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Archive for the ‘Trivia’ Category

I had a professor in college that started his lectures with “Little Known and Useless Facts of History”.  He captured our attention and of all the things I recall from history courses, these are the ones I can pull up the fastest in my mind.  We all love trivia and fun facts.  So today I am introducing “Little Known and Useless Facts of Art”. 

Picasso's Dog

Picasso’s Dog

Picasso's Cat

Picasso’s Cat

I would, of course, start with the topic of pets, especially dogs.  Did you know that Pablo Picasso loved animals?  During his adult life he had many animals as pets including a monkey, an owl, a goat, a turtle and a pack of dogs and cats.

Here is a link to an interesting article about Picasso and his dogs by Stanley Coren in Modern Dog Magazine.  This is part of that article: 

“In fact, Picasso’s life was full of dogs. He had many, of many different breeds, including terriers, Poodles, a Boxer, Dachshunds, a German Shepherd, Afghan Hounds, and numerous “random bred” dogs. Many of these were “borrowed” or “stolen” from friends and associates in the same way that many of his women were. The dogs were as much a part of his life as his female companions, and they went everywhere with him. He also gave dogs to his friends as gifts, in part to ensure that he would never be in their company without a dog. When his various relationships broke up, Picasso would often leave all of his goods behind him and go off to live in a new place with a new woman. Usually, he would only arrange to have a few things returned to him, including some of his recent paintings, some of his brushes and paint, and his dog or dogs. The rest was all left to friends or to the woman whom he was leaving.”

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My year end report just arrived from WordPress.  I am always amazed by the information I receive.  Many thanks to my readers for increasing my average daily views.  They are up 63%!!!  In 2012, there were 298 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 881 posts. There were 702 pictures uploaded.  That’s about 2 pictures per day.

The busiest day of the year was June 20th with 1,142 views. The most popular post that day was About Kelly.

I am amazed that the posts that got the most views on “Life of a Daily Painter” in 2012 are mostly posts from previous years so that means that viewers searching for specific topics find my blog.  The good news is that my posts have staying power!

And even more amazing is the viewers of my blog in 2012 came to it from 132 countries  around the world! WOW!  Most visitors came from The United States. Canada & The United Kingdom were not far behind.

So thank you to readers of “Life of a Daily Painter”.  I plan to make a few changes to the blog in the New Year.  I hope they will be something you will all enjoy.  Stay tuned.

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Monet Sells for over $43 Million

Wow!  One of Monet’s Water Lilies sold for over $43 million!  Read about it here. 

 

 

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I love impressionism.  Many people do.  When you ask someone what their favorite painting might be often people will name an impressionist’s work; ie.  Monet, Degas, Renoir, etc. 

But do you know what invention truly help to develop the impressionist movement of painting outdoors and capturing light and fleeting images?  The paint tube!   Never would have guess that, right?  Before the invention of the paint tube which allowed artists to easily carry their mixed paints in the field they had to use, of all things, pig bladders.  Yuck.  I’m thinking I would have remained in the studio to paint too. 

Miniature Summer Flowers is an oil on canvas panel measuring 3″x7″ and is available for $45.

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Laura’s Favorite View is an oil on 8″x10″ canvas panel and is available by contacting me.

I paint a great deal from photographs, especially during the winter months when it is difficult to get outside to paint.  This view is from a photo that one of my collectors sent to me recently.  She said that she has taken numerous shots of this particular scene.  It’s one that she enjoys seeing each time she drives by it. 

I love it when readers share their photos with me and give me permission to paint from them.  I am working on a second painting from the same photo as it has a barn in it and I wanted to do a painting with and without the barn.  Stay tuned for Laura’s Favorite View II.

Thursday Trivia revisits a    question we just recently answered.  Yesterday a record was set for the most expensive piece of art every sold at auction.  It is “Walking Man”, a sculpture by Alberto Giacometti, a 20th Century Swiss artist.  It took just 8 minutes for 10 bidders at Sotheby’s to run the price up to $104.3 million! 

Walking Man is a life-size sculpture, 72 inches tall, of a wiry man walking along.  The part that amazes me most is that Sotheby’s estimated that it would sell for 12-16 million pounds and it actually went for 65 million!  I’d say they were off a little in their estimate.  🙂

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“Miniature Snow and Fence” is an oil on 3″x5″ stretched canvas.  This painting is available for $40 by contacting me at kwalker@doubledogdesigns.com .

Today I am introducing a new series.  Each Thursday I will try to answer a “trivia” question about art.  I get questions all the time about little things related to painting.  This is where I will address those questions.  Who knows?  Maybe we will learn something on Trivia Thursday!

Today’s question is about the different length of handles on brushes.  Why are some brush handles longer than others?  The short-handled brushes are generally for watercolor painting or painting where you sit close to the piece you are working on.  Long-handled brushes are used mainly for oil painting.  When painting oils you want to try to stand up at the easel.  That way you can stand back from work and look at what it needs.  If the brush has a longer handle then you can put paint on the canvas by standing back from it and seeing where it needs more work.  Many instructors teach new painters to put one stroke on the canvas and walk back a couple of steps.  Then decide where the next stroke of paint should go, put it on and walk back.  This is why you see painters on tv stepping back and looking at the work, generally with their head cocked to one side.  The head cock is optional.  🙂

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