Professors (2016)
Tags
- Aaron Gilbert
- Abstract
- Albert Bierstadt
- american
- American Art
- art
- A Storm in the Rocky Mountains
- Awesome
- Brooklyn
- brooklyn museum
- Canvas
- Cassatt
- coffin
- death
- discussion
- Egypt
- egyptian
- Faile
- Fallen Bierstadt
- french
- George Washington
- John Biggers
- Landscape
- Life
- love
- Macaulay
- modern
- museum
- Nature
- Night at the Museum
- nyc
- Oil
- Oil on Canvas
- oil painting
- painting
- portrait
- rembrandt
- sculpture
- Statue
- Still life
- temple
- two ivans and oksana
- valerie hegarty
- Web of Life
- woman
Bronze Bird Lamp
by: Sara Pepkin, Michael Tirado, Alex Wong
I found the experience rather interesting. We learned about different mediums of expressions, not just the average portraits, paintings, and murals. There was a variety of styles to keep our curiosity satisfied and the descriptions help make sense of everything we saw.
Tagged Bird, Bronze, Contrast, Lamp, Pierre Emmanuel Guerin, post Civil War
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To Detail or Not to Detail
by: Mariel Heyboer, Austin Fischer
I enjoyed the experience, because it was my first real opportunity to gain some experience working with Garage Band and iMovie. My partner Mariel really enjoyed going to the Brooklyn Museum for the first time and exploring the different exhibits. She particularly liked the egyptian exhibit because of the tombs. I learned that art is subjective and everyone has the right to their particular belief, if they can defend it.
Tagged brooklyn museum, Colonel, Fountainebleu, Landscape, rembrandt
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Web of Life
by: Chris Rincon, Gerald Lizzo, Jia Jun Wu, Fadi Habashy
Enlightening. We learned about the beauty of art.
Recorder 220 – “Lake George” – John William Casilear
by: Jacob Hamer, Jeongwoo Nahm
This was not our discussion, but we enjoyed trying to convey what the speaker’s main focuses were.
Tagged Casilear, Lake George, Recorder 220
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Night At The Museum 2013
by: John C. DeFilippo, Maria Katija Grbic, Kirsten E. Paulson, Antonio Lorenzo Femia
It was very wonderful and interesting. It was very cool to try to interpret the art and the meanings behind it with our fellow classmates. We learned to build off of each others’ ideas and to view things from each others’ perspectives. We were able to each put forth different ideas and it expanded our understanding of the art that we observed. All in all it was much more satisfying as a group effort than if we had done a solo project.
Woman Holding an Arrow
by: Skye Wright, Carlo Sevilla, Alexis Romano, Ledia Duro, and Brett Barshay
It was fun, enlightening, and it helped us understand art on a deeper level. We explored further than the superficial layers of the artwork to find the artist’s purpose in creating the work. What was the most important, to us, was the idea that we could talk about art and have a valid opinion about it without being art students.
Tagged allegory, american, arrow, oil on panel, painting, portrait, unknown artist, woman
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Dinner Party
by: Neha Gupta, Dina Mangialino, Carmela Ruffo, Alyssa Warych, Jessica Johnson
We learned how to branch off each other’s ideas and create a movie to share our new collaboration with others!
Nude with Apple
by: JanYing He, Donald Fung, Nursultan Djamalidinov, Cheng Dong, Christian Budhi
It was a very interesting experience since we’ve never done something like this before. It gave us a new insight on our view of art because we took time to analyze and discuss different paintings in the museum. It was very hard to find something that stood out for us, but we got inspiration from the painting “Nude with Apple.” We learned that everyone has their own definition of what Art is and that everyone can participate. Through out the discussion, we also learned to appreciate each other’s opinions. (:
In Danger
by: Dillon Scibelli, Ikramullah Khan, Thomas Viskoc, Drew Podgorski
It was a unique experience. The variety of ideas that we were able to expose from one painting was amazing.
Tagged art, Boat, brooklyn museum, Contrast, Dark, In Danger, Light, Media Arts, William Mesdag
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Untitled by Richard Pousette-Dart
by: Jason Vayner, Clark Gentile, Karen Lau, Joseph Chiu, Aychen Halim
The experience was well worthwhile and has taught us much about observing both art and the world around us in a different way than our conventional society tells us to. We observe in an objective and subjective harmony that fully reveals the truth in all things.