The National Portrait Gallery ... Size Matters?
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| It seems that sizes really does matter when it comes to the Portraits of the Presidents exhibit at the National Portrait Gallery. If you are a Democrat president like, say, Clinton, Carter, or Kennedy, then you are fortunate to have an oversized portrait that is floor to ceiling and hung on its very own wall. But if you are a Republican president, like, say Bush, Reagan, or Nixon, then you unfortunately have, at most, a standard sized portrait that likely shares wall space with another president. See for yourself at http://mmxflex.blogspot.com/2010/02/national-portr ait-gallery-size-matters_08.html. |
National Portrait Gallery ... Size Matters?
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| The simmering difficulties in the US strategic relationship with the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) were, by the beginning of 2010, ready to emerge despite the attempts of the US Administration of Pres. Barack Obama to show a pattern of deference to Beijing. But the internal US economic policies, leading to the de facto devaluation of the US dollar, seemed, if anything, a deliberate move to devalue the worth of the PRCs massive investments in US dollar instruments. All that was needed to cause Beijing to vent its frustrations with the US quite apart from major differences over the... |
Project Compassion: Portraits of Heroes
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| ABOUT PROJECT COMPASSION Project Compassion Soldier Fund, Inc. is a privately funded 501(c)(3) nonprofit humanitarian organization founded by artist and goat rancher Kaziah Hancock in 2003. The organization provides one gallery-quality, 18x 24 original oil portrait of every American military service member who has passed away on active duty since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 to their loved ones, at no cost to them. An official humanitarian partner of the United States Department of Defense and armed services, Project Compassion receives no government funding and depends entirely on private donations, grants and in-kind support. |
The Art of Russell Lee Klika: 20 Fantastic Photos Taken in Iraq and Posted on Flickr
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| I am a big fan of Flickr. I have started using the photos there almost exclusively for the blog. While I was lurking there today, I found a photographer that has taken some of the most breathtaking portraits that I have ever seen...and they were taken in Iraq during the war. Russell Lee Klika is an artist. His work is beautiful. His eye is one of a master. I hope you enjoy his work. |
German experts crack Mona Lisa smile (discovers model's identity)
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| German academics believe they have solved the centuries-old mystery behind the identity of the "Mona Lisa" in Leonardo da Vinci's famous portrait. ADVERTISEMENT Lisa Gherardini, the wife of a wealthy Florentine merchant, Francesco del Giocondo, has long been seen as the most likely model for the sixteenth-century painting. But art historians have often wondered whether the smiling woman may actually have been da Vinci's lover, his mother or the artist himself. Now experts at the Heidelberg University library say dated notes scribbled in the margins of a book by its owner in October 1503 confirm once and for all that... |
Artist Hero
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| Kaziah Hancock is a people person. She studied the human face long before she began putting paint to canvas twenty-five years ago. With a self-described "weakness for a face that has weathered the storm, she specialized in painting the older, interesting people who made up her community. I wanted to preserve the memory of all those I had done business with for all those years, who were such characters, said 59-year-old Hancock. When you look in the eyes, you see the look of honesty and the lines of integrity. Youve just got to love that. Theyve lived a life and... |
Mark Steyn: Dislocated Dining
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| On the evening of September 11th, Rosemary Righter, the senior leader writer (leader is British for editorial) at The Times of London, was due at a dinner party. She arrived late, and found the tone, after a hard day at the office, oddly smug and triumphalist. Leaving early, she gave a lift to another guest. Rosemary, he said, isnt it marvelous to think that the arrogant bloody Americans have finally got it in the neck? Involuntarily, she braked. Hard. Though not hard enough to precipitate him through the windshield, sadly. Miss Righter was one of the first to experience an admittedly... |
Portrait of a hero -- and of family history (Do you know any of these men? See slide show)
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| Portrait of a hero -- and of family history Portraits of WWII servicemen, found in a downtown jewelry shop, are bringing memories of loved ones long lost to their relatives. BY FRED TASKER ftasker@MiamiHerald.com Theda Rendon, 67, of Homestead, picked up The Miami Herald on Nov. 10 and saw the front-page story about the discovery of long-lost portraits painted in 1945 of Miami servicemen who died in World War II and the attempts now to unite those portraits with the men's surviving relatives.Perusing the list of names, she got to the third-from-last before spotting the name Norris Walker.''That's my half-brother,''... |
Artists paint portraits for families of fallen Soldiers
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| Kaziah Hancock is a professional artist from Manti, Utah. She now devotes all of her work to painting portraits, for free, of U.S. military personnel killed in the Middle East. Photo by Rachael Tolliver More Images FORT KNOX, Ky. (Army News Service, Dec. 5, 2006) - Kaziah Hancock, an artist and patriot in Manti, Utah, has put her professional life on hold as a result of channel-surfing on the radio. Now, she devotes most of her time to honoring American Soldiers who have died in Middle East combat zones. "I came across a talk show and they were talking about... |
From Funerary Masks To Portraits
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
From funerary masks to portraits Clockwise from left: The Ancient Egyptian funerary mask; A sculpted portrait placed on a coffin; A painted portrait like that of the boy dated back to Roman times; A woman wearing jewellery. These were removed from their mummy wrappings The so-called Fayoum portraits, more than 1,000 of them, are the largest body of ancient portable paintings to have survived. They are portraits, painted mostly on wood, of men, women and children, young and old, believed to have been painted in their lifetime, sometimes framed and displayed in the homes, and later sawn to fit just...
Saddam's portrait artists look to bleak future
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| TIME was when life as a well-paid portrait artist in Iraq was relatively simple, if a little monotonous. In a good year, 20 portraits of Saddam Hussein could earn an artist £1,200 - a small fortune in a country crippled by two decades of war and economic sanctions. But now that the best-paying customer in town is fresh out of commissions, his absence is leading to a plummeting market in presidential iconography; what is a Saddam portraitist to do? Most of the better-known painters of the Iraqi president, who have become virtually synonymous with the regime, vanished along with the... |
Throwing Out The Garbage
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| A U.S. Marine from the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit throws out a portrait of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein after removing it from the command office of the Iraqi Naval base in Az Zubayar, in southern Iraq's desert, Sunday, March 23, 2003. (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye) |
Faces of Ground Zero - World Tour of Life-sized Portraits
Monday 6th of September 2010 09:16:28 PM
Posted by admin / Under Portraits Of Charles Darwin
| Morgan Stanley & TIME Magazine present Faces of Ground Zero World Tour of Life-sized Portraits May 14 (Tuesday) - June 7 (Friday) location: One Market Street (Near the Embarcadero) San Francisco, CA time: Monday - Friday » 7 am - 6:30 pm Saturday » 10 am - 6 pm Sunday » Closed admission: Open to the Public (Free) for more info: Visit their site at www.morganstanley.com 58 life-sized photographs of emergency workers, survivors and relatives of victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks, will open to the public at One Market Street. The photographs were taken with the world's largest... |



