Erwin Olaf's "The Bedroom" (2004) captures intimacy and solitude through a striking blend of vibrant color and stark symbolism. What emotions does this evocative scene stir in you?
#Art #ErwinOlaf #Rijksmuseum #ContemporaryArt #EmotionalResponse
https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/nl/collectie/RP-F-2018-38-39-4
Paul Klee's "Carnival in the Snow" captivates with its vibrant colors and abstract forms, merging joy and complexity. Can art truly evoke a deeper emotional response through just shapes and colors?
#PaulKlee #ClevelandArt #AbstractArt #EmotionalResponse
https://clevelandart.org/art/1969.46
In this watercolor, acrobats and circus jugglers emerge from a complex pattern of shapes and colors. Two jugglers share a face and torso. A member of Der Blaue Reiter group in Munich, Paul Klee believed that the elements of color and shape alone could carry connotations of emotions, moods, and subjective feelings. His method was to begin painting without a subject, only settling upon something that could be recognized after layering colored form upon colored form.
I'd like to say a couple of things that we all KNOW but sometimes need to be reminded of in the aftermath of this weekend's events:
Choose your trusted sources of information carefully. As President Lincoln once said, "just because it is on the Internet doesn't mean it is true." Memes, as a rule, should not be your go-to source for information.
Your own emotional response may impact your willingness to believe suspect information. Sometimes it is better to walk away from the topic for a bit and come back later.
When a major event happens people want answers immediately, but answers take time. The vacuum between when people want answers and when they're actually available is when we're all most susceptible to buying into misinformation and the like.