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    Art group spreads autism awareness by painting – WDVM 25 - April 6, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    SUITLAND, Md. (WDVM) Saturday is World Autism Awareness Day, and a DMV-based art group is spreading awareness in a creative way.

    Children and their families left Creative Suitland not only with their colorful butterfly paintings but also left with a better understanding of autism. It was all hosted by Artbae (Art before anything else), an arts, entertainment, and education-based lifestyle brand with a passion for advocacy.

    My favorite part about todays event was painting the butterfly and putting my quote on there which is love is love because it really spoke to me, said participant Angelina Bryant.

    My favorite part of the day was learning about autism too, and painting the butterfly, said participant Joshua Bryant.

    Cary Michael Robinson created Artbae in 2018. His class today was focused on bringing the community together with a paintbrush and canvas.

    I want them to feel like they matter feel like they are important and want them to have something that they create that they can take with them and be proud of them, said Robinson. I know the importance of how art can be therapy. I have the privilege to work with different kids who were challenged and had autism. Their parents were just so thankful that they were able to find the activity that helped the children kind of cope with it.

    Many guests even left with a better understanding of Autism Spectrum Disorder.

    I learned that its nothing wrong with autistic people they just have a special power, said participant Neveah Bryant.

    There was also a special character dressed as a butterfly, Robinson calls it Sethemba. He created the character since the name represents hope in Zulu. Sethemba walked around the event helping kids paint and passing out books.

    It just brings me joy to my heart that knowing that me doing something that Im passionate about has the ability to help someone in a positive way, said Robinson.

    In honor of International Childrens Book Day, kids were given free books and school supplies donated from the community.

    Giving kids books and just giving them a different activity outside of technology gives them the ability to kind of inspire them, said Robinson. Kids want to feel valued out know the kids need positive outlets outside of sports and things like that, to express themselves because art is expression.

    More here:

    Art group spreads autism awareness by painting - WDVM 25

    Famous Paintings Taken On The Beach – Daily Bayonet - April 6, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    It has often been said that art mirrors real life and one key element of that reality is nature. Nature is indeed a delightful form of inspiration; its majestic splendor and mystery offer an endless source of creativity. She is a muse that is hard to ignore, taking center stage with her powerful expressions spanning all around us.

    Numerous aspects of nature appeal to the artistic senses, but the most captivating is the beach. From thrashing waves to gritty sand, the seaside reflects the duality between land and sea and the thrills of the beachgoers themselves. Perhaps it is this euphoria that draws the attention of artists alike.

    The seaside remains a famous landscape for capturing light, color, and movement in the art world. Whether its a tropical Hawaiian setting or a windy seashore in England, many paintings beautifully depict these elements in various forms. Here are five of the most famous beach paintings ever seen:

    This beach painting by the famous artist depicts two women racing across a beach. The painting is a miniature gouache on plywood created in 1922 during Picassos neoclassical period. It has a simple background lacking details, with the sky and sea almost merging into each others blue hue. The vibrant blue is also contrasted by the tan bodies of the women and the white dresses they have on.

    The semi-nude women run wildly on the shore with their hair blown back by the sea breeze. They do this hand in hand, depicting their agreement to pursue freedom and an unleashed passion. This represents a homage to the newfound liberties the world enjoyed after the First World War.

    An enlarged version of the painting was used as a curtain for Le Train Bleu, a French ballet production with a beach theme.

    Mary Cassatt is notable for her portrayals of tender familial emotions, particularly mothers and children, and was the only American-born impressionist to exhibit at the Impressionist Exhibitions in Paris.

    This is one of the most famous beach paintings depicting a typical day at the beach for children, building sandcastles. This work of art debuted in 1886 at the eighth and final impressionist exhibition. It is a painting of two little girls engrossed in their sandy fun, enjoying their day at the beach. Being a cropped painting, it blocks most of the background and focuses on the girls and their activities.

    Various aspects of the artwork, particularly the perceived affinity between both girls, suggest it was created to tribute Cassatts late sister Lydia who died in 1882.

    This iconic piece of renaissance art is one of the most recognizable paintings in art history. The exact creation date is unknown, but it is pegged at the mid-1480s. As is typical for renaissance paintings, the painting portrays Roman culture by delving into its mythology.

    It is a painting of the Roman goddess of love, Venus, surfacing from the ocean in a giant Scallop shell after being born. The goddess stands nude against the backdrop of a beautiful beach landscape with Zephyr, the wind god, on her left and a minor goddess on her right, holding out a cloak for her.

    The painting features pale, gentle hues and is themed after the writings of the ancient poet Homer. It is said to embody the rebirth of civilization and a cultural shift. These elements are critical to the renaissance, French for rebirth.

    Created sometime between 1808 and 1810, this piece by Friedrich is a stellar example of Sublime Art. Sublime is an art form that showcases the overwhelming power of nature, evident in contrast created between the vast landscape and the monks meager figure.

    The painting depicts a figure believed to be a monk, standing atop a low dune by the seashore, looking out to sea. Natures incredible presence is also emphasized in the paintings dark colors and the shadows they cast, with the cold sky and empty foreground almost swallowing up the tiny monk.

    There has been some debate over time as to the monks identity. Some believe it represents the artist himself, while others infer from the perceived location depicted in the painting: pastor and poet Gotthard Ludwig was known to give sermons on the shore. However, owing to the flimsy rendition of the monk as opposed to the vastness of the background, his identity has been left somewhat ambiguous.

    This 1931 famous beach painting created by famous artist Salvador Dali is considered one of the most important works of Surrealism and is probably one of Dalis most recognizable works. It was donated to the Museum of Modern Art in 1934 and has been on display ever since.

    It is often descriptively referred to as Melting Clocks. Described by Dali himself as resembling Camembert melting in the sun, the melting watches are believed to symbolize Albert Einsteins Theory of Relativity. This is a nod at the distorted notions of time and space, with the dreamy beach setting acting as a surreal backdrop to that distortion.

    Although the painting may generally seem abstract, the beach scenery in the painting is also believed to have been inspired by the Cadaques beach in Catalonia, Dalis hometown. This landscape is repeated in many of Dalis works.

    Seascape paintings have become a staple in the world of art as the union of land and sea continues to inspire many more artists today, just as it did in history. Artists have found that it offers limitless artistic expression possibilities and aptly takes advantage of its generosity. The beach, in turn, rewards their creativity with stunning depictions that reflect natures beauty and incite deep emotions. Thus, forming a mutual benefit between sea and art.

    The rest is here:

    Famous Paintings Taken On The Beach - Daily Bayonet

    On This Day in 1972 (Or Thereabouts), David Bowie Was Painting His Ceiling – Go Fug Yourself - April 6, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Im sure we all look just this fashion-forward when were doing a spot of house painting, right?

    Informative Caption says:

    English singer, musician and actor David Bowie (1947 2016) paints the coving of his ground floor flat at Haddon Hall in silver paint, Beckenham, south-east London, 24th April 1972. This was after the recording of Bowies concept album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, but before its release on 6th June 1972.

    I learned a new word! Coving is a curved or shaped strip of wood or other material fitted as a feature at the junction of a wall with a ceiling, or what we Americans would call the moulding. Bowies coving his Bowving, if you will is as spectacular as his ensemble, as is his ceiling, and I would expect nothing less from him.

    Haddon Hall has since been demolished because, per the internet, the roof was threatening to blow off which does seem like a potential issue. It does look like it might have gotten a bit structurally precarious:

    This seems a bit tilty. Very rock and roll!

    View post:

    On This Day in 1972 (Or Thereabouts), David Bowie Was Painting His Ceiling - Go Fug Yourself

    Institutional demand for DOT, AVAX and ATOM is on the rise, painting a bullish outlook – FXStreet - April 6, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Grayscale Investments has rebalanced its portfolio to include Polkadot, Avalanche and Atom, among other digital assets in its $480 million Digital Large Cap Fund. Proponents believe the asset manager's move indicates rising institutional demand for DOT, AVAX and ATOM.

    Grayscale, a leader in digital currency investing, performs a quarterly balancing of its portfolio. The giant decided to add Polkadot (DOT), Avalanche (AVAX) and Atom (ATOM) to its Digital Large Cap Fund.

    The addition of DOT, AVAX and ATOM to the crypto investment giant's $480 million fund indicates rising institutional demand for cryptocurrencies. Grayscale added ATOM to its smart contract platform ex-Ethereum fund.

    The Digital Large Cap Fund has added AVAX and DOT without removing any assets from the existing portfolio. The fund was launched in 2018 and enabled users to gain exposure to the top 70% of the crypto market. AVAX and DOT's combined allocation in the fund is greater than 3%, while ATOM makes up 5% of the DeFi fund.

    Grayscale removed Sushi and Synthetix from its DeFi fund focused on smart contract networks as they failed to meet the market capitalization criteria.

    Institutional demand for AVAX, DOT and ATOM has climbed steadily and the digital assets are on track for a rally.

    @Ninjascalp, a crypto trader and analyst, believes Avalanche is currently undervalued and predicted a rally in the altcoin. @BenjaminCowen, a leading crypto analyst, believes Avalanche price is on track to hit the target of $100.

    See the rest here:

    Institutional demand for DOT, AVAX and ATOM is on the rise, painting a bullish outlook - FXStreet

    Raphael, the painter of perfection – The New Statesman - April 6, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    In 1768, with the personal blessing of George III, the Royal Academy of Arts was founded as a school or academy of design for the use of students in the arts. The British nation was late in possessing such an institution the French Acadmie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture had been established more than a century earlier, in 1648 but the new academicians were determined to slough off any residual cultural cringe and catch up with their continental peers. So, in 1769, Sir Joshua Reynolds, the RAs inaugural president, delivered the first of 15 Discourses.

    The Discourses, for the edification of the RAs 77 students, laid out Reynolds vision of art, one based on the emulation of the Renaissance masters and the antique. In Discourse Five, delivered in 1772, he grappled with the problem of exactly which great name the students should best look to for inspiration and example. The choice, he was clear, lay between Michelangelo and Raphael (neither Leonardo nor Titian was even considered). These two extraordinary men, he said, carried some of the higher excellencies of art to a higher degree of perfection than probably they ever achieved before. They have certainly not been excelled or equalled ever since.

    Although, he conceded, Michelangelo would win the duel if the sublime in the sense of a moody and rumbling intensity were the measure, it was Raphael (1483-1520) who was Reynolds clear choice because he alone exemplified the great style. (In 1787, prompted by a visit to the Vatican, Goethe plumped, almost reluctantly, for Michelangelo instead. It is so difficult to comprehend one great talent, let alone two at the same time, he concluded, adding that, To make things easier for us, we take sides. It would always be this way, he thought, until the unlikely event that mankind acquires the capacity to recognise and appreciate equally, different kinds of greatness.)

    For Reynolds though, the excellence of Raphael was surpassing. It lay in the propriety, beauty and majesty of his characters, the judicious contrivance of his composition, his correctness of drawing, purity of taste, and skilful accommodation of other mens conceptions to his purposes. This last trait was of particular importance to art students and nobody excelled Raphael in that judgement, with which he united to his own observations of Nature, the energy of Michael Angelo [sic], and the beauty and simplicity of the antique.

    For more than a century those who sided with Goethe were heavily outnumbered. Raphael talented, multifarious, soign, socially adroit, and dead at just 37 fully merited Vasaris sobriquet the prince of painters, since he showed not only how to paint but also how to be the ideal artist. Raphaels pre-eminence was not to survive, however. Post romanticism, artists and aficionados began to desire less purity of taste and more grit in their oyster, and they found it in Michelangelos terribilit, Leonardos universality and Titians emotive colour.

    Even Ruskin failed to be swayed by Raphaels merits, later writing waspishly of his first encounter with the painter in Rome in 1840: Of Raphael, however, I found I could make nothing whatever. The only thing clearly manifest to me in his compositions was that everybody seemed to be pointing at everybody else, and that nobody, to my notion, was worth pointing at.

    Raphaels reputation as one of the greatest of the Renaissances Renaissance men has survived but he is perhaps more often admired than loved. The quincentenary of his death fell in 2020 and was due to be marked by an assortment of celebrations, including a much anticipated exhibition of his work at the National Gallery. That show twice fell victim to the Covid pandemic but is now, belatedly, taking place and offers the opportunity to see why Reynolds and so many others held him in such esteem.

    One reason was that Raphael seemed preordained for greatness he was the golden child who went on to fulfil his destiny. Vasari called him Natures gift to the world and ascribed his sweetness of temperament to being breastfed by his mother, rather than by a wet nurse. Raphaels mother, Mgia, died when he was only eight, which may account for the centrality of Madonna and Child paintings throughout his career. The boys early training was with his father, Giovanni Santi, official painter (and sometime poet) at the highly cultured court of the Duke of Urbino. By the time of Giovannis death in 1494, his 11-year-old son was precocious enough to work as his assistant.

    Some time around 1500 Raphael joined the Perugia workshop of Pietro Perugino, one of the leading painters of the day, and also received his first recorded commission, for an altarpiece: in the contract, although just 17, he was recorded as magister, master. Raphaels ability to absorb the influence of other artists, remarked on by Reynolds, was evident in his adoption of Peruginos softly harmonious and jewel-like manner and it was further demonstrated from around 1504 when he first started to visit Florence to learn from the art there. Both Fra Bartolommeo and Leonardo were synthesised in his work, and a drawing of a young woman of 1505-06 shows that he had clearly seen the Mona Lisa in Leonardos studio, while another depicts Michelangelos recently unveiled sculpture of David.

    The example of these artists resulted in Raphael imbuing his forms with greater weight and clarity and, through the expressive use of pose and gesture, endowing his pictures with resonant emotion (Leonardos notion of the moti dellanima motions of the soul) and a sense of storytelling. This step change is clear in his painting of The Deposition (1507) in which the heft of the dead Christs body and the pain of grief that runs throughout the cortge combine in a narrative that Vasari said would move the hardest heart in pity.

    In the autumn of 1508, at the summons of the Della Rovere Pope Julius II, Raphael moved to Rome and was to remain there for the rest of his life. He initially worked on Juliuss private library in the Vatican and so impressed the pontiff that he was tasked with frescoing the suite of four ceremonial rooms known as the Stanze. At the same time, Michelangelo was at work on the Sistine Chapel ceiling a mere hundred yards or so away. It was Raphaels frescoes, completed either by himself or to his detailed designs by members of the workshop that quickly formed around him, that made his reputation.

    In paintings such as The School of Athens, Parnassus and The Deliverance of St Peter, Raphael found new ways of handling large numbers of figures in lucid and rhythmic compositions (it has been claimed that he never repeated a pose in his work); of using a telling variety of expressive gesture, foreshortening and colour; of inventing innovatory light effects (The Deliverance has moonlight, dawn sunlight, torchlight, reflected light, and divine light), all in the service of a sophisticated melding of Christian and pagan theology. The 19th-century critic Walter Pater described the frescoes, in effect a summation of Renaissance humanist thought, as large theoretic conceptions that are addressed, so to speak, to the intelligence of the eye, and Kenneth Clark had this harmony of conceit and expression in mind when he called Raphael one of the civilising forces of the Western imagination.

    Some of the figures also show a debt to Michelangelo. At some point before the first part of the Sistine ceiling was unveiled in 1511, Raphael managed to sneak into the chapel to see Michelangelos work in progress and, as a result, a new monumentality emerged in some of his figures. The proprietorial older artist was outraged by the trespass, by the appropriation and by the fact that Raphael gave this assimilated style a public airing in the figure of The Prophet Isaiah painted for the church of SantAgostino in Rome. Raphaels popularity with the Pope, with whom Michelangelo himself had fractious relations, only further soured his mood and it rankled: as late as 1542 he claimed sourly that, What he [Raphael] had of art, he had from me.

    As with all his designs, Raphael first refined his figures and harmonised groupings in drawings of exquisite beauty. These were worked up to full-scale cartoons by his assistants (who were frequently also his models) and transferred to the walls for frescoing. Drawings were the basis for his oil paintings too, as well as being used as gifts (he exchanged drawings with Drer, for example), as models for engravings, tapestries, sculptures and medallions, and as the basis for paintings by other artists. Reynolds thought Raphaels greatest genius lay in his frescoes, but others might argue that it was with pen or chalk in hand that he was truly peerless.

    Raphaels closeness to the seat of spiritual power also gave him added lustre in the eyes of Romes patron class. Among those to employ him was Agostino Chigi, the Popes banker and a man so rich he would have gold plates made bearing the arms of his dinner guests, which he would then encourage them to throw into the Tiber at the end of the meal. While they went away staggered by his liberality, he ordered the goldware hauled out again in nets he had hidden in the river. Raphael would design two chapels for the Chigi family ensembles of architecture, statuary and metalwork as well as decorations for Agostinos villa then on the edge of Rome, now the Villa Farnesina, which included his celebrated fresco of The Triumph of Galatea (1512).

    In the figure of the water nymph, derived from his own gently ecstatic painting of St Catherine (1508), he not only showed his mastery of mythological subjects and the female nude but his conception of ideal beauty. In a letter traditionally thought to be from the painter to his friend Baldassare Castiglione, author of The Book of the Courtier (1528), Raphael wrote that, To paint one beautiful woman, I would have to see several beauties but, since both good judgement and beautiful women are scarce, I make use of a certain idea that comes to mind. Just as he transmuted the work of other artists so he sought to depict not simply nature but nature improved.

    Within two years of painting Galatea, Raphael was appointed chief architect of St Peters by Pope Leo X, and a year later, in 1515, supervisor of Roman antiquities and excavations. The leap from artist to architect was not as great as might be imagined (Michelangelo had held the same role): the great architect Donato Bramante was a distant kinsman, mentor and fellow Urbinite and Raphael included imagined architecture in many of his paintings, as well as inventing more practical iterations for his stage and chapel designs. As Prefect of stones and marbles Raphael was a proto-conservationist, reluctant to take material from Romes ancient buildings for reuse in its new ones, notably St Peters. In his Letter to Leo X, written in 1519 with Castiglione, he hymned antique Roman architecture, while he also embarked on a survey of ancient Rome that was incomplete at his death.

    Raphaels rise led to an unrealisable demand for his work. At one point he sustained a workshop, or perhaps more accurately an artistic enterprise, of up to 50 artists, many of the first rank. Giulio Romano, who would become one of the leading painters of the next generation, was his most notable assistant; Marcantonio Raimondi was the foremost engraver in Italy; Giovanni da Udine was its leading decorative still life painter; and the Flemish weaver Pieter van Aelst, who brought Raphaels tapestry designs including the ten monumental hangings he designed for the Sistine Chapel to fruition, was the most accomplished tapestry weaver of the age. What impressed Vasari most, however, was not how hard Raphael had to work for all his preternatural talent but his ability in keeping harmony between normally fractious artists. Meanwhile his literary friendships encompassed not just Castiglione but Pietro Aretino and Pietro Bembo too.

    This sense of sympathy, a gift for human relations, emerges clearly in his portraits. His depiction of Julius II (1511-12), for example, is not an image of religious authority but of extraordinary, indeed daring, intimacy in which the Pope is shown not as St Peters heir but as an elderly man weighed down, almost broken, by the responsibility of his office. However, Raphael could paint power too: his 1518 portrait of Juliuss successor, Leo X flanked by Giulio de Medici and Luigi de Rossi (Leos family cardinals), is above all a summation of dynastic potency.

    Although Raphael left many patrons frustrated by his unwillingness to take on commissions or by his tardiness in completing them, he seems always to have found time to paint portraits of his friends. In contrast to his papal portraits he made a series of informal works for private rather than public view that show the trust and ease between painter and sitter. In paintings such as his Double portrait of Andrea Navagero and Agostino Beazzano (1516), Bindo Altoviti (1516-18), Baldassare Castiglione (1519), Self-portrait with Giulio Romano (1519-20), and La Fornarina (1519-20), a calm amiability is tangible: these are records of relationships that are as comfortable with silence as with conversation.

    Just occasionally, Raphaels equability could crack. He was once teased by two cardinals who complained that in one of his paintings, St Peter and St Paul were too red in the face. Raphael snapped back that the Church fathers must be as red in heaven as you see them here, out of shame that their Church is being ruled by such men as you. There are, however, only two existing letters from his hand, so his true personality remains elusive and shaped by the anecdotes of others.

    That he was widely loved as well as revered is nevertheless clear from his death. Vasari records that the unmarried Raphael had an eye for the ladies and that pursuing his amours in secret, Raffaello continued to divert himself beyond measure with the pleasures of love; whence it happened that, having on one occasion indulged in more than his usual excess, he returned to his house in a violent fever. The doctors bled him but that only made his condition worse, and Leo X was so concerned that he sent emissaries to offer what aid he could at least six times. Neither medicine or prayer worked and when Raphael realised the end was coming he dismissed his mistress from his house (courteously leaving her the means to live honourably), made his will and confessed his sins.

    He died on 6 April 1520, on the same day that he was born, which was Good Friday, and a story quickly circulated that a crack appeared in the Vatican Palace foundations at the moment of his death. In fact it was due to a construction error and had appeared days earlier but it served nevertheless to reinforce the links between the painter and Christ. Raphael had bought a burial plot in the Pantheon, the former Roman temple turned church, and his funeral procession, with four cardinals carrying his body (there were rumours too that the Pope had been about to offer the painter a cardinals hat) was lit by 100 torchbearers and accompanied by a huge crowd. Leo X wept and kissed the dead painters hand and the bier was surmounted by Raphaels last work, the huge altarpiece showing The Transfiguration.

    Some 300 years later, in 1833, Pope Gregory XVI ordered Raphaels tomb to be opened so that his body could be studied. While the public bought tickets to view his remains, scientists examined his skeleton to see if it would yield clues as to his genius. The most interesting finding was that he had a large larynx, which suggested the gentle artist, contrary to the image of his hagiographers, had an unusually loud voice. Hans Christian Andersen was among those present when Raphael was reinterred and recalled the solemnity of the moment being broken when the coffin was tipped while being reinserted into the tomb and the bones rattled noisily to one end.

    Perhaps Raphael was due a moment of posthumous bathos after a life and body of work of such conspicuous grace.

    RaphaelNational Gallery, London WC2, 9 April 31 July

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    This article appears in the 06 Apr 2022 issue of the New Statesman, Easter Special

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    Raphael, the painter of perfection - The New Statesman

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