The following sample essay on “Khufu Painting”: what tools the artist used and what they mean.
The artist used acrylic paint on canvas, it gives the picture a nice clean cut and looks like it was just painted yesterday instead of in the mid !960’s. It was a smart move on the part of the artist because acrylics can dry fast, they are thin, and resistant to cracking when the climate changes and it will also not darken or yellow over time, acrylics can also stick to a wide variety of surfaces.
The artist utilizes line and color edges in this painting. He uses white lines in between the colors to show the colors getting closer and to separate the colors so they don’t mix. He uses a lot of colors in this painting and they all seem to be uniform in the fact of, they all start out small in the upper corner and get bigger, by the time they reach the other corner.
He uses lines to control the vision of the audience and create depth on a flat canvas.
The form that he uses in the paintingreminds me of Pink Floyd’s dark side of the moon album, were it reminds me of light shining through a prism and splitting itinto the light spectrum that our eyes can see, the lines create the illusion that its going off into the distance, when in fact there just getting smaller.
The artist uses 5 hues which are orange, blue, pink, red and yellow.
He uses all the primary colors (red, blue, yellow) in the painting along with a secondary (orange) and a tertiary (pink) in his painting. By having these certain hues that complement each other, for example, orange and blue are across each other on the color wheel so they are complimentary colors. As is red and yellow being complimentary to one another. The overall palette is soothing in a way to me because of the colors he used, they work together to create a good painting.
The Rhythm in painting is very obvious, the artist uses the same type of lines to separate the different colors in the same pattern of putting the white in between the colors, and that’s a…
Khufu Painting: Tools and Meaning. (2019, Dec 05). Retrieved from https://paperap.com/paper-on-khufu-a-painting-by-sam-gilliam/