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Saturday, March 9, 2019

History, but goes deeper to touch on matters

It is non customary for there to be exchanges between us concerning my growing interest in fine art and my consequent enrollment in an art school. I however hope non to offend you, not by sharing what has become so intimately entwined with my heart.Im not going to amuse you by attempting a funny portrait of you, solely when discuss a classic that I recently encountered, and that does not only touch your favorite subject, History, save goes deeper to touch on matters of humanity, of war and the betrothal against such atrocities as happened on the Third of May, 1808. I give birth been deliberate enough, dear, to attach a photo of the portrait for you.Franscisco Goya, the artist who created this masterpiece is considered a key figure in the word of paintings. On this painting he created the background of a dark early morning, in which a church building stood.Goya tells of the dark evil that surrounded the mass execution that occurred that morning, an atrocity against humbled and innocent human beings. This is implied by the presence of a church, and demonstrated by one of the victims in the middle ground.Talking of the middle ground, you have seen the desperate faces of the victims displayed against the gently from a lamp. You must, as well as I did, wonder slightly the genius that Goya was What is this source of light? How can it exist in expect of such seemingly horrible executioners? He crafted it so cargonfully that we do not have to see the faces of the executionersAfter all, he must have wanted us to focus on the victims who suffer the violence, not the perpetrators, and so raising that humane part of us to protect the harmless of the confederation whove been pitted against the armed ruthless dictators of the world.The foreground is very dramatic. The firing soldiers are killing one victim after another in frigidity blood. Goya must have been very skilled in his conception of principles of design, curiously how he has used light to communicate his message, yet all this is through with(p) on a canvas, just (106*137 inches) Fairly large for a painting, but the depth of meaning it carries cannot be exhausted, not by time or space.I have hereby just given you a glimpse of what art we study in school and the thoughts that cross my mind as I engage the books.

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