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my favourite painter
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 12:19
by doc P
of all time
your turn now!
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 12:24
by Ozpat
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 12:27
by itnAklipse
Unoriginally, Vincent van Gogh. Close to that is a contemporary female artist from the Philippines, Zaballero, whose first name i seem to have forgotten in the last couple of years. But i liked her paintings enough to buy one, which can't be said about Vincent...
Behind those i guess it's David Tibet and myself..
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 12:31
by nick the stripper
Salvador Dali
Andy Warhol
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 12:31
by Ozpat
itnAklipse wrote:Unoriginally, Vincent van Gogh. Close to that is a contemporary female artist from the Philippines, Zaballero, whose first name i seem to have forgotten in the last couple of years. But i liked her paintings enough to buy one, which can't be said about Vincent...
Unoriginally? So my taste has to be original so that others like my opinion?
No thanks....Van Gogh it is. Original or not. I admire the man's work though I haven't got one.
I got a Brood one though...
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 12:38
by Obviousman
Edward Hopper!
Most wellknown for Nighthawks (below), but he did much more great stuff. Have a look
here...
Also very fond of
Luc Tuymans
Or how about Caravaggio
Or obviously Rubens, Van Dyck and most stuff along those lines...
And many many more...
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 12:53
by markfiend
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 13:05
by paint it black
loads (we collect paintings)
at the moment probably degas again
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 13:45
by Izzy HaveMercy
Luis Royo, for his lovely fantasy art.
And Jef Bertels, a Belgian artist of whom we bought a painting some years ago, a very nice guy with a weird, yet beautiful style...
Some works:
IZ.
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 15:02
by boudicca
Dash darn it, I was going to start a thread like this, you!
I'm also fond of Caravaggio... who else? Well -
Gustav Klimt,
Aubrey Beardsley
That pervy old bastard Egon Schiele
Jean Delville
And good old Leonardo Da Vinci as well I suppose...
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 15:08
by radiojamaica
for me it's the usual suspects:
Van Gogh (guess he's number one...)
Dali
Klimt
Mucha
and Milo Manara knows how to use a pencil too
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 15:20
by christophe
To be honest I’m not very into paintings, its something I appreciate but I know to little of it to have more of a opinion than if I like it or not.
Though some time ago I went to a exposition of
this group, and I liked a lot of the things I saw.
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 15:26
by SomeKindOfStranger
my dad did a brilliant job of the hallway.
His 'visions of magnolia' was truely a sight to behold....
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 15:35
by Badlander
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 15:39
by MadameButterfly
So many have been named already!
~ Van Gogh
~ Di Vinci
~ Salvador Dali
~ Herman Brood
~ Karel Appel
~ Luis Royo (his sketch work is amazing!)
~ Fiona Andreanelli and David Costa (their sketch work in Brian Froud's book "good faeries, bad faeries")
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 15:55
by Andie
Edvard Munch The Scream...
the feelings and emotion that this picture brings forth in me come from my youth...
John Constable Flatford Mill (on the river Stour)
this is the calm and well being i have found today...less than a mile from where i work...
art, to me, is about who you are...and where you fit in
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 16:14
by markfiend
God you're all so
figurative
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 16:45
by Obviousman
markfiend wrote:God you're all so
figurative
I've got a rule and a pen at home myself thanks
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 18:25
by Almiche V
Dali and Giger for me, but I'm more into digital art.
I'm studying a Fine Art degree at the moment where anything goes. Although the Turner Prize took the p*ss this year I thought. It's a shed that can be turned into a boat and goes on a journey ffs. If that's art then Michael Palin is an old master....
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 18:32
by scotty
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 20:38
by Big Si
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 21:06
by steamhammerdave
Gerrit Dou
Who I don't think anyone will have heard of
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 21:34
by canon docre
Oh yes: Francis Bacon
but as well:
Bruegel
Goya:
and
Bosch of course.
Egon Schiele
but as well:
George Grosz
and Otto Dix:
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 23:37
by daggs
Almiche V wrote:Dali and Giger for me
same here. I went to a Dali museum near barcelona and it was the highlight of the trip as I'd loved his work ever since I saw it and read a huge book on it. He had the museum designed with giant eggs all around it (in true dali fear-of-sex type style) and there was one of his paintings that was so high it's amazing how he managed to keep the perspectives right. He is also a really good sketcher...I saw a beautiful sketch of his that involved hands that became roses and entwined round themselves or something but couldn't find it in any books afterwards. He's also done some big sketches in biro!
I'd love to go to the giger museum, he actually has it designed like his artwork doesn't he. I have a few Giger posters in my room and a friend is lending me his Giger book as mine is all in German and being English i'm not too great with foreign languages i'm ashamed to say
EDIT: Escher is a good artist aswell, his work is abit of a headfcuk
Posted: 28 Apr 2006, 23:52
by aims
Our maths classrooms are a shrine to Escher. Sadly, that's because of the posters on the walls and not because of the architecture. More's the shame