Monday, December 29, 2014

Broken soul apart ... ~ American artist Daniel F. Gerhartz



Basque Léonard Parent paintings
Touches lips and hands,
Heat soul and your words,
The excitement of the heart, his knock
And the tenderness of the night for two.
Your tired, "I love you"
My barely audible, "you - God"
Thank you for all the fate -
For a moment of happiness and sadness year.
Back door is closed too,
And will not return that day,
When, forgetting about the cold cold,
Heart on fire. And now?
You all decided for us then.
Decided that we had better apart,
Decided as if forever,
Close the entire world one evil cloud.
Damn! I swear to the stars
And jets of hot tears
I love, love, but I can
You forget, though not seriously.
Soul torn apart,
Rough sewn stitches.
And I is not in your more power.
Cry! We now have become enemies ...




American artist Daniel F. Gerhartz was born in 1965 in Kewaskum, Wisconsin, where he lives with his family.
Daniel became interested in art as a teenager. Interest in the study of the American Academy of Art in Chicago, Illinois, and his love of museums and exhibitions of contemporary artists such as John Singer Sargent, Alphonse Mucha, Nicolai Fechin, Joaquin Sorolla, Carl von Marr and other French and American impressionists inspired him. Dan has a special interest and assessment of contemporary Russian art and magnificent canvases of painters Nicolas Fechina, Isaac Levitan and Ilya Repin.



October

Paintings by Dan cover a wide range of subjects, most notably the female figure.
His mastery of the female figure is brilliant. He draws inspiration from a very old tradition of romanticism and symbolism. Color and lighting are in harmony with his expressionist brushstroke, modeling of light and shade. His paintings are sensual. His subjects cause timelessness. Emotions - a vital part of his work, and at the same time, knowledge of anatomy, human form makes his canvases very strong visual events.
A distinctive feature of his style is the minimum detail pictures. Light, color, composition, content. In the analysis of his works he repeatedly mentions the squinting eye, which helps to remove the excess of composition and distracting, focusing on the essentials. Playful portrait, by the way, is taken from that article, where he demonstrates with specific examples from the squinting eye effect. In short the main thing in an artist - at the details he closed his eyes. It works by contemporary American painting found another great example of the correct sense of the prevalence of living and strong expression of technical perfection is often dry now popular hyperrealism.





Dream Of The Angels





October Glow





Almost Seven







Secret







Jasmine and Daffodil







Artisan






Whispers Of Heaven






Sparkle






Dolls and Angels





Flowers For A Day






Warmth






Her Favorite Place






Awaiting His Return

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