Critique

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This work was “ On the way home” drawn by Ferdinand Amorsolo, who lived in Del Rosa, Manila and
graduated from the University of the Philippines in 1914. Amorsolo painted and sketched over 10,000 of
his works over the course of his lifetime, using natural and backlight techniques. Fernando Cueto's
Amorsolo, which captures the vivid tropical sunshine of the landscape, is the undisputed master of the
Filipino romantic landscape genre. The scenes he painted seem to be touched by the glow of warm
backlighting, accentuating the golden wheat fields, lush emerald trees and clear blue skies that
characterize the ideal of pastoralism. On the way back there is a tribute to the workers, both human and
animal, who plow the lush fields from dawn to dusk. The mood of the painting is calm, with warm tones
that evoke familiarity and nostalgia. Harvest time is a similar testament to diligence. Celebrating and
sharing a bountiful harvest is a reward for the whole community and unites all generations. I think this is
a good painting because the artist uses different styles to create the image and uses different colors. The
contrast between the shadow and light areas indicates a sunny day. The artist uses different colors and
values to create unique textures through his painting style.
This work of art, The Daughters of Avignon, was described by French art critic and Spanish

artist Pablo Picasso André Salmon as "a perpetually glowing crater from which contemporary art
bursts with fire". I was. It was considered "the great manifesto of modernist painting". This
artwork was created in 1907 using oil paintings. Painting (Le Bonheur de Vivre) is about raw
sensuality, unleashed color, unleashed body size, unleashed imagination, and salon crowds.
Extreme, bizarre, even hilarious, the reaction to this work must have impressed Picasso as
much as the intensity of its abuse. Picasso painted the figures of the Daughters of Avignon in a
variety of ways. The woman pulling the curtain on the upper right is expressed in bold colors.
Her head is composed of sharp geometric shapes, the most austere of Cubism of all five. The
curtain appears to be partially fused to her body:

The cubist head of the crouching figure (bottom right) has been reworked into her present state
at least twice by Iberian figures. She also appears to be painted from two different perspectives
at the same time, creating a confusing and twisted portrait.The woman above is male, with a
black face and square chest. The big picture is created in a two-dimensional style that
abandons perspective. I think this painting sold well because the artist appreciated what he
wanted to express in this painting. The artist uses different colors and values to create unique
textures through his painting style

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