looking at the paint but the character inside the work doesn't want to be watched(or they don't even know they are be staring at).
scopophilia is something evil, so I have no idea why the work is so soft and colorful but not black or dark.
I would like to try using "audiences' perspective of viewing " in my artwork.