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astrochex 09-21-2024 05:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Seahawk (Post 12325099)
I would like to apologize to every one here and Wild Cherry in advance.

I am sorry:

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1726924188.jpg

Quality, no apology needed! :D

http://www.marriedtoplants.com/wp-co...upertrees_.jpg

GH85Carrera 09-21-2024 08:07 AM

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GH85Carrera 09-21-2024 06:21 PM

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Steve Carlton 09-21-2024 08:52 PM

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Heel n Toe 09-21-2024 11:17 PM

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10 reasons why "David" is so awesome:

1. The colossal figure is 17 feet tall, equivalent to a 2-story building. It was carved into a huge marble block of Carrara.
2. The block that was cut was damaged. Two sculptors were tasked with the commission before Michelangelo took control, but neither could successfully work the poor quality stone provided.
3. David's way explained the limitations of the stone. He is slim and his head is pointing to the side because the block was too narrow for him to look forward. Their contrasting position explained a hole that already existed in the marble between the legs.
4. Miguel Angel was only 26 when he started and 28 when he finished. He was already one of the best sculptors alive at the time, having completed the "Pietà" with total disbelief of Rome when he was 24 years old.
5. It was originally meant to sit on the ceiling line of Florence Cathedral. When completed, it was simply too beautiful, and big, to be hoisted up there, and instead displayed at the Palazzo della Signoria.
6. Modern studies have found that it is anatomically perfect, except for a small muscle missing in the back. Michelangelo, who studied anatomy scrupulously, knew this, later wrote that he was limited by a defect in the marble.
7. The jugular vein in David’s neck is bulging, appropriate for someone in a state of fear or excitement (as the young shepherd would have been). Miguel Angel obviously knew this was a feature of the circulatory system, but medical science didn’t document this discovery until 124 years later.
8. It was stylistically innovative. Previous interpretations of David, such as those of Donatello and Verrocchio, represented him victorious over the already murdered Goliath. Here, he is on the precipice of battle, his intense gaze and frowned forehead representing a contemplative moment.
9. David represents the idealized male form and proportion, a common theme in classic Greek sculpture. But Michelangelo's work is much more naturalistic, rooted in anatomical understanding that far surpassed the Greeks. David is both a beautiful representation of the ideal, but surprisingly real, a defining achievement of the Italian Renaissance.
10. Today, about 1.5 million people visit David each year. It has lived in the Accademia Gallery in Florence for 150 years, since it was moved inside in 1873 to protect it from the elements.
As expected, David won the admiration of the great Renaissance artist and historian Giorgio Vasari:
"When everything was finished, it cannot be denied that this work has taken the palm of all other statues, modern or ancient, Greek or Latin; no other work of art is equal to it in any way, with such fair proportion, beauty and excellence was finished by Miguel Angel."

GH85Carrera 09-22-2024 05:25 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1727011517.jpg

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GH85Carrera 09-22-2024 06:23 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1727058167.jpg

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Racerbvd 09-22-2024 07:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Heel n Toe (Post 12325493)
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1726989406.jpg

10 reasons why "David" is so awesome:

1. The colossal figure is 17 feet tall, equivalent to a 2-story building. It was carved into a huge marble block of Carrara.
2. The block that was cut was damaged. Two sculptors were tasked with the commission before Michelangelo took control, but neither could successfully work the poor quality stone provided.
3. David's way explained the limitations of the stone. He is slim and his head is pointing to the side because the block was too narrow for him to look forward. Their contrasting position explained a hole that already existed in the marble between the legs.
4. Miguel Angel was only 26 when he started and 28 when he finished. He was already one of the best sculptors alive at the time, having completed the "Pietà" with total disbelief of Rome when he was 24 years old.
5. It was originally meant to sit on the ceiling line of Florence Cathedral. When completed, it was simply too beautiful, and big, to be hoisted up there, and instead displayed at the Palazzo della Signoria.
6. Modern studies have found that it is anatomically perfect, except for a small muscle missing in the back. Michelangelo, who studied anatomy scrupulously, knew this, later wrote that he was limited by a defect in the marble.
7. The jugular vein in David’s neck is bulging, appropriate for someone in a state of fear or excitement (as the young shepherd would have been). Miguel Angel obviously knew this was a feature of the circulatory system, but medical science didn’t document this discovery until 124 years later.
8. It was stylistically innovative. Previous interpretations of David, such as those of Donatello and Verrocchio, represented him victorious over the already murdered Goliath. Here, he is on the precipice of battle, his intense gaze and frowned forehead representing a contemplative moment.
9. David represents the idealized male form and proportion, a common theme in classic Greek sculpture. But Michelangelo's work is much more naturalistic, rooted in anatomical understanding that far surpassed the Greeks. David is both a beautiful representation of the ideal, but surprisingly real, a defining achievement of the Italian Renaissance.
10. Today, about 1.5 million people visit David each year. It has lived in the Accademia Gallery in Florence for 150 years, since it was moved inside in 1873 to protect it from the elements.
As expected, David won the admiration of the great Renaissance artist and historian Giorgio Vasari:
"When everything was finished, it cannot be denied that this work has taken the palm of all other statues, modern or ancient, Greek or Latin; no other work of art is equal to it in any way, with such fair proportion, beauty and excellence was finished by Miguel Angel."

Then there was this..
Quote:

Unlike most Renaissance artists, who learned about the human body from ancient sculpture and live models, Michelangelo participated in dissections. According to his acquaintance and biographer Ascanio Condivi, the artist first examined corpses in the convent of Santo Spirito in Florence when he was in his late teens.
https://www.getty.edu › art › explore
Michelangelo: Mind of the Master - Getty Museum
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GH85Carrera 09-23-2024 05:11 AM

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Racerbvd 09-23-2024 01:34 PM

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GH85Carrera 09-23-2024 06:52 PM

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Racerbvd 09-23-2024 08:08 PM

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john70t 09-23-2024 09:03 PM

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GH85Carrera 09-24-2024 04:42 AM

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mrbeverlyhills 09-24-2024 06:57 AM

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john70t 09-24-2024 07:02 AM

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GH85Carrera 09-24-2024 07:22 AM

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One of the masterpieces of sculpture by the creative international sculptor Monica Angel, made of Carrara marble, is displayed at the Xiong Folk Art Museum in China.— in New York, NY.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1727191203.jpg
On November 11, 1935 Albert W. Stevens took a specially designed infrared camera to a height of 72,395 feet over South Dakota. Albert took the first photograph of the left to right curvature of the earth. This was published in the May 1936 issue of National Geographic. A 35″x17″ insert was included in the issue. I purchased a copy of the magazine and the fold out. A high-resolution scan of the insert is included below.
The photograph was taken with a Fairchild K-17 camera with a Kodak 304mm f5 lens on Eastman infrared Aero film through a red filter. The film is 9″ wide for a huge photograph.
-https://mctoon.net/first-curve/

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1727191203.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1727191203.jpg

Racerbvd 09-24-2024 08:02 AM

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craigster59 09-24-2024 09:38 AM

“I met the amazing animator JIM DANFORTH through Forry Ackerman, when I was about 14. At the time I visited him, at the studio, he was working on the opening sequence for "Here's Lucy". But he was also doing animation on a "Swiss Miss" TV commercial and the "Pillsbury Doughboy". Jim is probably best known for his work on "When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth", as well as working with George Pal & Ray Harryhausen, and on many other films. He is a multi-talented artist, very kind gentleman, it was such a pleasure to meet him, and see the projects he was working on.”

- Cortland Hull


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1727199478.jpg

craigster59 09-24-2024 09:40 AM

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/krt6qkWpqCU?si=Ov4q9ouNYON71mj0" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen></iframe>


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