Soulmate Gem
Photo: Andrea Piacquadio
To represent three-dimensional objects or buildings, artists often use two (or more) vanishing points.
Oxytocin can help us bond with loved ones and can be released through touch, music and exercise. Oxytocin is a hormone that's produced in the...
Read More »
"In the absence of evidence to prove that the prosecutrix had consented for physical relationship on a misconception of fact, as stipulated under...
Read More »
Breadcrumbing is the act of sending out flirtatious, but non-committal social signals (i.e. "breadcrumbs") in order to lure a romantic partner in...
Read More »
Communication is the key to Gemini's heart (or at least to their bedroom)—you literally cannot talk too much to a Gemini—and a punchy dose of bold,...
Read More »Once you know how perspective works, you can start messing with it: add a sense of drama (or otherworldly weirdness) to a landscape or cityscape, or explore abstract space. Dramatic buildings and spaces Anthony Hernandez's Rome #17 1999 is a photograph of the interior of a building. The space is ambiguous – it looks like a lift shaft in a building that is under construction – but we can't tell if we are looking up or down it. By centralising the vanishing point of the shaft on the paper, so that the image is symmetrical, he creates a dramatic sense of receding space. We seem to be sucked into the image. The viewpoints chosen by the artists for these photographs also make use of perspective to emphasise and dramatise the structure of the buildings. Surreal landscapes and cityscapes Surrealist artists used linear perspective to create strange cityscapes with sharp angled buildings and empty receding streets. The shadowy receding arcade in Giorgio de Chirico's The Uncertainty of the Poet 1913 adds an eerie backdrop for his odd (and very surreal) foreground still life. Tristram Hillier makes use of perspective to create an equally eerie urban scene of squares, shadows and buildings. The line of trees in Pauls Nash's ghostly landscape painting Pillar and Moon 1932-42, recede to a vanishing point off to the right of the image. By using a vanishing point at the centre of the image, Colin Self draws us into his nightmarish looking garden. Artists Yves Tanguy and John Armstrong used aerial perspective in their surreal landscapes. The landscape in Tanguy's Azure Day 1937, the setting for groups of anthropomorphic figures and buildings, seems to go on indefinitely as it fades out to an indistinct haziness. Armstrong exaggerates the contrast between sharp, in-focus, foreground; and blue, indistinct background to create the dreamlike atmosphere of his painting. Perspective and abstraction The main idea behind cubism was to represent three-dimensional objects on a two-dimensional canvas by bringing together different views of the objects. This often leads to a disorientating sense of perspective. Instead of receding into space objects seem flattened out – or have angles and planes that we don't expect to see.
As a result, there are quite a number of accounts given for the origin of the wedding kiss. The most commonly cited story is that of the ancient...
Read More »
Falling in love is a continuous process for both men and women alike. Falling, growing, and staying in love is an incredible experience. When it...
Read More »The photograph is part of a series by Carey Young called Body Techniques. In each photograph the artist wears a smart two-piece suit and is pictured alone surrounded by recently completed or half-finished construction projects. The photographs were taken in the United Arab Emirates and draw attention to the rapid growth of cities there, stimulated by private and corporate wealth. As the art historian Julia Bryan-Wilson has commented, these photographs ‘depict the architecture of multinational commerce as depersonalized and dehumanizing, futuristic yet dusty projects of progress perverted’. Carey Young explores how the human figure fits into these stark environments. But, as Young herself has explained: ‘it is ambiguous whether the artist is molding herself to the landscape or exploring ways of resisting it.’ Thomas Struth and Carey Young use perspective to explore an idea. Photographer Don McCullin uses perspective to help visualise the horrors of war. A long road disappears into the distance across acres of flat fields. The photograph records the location of some of the bloodiest battles of the First World War – the Somme. McCullin's choice of viewpoint, focusing on the road rather than battlefields, is a poingnant reminder of the miserable march that so many young soldiers took to their deaths. He chooses a viewpoint looking down the road – making the road seem endless. The perspective exaggerates the huge scale of the battlefields and the suffering and loss of life that happened there.
Genital exploration is a normal part of childhood development and helps children understand their bodies. Apr 11, 2019
Read More »
Who Can Get Married in Japan? Article 731 to 737 of the Japanese Civil Code stipulates the following requirements: The male partner must be 18...
Read More »
Generally, a bathtub is seen as more valuable in terms of resale value. This is because bathtubs are seen as more difficult and more expensive to...
Read More »
Romantical feelings can be described as deep emotional interest and connection with another individual that is not purely physical or sexual. One...
Read More »