Self-portrait Essays

  • Artemisia Gentileschi's Self-Portrait As The Allegory Of Painting

    1210 Words  | 5 Pages

    Self-Portraiture is a form that is well known for showing one's true nature. A self-portrait shows a person in their eyes. By doing this it shows deeper meaning, and what is hiding inside. Many artists use this form of art as a way to depict their true feelings. For women artists it shows the artists true feeling on their position as a woman. Looking at self-portraits of woman it is easy to see that most of them display the woman in some position of power. Woman use the self-portrait as an opportunity

  • Frida Kahlo's The Two Fridas

    1472 Words  | 6 Pages

    Self-portraits are not meant to be interpreted as unbiased opinions of the subjects’ basic physical appearance. This, however, does not make them deceptive or untrue. Instead of merely showing us what these people look like, self-portraits express the endlessly complex facets of a human’s soul. They show us the things, people, and qualities that the artist valued. Dürer embodies Christ to exemplify the power of the artist and their divine ability to create, to make something where before there was

  • Frida Kahlo

    1053 Words  | 5 Pages

    Typically, Kahlo painted her self portraits with, at least, one animal by her side or somewhere in this picture. As seen in Kahlo’s painting, Self-Portrait with a Monkey, she painted a plain picture with just leaves as the background, but added a monkey on her shoulder. Since this was painted right after she had spinal surgery, she could have

  • Virgin Of Guadalupe Analysis

    8616 Words  | 35 Pages

    In the self-portrait López holds the snake firmly, in the portrait of her mother the snake is tied tightly yet almost invisibly around the sewing machine, while in the portrait of the grandmother she holds the snake tightly and indifferently, while holding a knife in her other hand. The snake has symbolic meaning for Mexicans. As Annette Stott identifies, “the snake is a native symbol of self-knowledge, sexuality and the cycle of life”, thus the snake

  • Paint Self Portraits

    290 Words  | 2 Pages

    • Expressive Arts and Design- Paint self-portraits the children will draw their families and using their imagination they will draw what they want or make up a healthy eating plate. • Physical Development- Begin to undress and dress by themselves independently for PE. Learn to recognise a good space in the hall and develop skills and control in moving in a variety of ways and using a space safely. Develop fine motor skills through a variety of activities such as using a pincer to pick up objects

  • Fritz The Cat Analysis

    914 Words  | 4 Pages

    Fritz the Cat (1972) is a film about the 60s. Being the first animated feature to receive an X rating, Fritz the Cat attempts to unveil all the violence, sex, racism, and disillusionment of the 1960s through an unfiltered, and debatably unfocused, lens. Ralph Bakshi is the director behind this film, and he aimed to show that the 60s was not a very perfect era, but in fact quite hypocritical one. Fritz the Cat and the numerous people that surround him are, for the most part, confused souls with often

  • Self Portrait Of The Artist Essay

    1367 Words  | 6 Pages

    that is exactly the thought that echoes when walking through the “Portrait of the Artist” exhibition at the Vancouver Art gallery. On the walls are a variety of self-portraits created for various purposes. Some were made for introspection, never meant to be seen by a wide audience, others were made to create an image of accomplishment and assert the artist’s status. One self-portrait that captures the attention is A self-portrait as an ox by Thomas Patch because this one involves an artist creating

  • Self Portrait Of Michelangelo Essay

    439 Words  | 2 Pages

    Italian art historians have announced this week that the first known self-portrait of Michelangelo might have been discovered in the form of a unique marble relief belonging to a private collection. This remarkable piece is a circular white marble tondo some 14 inches in diameter depicting, in three-quarter profile a bearded head, carved with precision and delicacy, and identified by the late James Beck, of Columbia University as a possible work by Michelangelo back in 1999. Beck's written Three

  • Kahlo Self Portrait Analysis

    1117 Words  | 5 Pages

    plants stretched out and entwined with the power cords of the US loudspeakers (Volk 2000 177). As a result, the Self-Portrait not only complicates the notion of the emergence of a Mexican nation — which Rivera was working so hard to depict — but seems to parody his attempt to merge

  • Self Portrait With Saskia Analysis

    867 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Self-Portrait with Saskia was created by the 17th century Dutch artist Rembrandt van Rijn in 1636 during the Northern Baroque period. The artwork is an three state etching, which is a printmaking process. Rembrandt is known for being the first to popularize the technique and typically used a soft ground allowing for him to “draw” freely. Rembrandt was high experimental and explored many effects such as different weights and colors of papers. The artwork was of both Rembrandt and his wife and

  • Mental Self-Portrait Ethics

    1537 Words  | 7 Pages

    generalizations and partialities can show into segregation towards an out-gathering and for kids and young people this may come as avoidance from companion bunches (Killen & Rutland, 2011). Negative mental self-portrait is at the foundation of misconduct, with wrongdoing serving as a compensatory system for self-saw shortages. For children to go through this theory’s tests it can be difficult. For instance, parents, friends, school’s teachers can be mean, rude, critical and discriminate toward the child.

  • Self-Portrait In A Velvet Dress Analysis

    2952 Words  | 12 Pages

    society. Both are synonymous to each other as they have long been mediums of expression. From the late 17th and early 18th Century saw the advent and use of the word ‘Autobiography’ with varied meanings such as self-justification, self critical analysis and evolving to the stage of self-documentation or memoir. Autobiographies are in their truest meaning ‘memoirs of a person’s life’. Aesthetics is the language of an Art work. Artists have used these aesthetics on canvases to portray inner emotions

  • Alice Neel Self Portrait Analysis

    956 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the 21th Century, you can rarely find an artist 's painting with such great value that has gained the popularity of a Rembrandt or a Neel self-portrait. They have merely vanished from the art scene. In 1669, Rembrandt van Rijn, a realism artist, painted one of his last self-portraits of himself, the same year that he died. He named it Self Portrait At The Age of 63. The painting originated from the Baroque style, a technique in which Rembrandt reflected shades of light. The National Gallery of

  • Frida Kahlo Self Portrait Essay

    806 Words  | 4 Pages

    Essay For my essay I will be discussing my evaluation of Frida Kahlo’s painting named “Self-portrait along the boarder line between Mexico and the United States”. Frida Kahlo created this painting while living in Detroit at the time, in the year 1932. My overall impression of her creation is she’s lonely, the loyalty to her home town (Coyacan, Mexico), how she views our country, and how the two sides of her portrait contrast. She displays she’s lonesome by standing solid, by herself on a stone engraved

  • What Is Frida Kahlo Self-Portrait

    557 Words  | 3 Pages

    Frida Kahlo created a self-portrait that seems to be portraying her relationship with her cherished husband. Frida is shown as a strong mother-like figure in the piece. She is wearing a traditional red dress, the bold color red might suggest her passionate love or anger towards her husband or situation. She appears to be holding her husband Diego Rivera, as if he were her child as her beloved dog stands nobly nearby. This could represent her wanting to hold on to her marriage to her husband or possibly

  • Lester Johnson Self Portrait Essay

    1191 Words  | 5 Pages

    streaks of paint that covered his hands, which held a paintbrush, tip upward, which provided the paint that showed on his hands and parts of his clothing.showed his hurry to complete the piece and gives a . The three heads on this canvas, entitled Self Portrait, is larger than life, with the three ages of Johnson all looking down on me as the viewer as if he was judging my right to judge his art, all eyes seemed to follow my every movement. This does fit his main ideas for the first several years, all

  • The Apostle Rembrandt Analysis

    1358 Words  | 6 Pages

    core of the story is hope, no one is beyond redemption. Rembrandt was very familiar with this story as well as its multiple facets. Christopher Braider in his Review: Rembrandt Agonistes, states, “by identifying himself with St. Paul in the late Self-Portrait as the Apostle Paul, Rembrandt identifies his art with the darkly distorting "glass" of 1 Corinthians” . As we will discover, this statement is underscored by the use of color and

  • Self-Portrait With Thorn Necklace And Hummingbird Analysis

    1082 Words  | 5 Pages

    Jennifer Mercado Art B37 Surrealism started in the 20th century and sought to release the creative potential of the unconscious mind. Surrealism was a movement that focused on expression, experiences and the artist 's imagination. Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird is a painting that has a bit of surreal influences and was created by artist Frida Kahlo in 1940. The painting depicts herself entwined with thorny branches and surrounded by different animals with a leafy backdrop. Surrealism

  • Is Frida Kahlo's Self-Portrait With Necklace Of Thorns?

    324 Words  | 2 Pages

    The painting “Self-Portrait with Necklace of Thorns” by Frida Kahlo portrays Frida a couple of years after her divorce with Diego Rivera. Frida is shown in a white shirt with a thorn necklace wrapped tightly coiled around her neck. It symbolizes the pain she still feels over her divorce from Diego. The overall theme in this piece would be sadness this is shown behind Frida. on her right stands a monkey which tends to represent bad luck and death and on her left a crouching cat which serves as a

  • Frida Kahlo's Self-Portrait With Loose Hair Analysis

    298 Words  | 2 Pages

    Frida Kahlo’s Self-Portrait with Loose Hair is an accurate portrayal of the artist because it clearly demonstrates her need to appease her husband, Diego Rivera. Frida Kahlo met Diego Rivera at school and was captivated by a mural he was working on. He encouraged her artwork and together they created outstanding works of art throughout Mexico (Biography.com Editors). However, like all relationships, Kahlo and Rivera’s had a bumpy path filled with affairs, causing Kahlo to believe that she was never