Williamsburg oil paint

Nikki Maloof—who creates impossibly vibrant paintings of animals and insects set in pattern-filled interiors or verdant environs—admits that Williamsburg oil paint is probably one of the reasons she became a painter. She describes standing in front of a glass case of the paint like a giddy kid in a candy store. “For me, these tubes contain more than just beautiful hues,” Maloof explained. “They are bottled potential for something I haven’t seen. Often, when I am stuck, I go to the art store and look for some new color, hoping it will reveal some new secret. Sometimes, when I am lucky, it does.”

She first encountered the brand through her undergrad professor at Indiana University, Barry Gealt—“a major paint nerd,” she recalled—who encouraged his students to have as many colors as possible. She first held a tube of Williamsburg at his wondrous, paint-filled studio. Once she tried it, she was hooked—both to its seductive colors, and to its “specific sticky, almost toothpaste-like texture,” she described.

“For me, so much of painting is a sensory experience,” Maloof explained. “The way a paint feels beneath my brush is as important as the image that is revealed.…My hand has learned to manipulate it in a second-nature kind of way. Maybe it’s how a specific instrument might feel to a musician, or a certain clay in the hands of a sculptor.”

(From: https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-22-artists-materials-inspire-drive-work)

2.2. Выпишите в словарь профессиональную лексику с переводом на русский язык и необходимыми пояснениями.

2.3 Сделайте сообщение о понравившемся художнике

 

Занятие 25.03

 


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