tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3953690364532718935.post1901632916539995379..comments2024-03-10T15:20:30.552-05:00Comments on stmhumanities: Painting like a childMrs.Qhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17626503384057111894noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3953690364532718935.post-54824918417735446752016-02-06T23:51:15.044-06:002016-02-06T23:51:15.044-06:00I really enjoy the ability to interpret the modern...I really enjoy the ability to interpret the modernist art my own way! Most of these painters try to get their audience to feel a certain emotion while looking at these types of paintings, and I think that is really fun. The artists also often convey their own emotions in their paintings. Picasso, for example, has said that, "Painting is just another way of keeping a diary."I thought that was a unique way to look at it. Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03389415772083322618noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3953690364532718935.post-18152454736434644822016-02-06T22:33:47.724-06:002016-02-06T22:33:47.724-06:00On another related note, in my middle school art b...On another related note, in my middle school art building, they would have the teachers favorite artwork over the years hung up on the wall. Many times we would walk by and look at them and towards some, a child would say "Even I could do that" to which the art teacher responded "maybe, but you didn't." That always stuck with me. Thinking about it in relation to Modernism, I feel like Mosernist paintings are the ones in museums that guests would look at and think "even I could've done that" but after studying it, I see just how much thought and planning went into these paintings, and what they can represent. They are the work of true experienced artists, and after you understand the work, you can understand that too. Cheyenne Dwyerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08389666693162751830noreply@blogger.com