Friday, 27 February 2009

Tiger attacking a wild horse - Delacroix

tiger_attacking_a_wild_horse-400

For romantic painters like Delacroix, the energy and violence of such an attack – expressed with such a few savage strokes to the horse’s main, and the shadows, and the background – was a physical expression of the intense emotions Delacroix sought to bring to life on canvas.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Cool PC, I love your art posts. Am I alone in seeing this painting and thinking of Rodin?

Anonymous said...

PC,

I saw this article on architectural sketching and thought you might like it:
http://www.slate.com/id/2212002/

It reminds me of the claim an elderly american architect made to me back in '99 that he thought CAD was evil: when he drew a vague line across the back of a sketch he meant "something that draws the eye across goes vaguely here" rather than anything precise, and CAD pushed him into a precision and decision-making that he didn't want at that stage. He really liked architectural sketches that were sketches.

icehawk

Anonymous said...

Nice picture!, need it for an art observational drawing and trial sessions. :D