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Expression Painting - Chancery Lane Gallery

Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryCrawling from the Wreckage, 101cm x 101cm


Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryLightning Class Cruisers. 223 x 175cm


Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryEverything We've Done is Forgiven. 223cm x 175cm



Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryEverything that Glitters Ain't Fishscale. 223cm x 223cm


Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryUltimate Nullifier. 200cm x 200cm, oil on canvas 2006


Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryTigranes. 200cm x 200cm, oil on canvas 2006


Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryBest Painting Ever. 230cm x 230cm, oil on canvas 2006


Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryCuntminer. 230cm x 230cm, oil on canvas 2006


Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryUntitled. 100cm x 100cm, oil on canvas 2006


Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryWhen in doubt, knock 'em out. 100cm x 100cm, oil on canvas 2006


Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryCome and have a go if you think you're hard enough. 110cm x 90cm, oil on canvas 2006



Expression Painting - Chancery Lane GalleryNever tell anyone anything, ever. 110cm x 90cm, oil on canvas 2006


source : http://www.simon-birch.com/TheArmenian.html

Woman Painting With Many Face - Worst Best Painting In The World

Woman Painting  With Many Face - Worst Best Painting In The World
Woman Painting With Many Face - Worst Best Painting In The World - Oil on Canvas Painting

Abstract Painting of a Double Bass Player

Abstract Painting of a Double Bass Player
Abstract Painting of a Double Bass Player

Last 100 Years Painter - Peter Paul Rubens


Peter Paul Rubens and Anthony van Dyck, the greatest Flemish artists of the seventeenth century, are the characters on the international stage, namely that the Catholic church and the royal court and the central European trade. As a painter of religious images, mythological scenes, classical and modern history, and portraits, Rubens has a wider impact than Van Dyck. But as a painter, Van Dyck far more influential, especially in England, where he spent most of the 1630s and his work inspired artists for the next 150 years (Thomas Gainsborough [20.155.1] is the most gifted admirer).

Van Dyck was also a highly expressive painter of religious themes and, as a draftsman, a sensitive landscapist, although in the latter field Rubens surpassed every other Flemish painter (A Forest at Dawn with a Deer Hunt [1990.196] is one of a few dozen landscapes Rubens painted mainly for his own pleasure.) Van Dyck's reputation as a portraitist was enhanced by his large series of etchings called the Iconography. Not a printmaker but an astute entrepreneur, Rubens supervised the reproduction of his compositions in hundreds of engravings.

In contrast to the teenaged prodigy van Dyck, who was about twenty-one when he painted the self-portrait illustrated here (49.7.25), Rubens did not develop quickly as an artist. In his early years, he received an exceptional education, experience as a page in a noble house, and training in the studios of three Antwerp painters, most importantly that of Otto van Veen, who probably encouraged Rubens's trip to Italy in 1600. Here he absorbed profound impressions from classical sculpture and the works of Italian artists such as Raphael, Leonardo, Michelangelo, Correggio, Tintoretto, Caravaggio, and Annibale Carracci. Rubens remained in Italy for eight years, supported by commissions from the duke of Mantua, Genoese nobility, and great Roman patrons, including major orders of the Catholic church. Before the end of 1608, when he returned to Antwerp, he had painted some of the most important altarpieces in Genoa, Rome, and elsewhere in Italy. This experience provided the groundwork for his extraordinary output of religious pictures during the next fifteen years in Antwerp, which he managed by organizing a large workshop of pupils and assistants.

Rubens was appointed court painter to Archduke Albert and Archduchess Isabella, who governed the Southern Netherlands from Brussels on behalf of Spain. However, the artist chose to remain in Antwerp, where he married and built a house and large studio in a Northern version of the modern Italian style. The altarpieces he supplied to Antwerp churches—like the two great triptychs now in the Antwerp Cathedral, The Raising of the Cross and The Descent from the Cross—were often funded by distinguished laymen with a discerning knowledge of the arts, such as the burgomaster Nicolaes Rockox. The Wolf and Fox Hunt of about 1615–21 (10.73) is the first of several large hunting pictures that Rubens made as alternatives to tapestries and sold to patrons like the duke of Bavaria. He also collaborated with other Antwerp artists, for instance, Jan Brueghel the Elder (45.141) and Frans Snyders, to produce mythological and other pictures intended mainly for connoisseurs.

In all of these works—religious paintings, tapestry designs, book illustrations, and other projects—Rubens exhibited extraordinary learning and imagination. Among the many examples of his insightfully conceived iconographic programs was the spectacular series of thirty-nine ceiling paintings for the Jesuit Church in Antwerp. The canvases (later destroyed in a fire) were actually painted mostly by van Dyck, after Rubens's oil sketches, his preferred method of formulating compositions. These modelli (models), fluid studies in oil paint on comparatively small wooden panels, were used both as proposals to patrons and as guides for assistants. One of the few hundred known examples is The Triumph of Henry IV of about 1630 (42.187), the last of four oil sketches for a monumental canvas now in the Uffizi, Florence. The painting was part of a large cycle of canvases, never completed, that would have decorated the Luxembourg Palace in Paris. The pendant cycle of twenty-four paintings depicting the life of Maria de' Medici (Louvre, Paris) was installed in the palace in 1625.

In the later 1620s, the demands of Rubens's international clientele and his role in peace negotiations between England and Spain made him the "most harassed man in the world" (as he complained in his extensive correspondence). He spent seven months in Madrid in 1628–29, where he portrayed the royal family and made copies after Titian, and nine months in London in 1629–30 (the ceiling paintings of the Banqueting House at Whitehall, London, were completed in Antwerp by 1634). In 1630, Rubens remarried (1981.238) and in the next few years organized his studio to work efficiently in his absence; large-scale projects such as the decoration of the Torre de la Parada (Philip IV's hunting lodge near Madrid) and the decorative scheme for the triumphal entry into Antwerp of the new governor, Cardinal Infante Ferdinand, were executed almost entirely by assistants and collaborators following the master's designs. However, numerous landscapes, unofficial portraits, and other pictures were painted entirely by Rubens during this period, either in Antwerp or at his country estate of Steen (purchased in 1635). He died in 1640, leaving behind five children, an impressive art collection, and a body of work that profoundly influenced artists—including Watteau, Boucher, Fragonard, Reynolds, GĂ©ricault, and Delacroix—for more than two centuries.

The first important painters to respond to Rubens's work were Jacob Jordaens and van Dyck in Antwerp. Both artists adopted Rubens's practice of painting studies of live models (usually in bust-length) for later use as characters in religious pictures. (Van Dyck's Study Head of a Young Woman of about 1618–20 [57.37] may have become a repentant Magdalen or mourning Virgin, although no precise use is known.) Van Dyck began training as a painter under Hendrick van Balen at the age of ten; he already had his own studio and pupil when he joined the painters' guild in 1618. By the fall of 1620, the young painter of portraits and religious pictures was in the service of King James I of England, but in 1621 he returned to Antwerp and then departed for Italy, where he remained until late 1627. While there, he painted grand portraits of Genoese aristocrats and numerous other distinguished figures (14.40.619). He also studied antiquity and Italian painters, concentrating—far more than Rubens had—on the single model of Titian. The latter's influence is evident in Virgin and Child with Saint Catherine of Alexandria (60.71.5), which dates from the artist's "second Antwerp period" of 1628–32. Most of van Dyck's remaining years were spent in England, where he was knighted by Charles I and effectively created the enduring image of the Stuart court (89.15.16).

Van Dyck's brilliant brushwork, graceful arrangement of elegant figures, and seemingly effortless displays of luxurious drapery occasionally make him appear a more superficial master than Rubens. A fair number of the later English portraits, which are often largely by assistants, support this view. However, the lasting importance of direct observation in van Dyck's art is clear in both the style and character of his autograph portraits. Similarly, a sincere emotionalism lends substance to the seemingly nervous manner of his religious pictures. Perhaps only a temperamental prodigy with astonishing natural talent could learn so much from Rubens and at the same time become a great master of a very different kind.


Some Rubens artworks:


Last 100 Years Painter - Peter Paul Rubens - PaintingStudy of Two Heads
Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, 1577–1640)
Oil on wood

27 1/2 x 20 1/2 in. (69.9 x 52.1 cm)
Bequest of Miss Adelaide Milton de Groot (1876–1967), 1967 (67.187.99)



Last 100 Years Painter - Peter Paul Rubens - PaintingVirgin and Child with Saint Catherine of Alexandria
Anthony van Dyck (Flemish, 1599–1641)
Oil on canvas

43 x 35 3/4 in. (109.2 x 90.8 cm); with added strips 44 1/8 x 37 in. (112.1 x 94 cm)
Bequest of Lillian S. Timken, 1959 (60.71.5)



Last 100 Years Painter - Peter Paul Rubens - PaintingThe Holy Family with Saints Francis and Anne and the Infant Saint John the Baptist, probably early 1630s
Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, 1577–1640)
Oil on canvas

69 1/2 x 82 1/8 in. (176.5 x 208.6 cm)
Gift of James Henry Smith, 1902 (02.24)



Last 100 Years Painter - Peter Paul Rubens - PaintingWolf and Fox Hunt, ca. 1615–21
Peter Paul Rubens and Workshop (Flemish, 1577–1640)
Oil on canvas

96 5/8 x 148 1/8 in. (245.4 x 376.2 cm)
John Stewart Kennedy Fund, 1910 (10.73)



Last 100 Years Painter - Peter Paul Rubens - PaintingA Forest at Dawn with a Deer Hunt, ca. 1635
Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, 1577–1640)
Oil on wood

24 1/4 x 35 1/2 in. (61.5 x 90.2 cm)
Purchase, The Annenberg Foundation, Mrs. Charles Wrightsman, Michel David-Weill, The Dillon Fund, Henry J. and Drue Heinz Foundation, Lola Kramarsky, Annette de la Renta, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, The Vincent Astor Foundation, and Peter J. Sharp Gifts; special funds, gifts, and other gifts and bequests, by exchange, 1990 (1990.196)


source : http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/rvd_p/hd_rvd_p.htm

Genetic Tattoo

Currently people get a tattoo, which is cut into their skin and then perhaps colored in. Body Art is a way to self-express one’s self and there is probably no better way to make a statement about your individuality than with a personalized tattoo. In the future there will be genetic tattoos, which will keep your tattoo perfectly the same for your natural life. You will be able to get translucent skin with a deep tissue tattoo which can be a three dimensional tattoo similar to a hologram. You will be able to get any color found anywhere in nature and you can choose what you would like.

Genetic Tattoos will be available within the next couple of decades, the first ones will be used to indicate security clearances for secret government and military operations and then later these technologies will pass into the private sector thru medical transfer technologies and then into Tattoo Parlors with these specialized Genetic Tattoo machines. Dads can get the family portrait on the insides of the forearms and never need to dig into their wallet for motivation or a reminder of why they do what they do. Veterans will never forget the fallen comrades and anyone who wishes to say anything can say it permanently in style with a 3D genetic tattoo. Think on this.


Source : http://ezinearticles.com/?Genetic-Tattoo&id=117631

3D Tattoos Available Soon Says Futurist






A futurist recently stated in an online think tank that he believed that genetic 3D tattoos maybe possible within the next couple of decades. He went onto predict that the use of cell expression, cell coating and genetic modification using the latest cutting edge discoveries would indeed aid in the process. The Futurist was latter asked about uses for such a novelty and claimed that such advances in tattoo research would have valuable application in security and military as well as the current and most common use of tattoos; individuality and self expression.

A fellow thinker online stated that; “3-D genetic tattoos can be used for identification purpose instead of finger printing the hologram will absorb and reflect a certain combination of wavelength which can be recognised or sensed by a biosensor or a DNA chip having the same sequence of that person.”

The futurist answered in reply; “Well yes, I was watching a discovery channel special on Tattoos in Russian Gulag and Tattoos are used by gangs for affiliation identification and people use them for self-expression of individualism and identity, you are long the lines of my thinking. I was merging many topics into one. But also realizing that this is 20-years out for human scientists currently. You will find many original thoughts of mine on this website, based loosely on scientific discoveries or trends, which indicate potential eventualities of future events.”

Imagine a future with 3D Tattoos on humans with areas of translucent skin, tattoos which could be turned on or off by frequency switches. Incredible thoughts indeed and worthy of mention as it appears it will be not only a bright and colorful future, but one in 3D. Consider all this in 2006.


Source : http://ezinearticles.com/?3D-Tattoos-Available-Soon-Says-Futurist&id=157967

Globe Abstract Oil Painting by K Madison Moore

Globe Abstract Oil Painting by K Madison Moore
Globe Abstract Oil Painting by K Madison Moore

Learning to Tattoo

Now that tattoos have become such a popular thing among people of all ages, it is becoming difficult to find somebody who does not have a tattoo. Due to the fact that they are now mainstream, each day more people have ambitions to become a tattoo artist. Most people who decide they want to learn how to tattoo think the best way to learn is to purchase their very own tattoo machine, and it has become very easy and very inexpensive to buy one.

If you are planning to buy yourself a tattoo machine and teach yourself how to be a tattoo artist, it is essential that you understand more about how the tattoo industry works. You should know that the proper way learn how to tattoo is to get a traditional apprenticeship, and if you try to get hired at a tattoo shop without having served as an apprentice chances are the tattoo artists there will not accept you because you have not yet paid your dues. Most established tattoo artists to not like when somebody thinks that they can teach themselves something what took them years to learn.

After informing you that to learn to tattoo properly and safely you need to obtain an apprenticeship, now it is okay to let you know that purchasing a tattoo machine early on is not a bad idea, but only if you go about using it the right way. To get a feel for tattooing prior to making the commitment of paying to learn from the pros, you might want to buy an inexpensive tattoo kit, but you must not tattoo people!

What you should do is purchase some fake skin that is now available for tattoo artists to practice on. Although their is nothing that acts just like human skin, this fake skin is probably the next closest thing. If you practice on this fake skin and learn some basic skills through trial and error, an established tattoo artist might be more apt to hiring you on as an apprentice.

You might be curious about where you should go in order to purchase a tattoo machine. The best place is probably a tattoo supply shop online, or possibly even ebay. Years ago I bought my first tattoo kit on Ebay for no more than a few hundred dollars and it worked great for quite a few years. You will also have to purchase some sterile and disposable needles and tubes, and make sure that with every use you dispose of each needle and tube properly to get into the habit of being as safe as possible.

In conclusion, this article was meant to dispose of the common misconception that you can pick up a tattoo machine and immediately start tattooing people with some basic art skills. This is dangerous and irresponsible thinking and any tattoo artist would be insulted because what they do is a skill that they have learned and perfected through many years of teachings. Do not make the mistake of thinking all that you need to do is buy a tattoo kit and you are now a tattoo artist, it just does not work that way.


Source : http://ezinearticles.com/?Learning-to-Tattoo&id=2446071

Full Alien Tattoo on Back Man

Full Alien Tattoo on Back Man
Full Alien Tattoo on Back Man - This Alien Tattoo is incredible

Buy Tattoo Designs - Simple Steps

If you are looking to buy tattoo designs, there are a few things that you need to keep in mind. As you already know, tattoo designs can have a great deal of personal meaning, so it is important to think about how you feel and what your relationship is to the personal design.

Make sure you know what you are getting in to and take some time to really communicate your own ideas about what you want.

Firstly, when you are looking to buy tattoo designs, remember that you will need to think about size. The larger a tattoo is, the more detail you can have; you'll find that a sleeve or a chest piece will allow you a great deal more detail than a piece that is only two or thee inches square. This holds true, and while some tattooists have made a real name for themselves with doing fine detail work, it is important to remember that this rule will hold true, and a good tattooist will tell you what can and cannot last.

The time right after your tattoo has been inked is when it will look the sharpest and the clearest; after that, especially if the lines are very fine, the ink might start to bleed a little.

Secondly, when you buy tattoo designs, remember that color is a concern. White ink is something that is often quite problematic when it comes to people who have darker skin, whether they are of African or Asian descent. People who have fair or pale skin usually have a great deal more luck when it comes to white ink sticking to them. If you have darker skin, you will want to rethink your design or speak with your tattooist to see what can be done.

Finally, when you buy tattoo designs, remember that your tattooist will have their own style. Take some time to take the design that you have bought to various tattoo places, and before you commit to anything, ask to to see their portfolios. Your best option is to take some time and find the tattooist whose style best matches that of your design, whether you have an interest in tribal art, floral scrolling or fine graywork. Really communicate with them, and when it doubt, remember that you can always get a second opinion.

When it comes to tattoo designs, remember that you have many options to choose from. Think long and hard and make sure that you are buying the one that is right for you.


Source : http://ezinearticles.com/?Buy-Tattoo-Designs---Simple-Steps&id=1066517

Where to Buy Tattoo Designs on the Internet

The phrase, "tattoo designs", is one of Google's top 200 most searched phrases on the net. So, as you'd expect, there are plenty of tattoo sites and galleries, some good, most bad. When looking to buy tattoo designs on the web there are a few things you should know. This article explains what.

If you want buy designs online there are two basic options: members-only websites or downloads. Membership sites, like Chopper or Tattoo Me Now, give members full access to their gallery and resources. This can be monthly or a one-time payment for life access. Joining a members-only site will enable you to view tattoos and print them off. New designs are added to these collections and they can include features such as a community forum, members' area and resource library. This is a good choice if you need tattoo ideas.

Downloads give you the whole collection to be saved onto your computer for a one-time payment. Usually this is instant. You can buy an individual design as in the case with Tattoo Johnny or an entire collection, like Crazy Tattoo Designs. This has the advantage of being yours to keep, but it is simply a collection or gallery without any extras. Usually with an entire collection you will have to browse page by page as there is no search option, though categories such as tribal, butterfly, etc, may be saved in different files.

One thing to do if you want to buy tattoos online is to find out what others who have paid for them think. Check out forums and feedback left on the net. Post a new thread if you need to. These, the ones who have used them, are the people to listen to.

When you come across a site that looks interesting the obvious thing is to have a look at the designs available on the website. A quality site is going to show you at least a few tattoos unless they think you'll be put off by them. So this can be a good indication of what to expect. But don't expect to see many, they won't want others getting the artwork free.

Finally, find out if there is some kind of guarantee. If there is, it is in their interests to give you what you are paying for. This is a good indication of a quality site.


Source : http://ezinearticles.com/?Where-to-Buy-Tattoo-Designs-on-the-Internet&id=3124756

Shoulder Tattoo Designs Aren't Just For Men Anymore

Prior to fifteen years ago, shoulder tattoos for women weren't very popular. Back then if a woman got a tattoo it was usually on the ankle, near the belly button, or on her wrist. The options for today's woman are more open than they were twenty years ago. Women are now getting tattoos in places they would have never dreamed of before, like on the back of their neck, lower back, or even their shoulders.

Shoulder tattoos are getting more and more popular with today's women. There are a wide variety of sexy tattoo designs for women to get on that especially beautiful part of the body these days, and shoulder tattoos are very diverse. They can be in different areas of the shoulder and there are a wide variety of designs that can work for any woman.

There are two areas on the shoulder that can be classified as a shoulder tattoo: on the back of the shoulder on or near the shoulder blade, and on the upper arm. Getting a tattoo on either part of the shoulder looks good, and they are both easily hidden in instances where having one is not appropriate.

Men have traditionally had more aggressive designs on the shoulder area. Skulls, tigers, and drags are popular designs for men's shoulders and upper arms. However, women's designs are much less aggressive and more feminine and sexy. Shooting stars, dolphins, tribal designs, and zodiac symbols are all very popular designs for a woman's shoulder. They all project a different image, depending on the woman. For example, a Dolphin design give a sense of playfulness and beauty, while a woman with her zodiac on display shows that she is proud of who she is. Choosing which shoulder tattoo design is right yields a lot of choices.

Getting a tattoo on your shoulder is a little more bold than having one on the ankle or somewhere else. A shoulder tattoo, even if it's very cute, shows that the woman with it has confidence in herself. With men it's all about looking macho, but a woman having one is empowering and shows that she is not afraid to be herself, even if it's a little out of the norm. Even when it is covered up, whether for work or a social gathering, it is still on her body and the confidence having one is still reflected in how she acts. When the design is on display, it looks beautiful. The shoulder looks beautiful on its own, but a beautiful and well-placed ink can make it look that much better.


Source : http://ezinearticles.com/?Shoulder-Tattoo-Designs-Arent-Just-For-Men-Anymore&id=2242577

Finding Good Back Tattoos For Men

I know that many people have a bunch of trouble finding good back tattoos for men. Sure, there is a lot of artwork out thee to choose from, but all most people see is the generic, cookie cutter artwork that has littered the web. This happens mostly because of people's reliance on search engines, which are very bad at showing us where the quality tattoo artwork is. There is a much better way to find good back tattoos for men and I will share it with you.

If you are fine with choose a random, generic tattoo, then search engines will be your best friend. That's all that seems to pop up. It's page after page of websites that have the same low end artwork as two hundred other galleries. They are just trying to stuff their gallery with as much art as humanly possible, so they aren't worried about the quality of the designs they post on their pages. This has become a disturbing trend and search engines aren't doing you any favors by pulling a lot of it up when looking for back tattoos for men.

This is also one of the reason people end up rushing their decision and end up getting tattooed with artwork that they don't even fully like. People will get tired of sifting through so much bland stuff and end up picking the first half way decent back tattoos for men that they see. This is a terrible way to go about choosing the tattoo that you will ink on your body.

While a lot of people will "still" end up picking tattoo artwork on impulse wherever they go, there is a way to find tons of quality back tattoos for men. You can do this by using internet forums. The bigger forums throughout the web are always jam packed with topics about tattoo art. It's a fantastic community, which can help you find out exactly where other folks are locating some of the great artwork the internet has to offer. It's a great way to find a lot of the superb tattoo galleries that search engines just aren't showing you. Looking for good back tattoos for men should be a fun experience and this should help you on your journey.

No matter where you end up looking for back tattoos for men, just make sure you take your time and don't settle on anything less than "exactly" what you want.


Source : http://ezinearticles.com/?Finding-Good-Back-Tattoos-For-Men&id=1424003