2012년 3월 14일 수요일

AIC Trip Reflection

The Art Institute of Chicago Museum has a bunch of arts. I could also see genuine articles, but I could not distinguish an imitation from an original. Therefore, I asked myself what genuine article is and imitation artwork is not art. The museum was divided by artists and time orders so I could compare the color, technique, shape, material, and expression method of artist between arts. When I took my first step in the museum, I really was grad too see Van Gogh’s artworks because these were very close to us through our text book. The museum was bigger than I thought so I could not look around the entire museum. However, I was very impressed with some of artworks. One of the most impressive artworks was “Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler”. It was located in a room of modern wing, and it was drawn by Pablo Picasso, 1907. The portrait of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler was definitely cubist work so I was really hard to understand about the location of face or body. Despite the portrait’s highly abstract character, however, Picasso added physical attributes to identify his very special subject such as a lock of hair and the knot of a tie. Moreover, when I read the artwork of instruction, I could know that the dealer sat as many as 300 times for completing this portrait. What a wonder!

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