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+ Portraits that tell stories By Connie Ison Shiflet.

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Presentation on theme: "+ Portraits that tell stories By Connie Ison Shiflet."— Presentation transcript:

1 + Portraits that tell stories By Connie Ison Shiflet

2 + Types of Portraits Individual Portraits Self-portraits Group Portraits: With a group portrait the painting also would have to take into account the relationships between the people within the painting. Gaze and gesture often show these relationships. With children it is often a child’s direct gaze, which gives us a point of entry and invites us into the painting. Wedding or Betrothal Portraits Formal Portraits show the figures like actors in a play and they exhibit various poses and gestures designed to tell us something about them. Partly through the setting, dress and poses of the sitters that suggest royalty, wealth or power in a portrait Informal: These poses appear more natural and in a natural or common setting. When with children it is often a child’s direct gaze, which gives us a point of entry and invites us into the painting.

3 + Portrait can be Formal or Informal Aaron Copland by candlelight, studio in the Berkshires, September, 1946 By;Kraft, VictorKraft, Victor

4 + Individual Portraits Thomas Sully (1783-1872) Queen Victoria 1838 John Quincy Adams, President of the United States / painted by T. Sully ; eng. by A.B. Durand. c1826 Oct. 6

5 + Self-portrait Charles Willson Peale, self portrait The Artist in His Museum 1822(1822) Technique Oil on Canvas Current location: Philadelphia Museum of Art; The George W. Elkins Collection

6 + Wedding or Betrothal Portraits The Byam Family circa 1762 Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788) Materials and technique: Oil on canvas Dimensions: 235 x 244.5 cm Holburne Museum: on long term loan to the Holburne Museum of Art and reproduced for educational use by kind permission of the Andrew Brownsword Arts Foundation

7 + Group Portraits Junius Brutus Stearns, 1810-1885, artist Washington standing among African-American fieldworkers harvesting hay; Mt. Vernon in background.

8 + There are many different kinds of question we can ask when we look at a portrait. The pose and expression that someone adopts in a portrait is very revealing and important. It can hint at someone's character and aspirations and even dictate how we feel about them; do they appear intimidating, friendly or nervous by the pose or expression they adopt?

9 + Portraits are created in different media and techniques. PHOTOGRAPHY, REALISTIC Frances Benjamin Johnston with camera on balcony of Treasury Building, Washington, D.C., 1888. Photographer Unknown, The National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections. 1959/61+ Washington, Library of Congress Z6620.U5N366-1426

10 + PAINTING LITHOGRAPH AND DRAWING Painting: The Staircase Group (Portrait of Raphaelle Peale and Titian Ramsay Peale),1795 by Charles Willson Peale 1822(1822) Oil on Canvas

11 + SCULPUTRE Life Mask of Abraham Lincoln, February 1865. Artist: Clark Mills. http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/stern-lincoln/object-rotate-lincoln.htmlhttp://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/stern-lincoln/object-rotate-lincoln.html

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15 + Life of George Washington--The citizen / painted by, Junius Brutus Stearns, 1810-1885. Wedding of George Washington and Martha Custis.


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