Either that or Starry Night by Van Gogh.
I know it's kind of clichéd, but I always loved Munch's The Scream.
That's cool!http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winged_Victory_of_Samothrace
I finally got to see my favorite sculpture this summer at the Louvre. It's so beautiful. I got my user name from it, too.
I didn't even try. I just thought of this old postcard on the mantlepiece. I thought people would perhaps share a little story of why a certain work of art is meaningful to them, not necessarily one from the theoretical top ten.I find it very difficult to play any favorite game, I don't have top ten lists of stuff I like
[NbOP: Lovely impressionistic painting there, but this post is too long already]
My entire collection of printed sequential art (I think the anglo term is graphic novels -don't confuse with 'comics') also had plenty room; Pratt, Shuiten, Franquin (yes, he belongs there!)
There you go. I don't mind quoting that picture, it really strikes one's fancy.But the one single piece of art I always seem to come back to is Fallingwater by the great US-American artist Frank Lloyd Wright:
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Scroll to the bottom of this page and click on the thumbnails for bigger versions of the many views of the house.
Drawn for and into the landscape, build with local materials - I think this is my 'favourite work of art'!
How about a few links to illustrate that?I always liked Scott Mutter's 'surrational images' style.
It's a pale copy of the Annunciation, but here it is. A little reminder.It would be either Leonardo da Vinci's Annunciation, in the Uffizi, which made me cry when I saw it. Or, Michelangelo's David, in the Accademia, which I found to be utterly breath-taking. Or, Hals' and Codde'sThe Meagre Compay, in the Riijksmuseum, which is opposite The Night Watch and blew it out of the water as far as I was concerned.
Right now it's Rembrandt's Carcass of Beef. I find it very pretty, in akind of way. I like how the colors are so spare and dim.
The visit of the Uffizi is well worth the 2 hours of standing in line for one hour of visit - without the possibility of turning back to a previous room.![]()
You do?WillsBabe, I remember your desctiption of the David from the Most beautiful thing thread. Quite vivid.![]()
Man-made Beauty - David
Forget about the pictures in your art books. A million photographs of it could not possibly do it justice. The sculpture of David, by Michelangelo and located in the Accademia in Florence, Italy, is, IMO, the most breathtaking piece of art in the world - and having been to pretty much every major art museum on earth (a few of them more than once), I say that as someone who has seen ALOT of art.
I am a huge fan of art and art museums...but this is the only piece of art I actually 'miss'. I have been to Florence and seen David twice, but he is so breathtaking that twice is not nearly enough. I would be very happy to visit him annually, because standing there looking at that piece, all the cynicism I have about the human race just washes away. Humanity, it turns out, IS good for something after all. We ARE capable of creating something pure and good and fundamentally beautiful. Michelangelo created something that reaches into the very core of what it means to be human, and pulls out the most beautiful piece of that core and carves it in stone.
You can't see it in the photos, but there is incredible detail there - you can see the veins in his arms for example - not just on the top of his hands, but in his arms.
Everything is just perfect.
If you never see another piece of art in the world, see David. Forget about the Mona Lisa. It's small and crowded and behind about a foot of bulletproof glass. Fergetaboutit.
The Mona Lisa leaves me with the question "So?" In contrast, David leaves me speechless...which is okay because I don't have to ask the question anyway.
^^Then it must have been somebody else loving the David even more than you do.
I also have a major soft spot for Caravaggio and Canaletto.
Seconded. What a tremendous loss.Guernica by Pablo Picasso.
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