Monday 13 April 2015

6 process art

Jackson Pollock







Jackson Pollock is one of the forerunners and most influential abstract expressionists artists, his work evokes a lot of emotion and is just generally appealing to look at, with his large scale work capturing and maintaining the audiences gaze.He works by knowing where he is going to put the lines but dances whilst doing it, giving a lot of his own emotion in with the work.

David Reed







David Reed paints canvases based on the galleries spaces so they fit with the walls, usually as a long landscape and occasionally portrait, he uses wet brush strokes of paint and captures the movement with his work and then uses an extremely contrasting colour which clashes and adds another element and makes the paint much more aesthetically pleasing to view.

Ian Davenport







Ian Davenport is an abstract artists whom uses glossy paint and sets up wires along a canvas, and by dripping it from the top of the wire it allows them to keep straight lines and allows the colours to merge at the bottom in a kind of rainbow looking image, the process used by Davenport is extremely interesting and unique amongst himself and creates a beautiful shined paint affect that stands out.

Steven Pippin







Steven Pippin uses a washing machine as a camera and takes and develops his images inside of it, creating a unique image unlike any other photographer, I like how Pippin managed to make his work look old fashioned with new technology. I also am intrigued with Pippin setting a motion sensor his washing machine which captures images when someone walks past, making it feel like an everyday object that is generally turned on and then ignored doesn't ignore others.

Martin Creed







Martin Creed uses humour, simplicity or irony within his art work installations, whether it is a thought provoking title and a simple idea or a cynical view on everyday politics and expressions, one of my favourite of his pieces is called 'what's the point of it?', and is a go at a lot of days art work which is worth a lot of money for very simple ideas and big artists trying to flog it as something special, and features nails hammered into walls at different lengths.

Gregg Simpson







Gregg Simpson is a process artist and tries to make his work replicate an abstract representation of what the ripples in waves look like whilst watching and ever changing, he explores the mediums of oil paints and spray paints.



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