Naïeve schilderijen te koop
1.373 Resultaten voor "crayon graphite"
Originele kunstwerken, limited editions en prints: Koop originele kunst van de beste artiesten wereldwijdBlader door een exclusieve selectie van originele kunstwerken over crayon graphite
Onze online kunstgalerie biedt de grootste collectie originele kunstwerken online, waaronder een exclusieve selectie van crayon graphite kunstwerken van opkomende en beroemde kunstenaars van over de hele wereld. Artmajeur biedt inderdaad miljoenen kunstwerken zoals schilderijen, sculpturen en foto's van de grootste hedendaagse kunstenaars van vandaag!
Koop veilig alle kunst waar je van houdt op Artmajeur
Bent u op zoek naar crayon graphite kunstwerken te koop ? Je kunt veilig schilderijen over crayon graphite kopen , maar ook sculpturen, foto's of tekeningen: al je aankopen vallen onder ons retourbeleid van 14 dagen, zonder vragen! Kunstwerken die op de galerij worden gepresenteerd, worden verkocht tegen een gegarandeerde prijs, met gratis verzending.
Vind "crayon graphite" schilderijen en kunstwerken bij jou in de buurt
Met de geografische zoekmachine op Artmajeur kunt u ook kunstwerken bij u in de buurt vinden, op deze manier kunt u gemakkelijk originele kunst vinden in uw stad, regio of elke locatie die u kiest. Sommige verkopers kunnen ook zelf pakketten bezorgen als hun studio dicht bij jouw locatie is gevestigd.
Ontvang een aangepaste selectie van schilderijen en kunstwerken
Een perfecte manier om uw huis zo geïndividualiseerd mogelijk te maken, is met een op maat gemaakte selectie van kunstwerken. De kunstwerken worden beschikbaar gesteld in uw keuze van onderwerpen, maten, genres, vormen, stijlen, thema's, kleuren en onderwerp. Als u een kunstcollectie heeft die bestaat uit honderden schilderijen, al dan niet met de hand geschilderd, kunt u degene kiezen die uw interesses het beste weergeven.
Om schilderijen voor uw collectie te selecteren die bij uw smaak en stijl passen, kunt u de opties in het zijmenu gebruiken. Door simpelweg opties zoals kleur, thema, prijs, onderwerp te selecteren, wordt uw selectie automatisch bijgewerkt. Je kunt ook alle kunstwerken die je leuk vindt als favoriet opslaan: zo kun je je persoonlijke favorieten bewaren voor toekomstig gebruik. Als u uw kunstwerken met anderen wilt delen, kunt u uw collecties ook openbaar maken, het is een creatieve manier om uw favoriete kunst te delen met andere kunstliefhebbers, vrienden of zelfs klanten.
Vraag een kunstadviseur om je te helpen bij het vinden en kopen van kunst om je collectie op te bouwen
Er kan een groot aantal kunstwerken zijn gerelateerd aan crayon graphite : Of je nu voor de eerste keer online koopt of al een frequente koper bent, het kan zowel intimiderend als tijdrovend zijn om het juiste kunstwerk online te vinden:
- Hoe maak je de juiste keuze en koop je het juiste kunstwerk?
- Hoe betaal je de beste prijs voor een origineel kunstwerk?
- Hoe navigeer je door het grote aantal beschikbare collecties?
Ons team van kunstadviseurs staat voor je klaar: Artmajeur wil het online kopen van kunst gemakkelijk en veilig maken. Al onze kunstwerken worden geleverd met een 100 procent geld-terug-garantie, zodat u zich volledig veilig voelt over uw online aankoop bij ons.
We hebben een platform gecreëerd waar kunstenaars hun kunstwerken rechtstreeks op onze website kunnen uploaden om u te helpen het perfecte stuk te vinden. Blader door duizenden prenten, sculpturen en schilderijen van hedendaagse topartiesten. Prijzen variëren van zeer betaalbare kunstwerken tot zeer waardevolle stukken om in te investeren, afhankelijk van het type en de grootte van het kunstwerk dat u zoekt en uw ruimtevereisten. Het is verbazingwekkend om de verscheidenheid aan originele kunstwerken online te zien. Artmajeur heeft het allemaal, of je nu op zoek bent naar een mooi en duur olieverfschilderij of een meubelstuk voor in huis.
Hoe Naïeve Kunst stijl definiëren?
What is a Naive painting?
Naive painting is a style of art that was started by artists like Henri Rousseau who didn't know much about art. Most of the time, naive art is defined as visual art made by someone who hasn't had the training and education that a professional artist does. When a professional artist tries to copy this style, it is often called "primitivism."
What are the characteristics of Naive painting?
Naive art is usually defined as visual art made by someone who doesn't have the formal training and education that a professional artist does (in anatomy, art history, technique, perspective, ways of seeing). When a trained artist tries to copy this style, it is sometimes called primitivism, pseudo-naive art, or faux naive art.
Unlike folk art, naive art doesn't have to come from a specific popular cultural context or tradition. In fact, at least in advanced economies and since the Printing Revolution, it's impossible not to know about the local fine art tradition, which has spread through popular prints and other media. Naive artists know about "fine art" conventions like graphical perspective and compositional conventions, but they can't or don't use them to their full potential. Outsider art (also called "art brut"), on the other hand, refers to works that come from a similar background but have little to do with the mainstream art world.
Naive art is known for being simple and honest like a child, and this is why it is often copied. These kinds of paintings usually have a flat style of drawing and a simple way of showing depth. Henri Rousseau, a French Post-Impressionist who lived from 1844 to 1910 and was discovered by Pablo Picasso, was one of the most important painters of "naive art."
There has been some disagreement about what the term means and where it "ends" with other terms like folk art and outsider art. Naive art is usually used to describe works of fine art made by self-taught artists, like paintings and sculptures. Folk art, on the other hand, refers to things that can be used in everyday life. But this difference has been argued about. [6] "Provincial" is another word that can be used, especially for paintings and buildings. It is mostly used to describe work by artists who have had some traditional training but whose work falls short of metropolitan or court standards by accident.
By what do naive paintings stand out?
People often think of naive art as art made by someone who hasn't had any formal training or a degree, or hasn't had much. Before the 20th century, this was true, but now there are schools for naive art. Naive art is now a fully recognized type of art that can be seen in galleries all over the world.
The features of naive art don't fit well with the formal aspects of painting, especially when the three rules of perspective aren't followed (as described by the Progressive Painters of the Renaissance):
-Objects get smaller as you get farther away,
-Colors become less clear as you get farther away;
-Details become less clear as you get farther away.
Here are the results:
-Geometrically wrong effects of perspective (awkward parts of the works, like how children's drawings or paintings from the Middle Ages look, but that's where the comparison ends);
-Effects of perspective that aren't quite right. Strong use of pattern, unrefined color on all the plans of the composition, without enfeeblement in the background;
-Equal attention to details, including those in the background that should be shaded off.
People say that naive art is easy to spot because it is not complicated. It has become so popular and well-known, though, that many examples could be called "pseudo-naive." "Pseudo naive" or "faux naive" art is the work of an artist who is more imitative or self-conscious and whose work looks more copied than original. "Naive" art is the work of an artist who did not go to art school or academy, like Henri Rousseau or Alfred Wallis.
Since Autodidactism has become more popular as a way to learn in modern times, strict naiveté is not likely to be found in modern artists. Living artists don't always like naive categorizations, but this is likely to change as more dignifying signals become known. There are now museums for naive art in Kecskemét, Hungary; Kovaica, Serbia; Riga, Latvia; Jaen, Spain; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Vicq, France; and Paris. Gary Bunt, Lyle Carbajal, Gabe Langholtz, Gigi Mills, Barbara Olsen, Paine Proffitt, and Alain Thomas are all English-speaking living artists who admit to having a naive style.
"Primitive art" is another term that people who haven't studied art often use to describe it. Historically, though, it has been used more to describe art from cultures that Western academia has deemed "primitive" socially or technologically, like Native American, sub-Saharan African, and Pacific Island art (see Tribal art). This is different from the "primitive"-inspired, self-aware movement called "primitivism." Folk art is another term that is similar to naive art but not the same thing.
There are also the terms "navism" and "primitivism," which are usually used to describe professional painters who use naive art as their style (like Paul Gauguin, Mikhail Larionov, Paul Klee).
What is the history of the Naive movement?
No one knows exactly when the first naive artists started making art, but from the very beginning of art to the time of the "Modern Classic," naive artists have left behind clear signs of their creative work. At the very least, naive art has been "official" in the history of 20th-century art since 1912, when an almanac called Der Blaue Reiter was published. Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc, who made the almanac, showed six copies of Henri Rousseau's paintings and talked about how they were different from other pictures. Most experts agree, though, that naive art was "discovered" in 1885, when the painter Paul Signac learned about Henri Rousseau's skills and started putting on shows of his work in some of the best galleries in Paris.
The Sacred Heart painters
Wilhelm Uhde, a German art collector and critic, is known for being the main person in charge of the first Naive Art show, which took place in Paris in 1928. Henri Rousseau, André Bauchant, Camille Bombois, Séraphine Louis, and Louis Vivin all took part. Together, they are known as the Sacred Heart painters.
Earth Group
The Earth Group (Grupa Zemlja) was a group of artists, architects, and thinkers from Croatia who lived and worked in Zagreb from 1929 to 1935. The group was Marxist and was partly based on "Neue Sachlichkeit,"[19] which led to more stylized forms and the start of Naive painting. In the group were painters Krsto Hegedui, Edo Kovaevi, Omer Mujadi, Kamilo Ruika, Ivan Tabakovi, and Oton Postrunik, sculptors Antun Augustini and Frano Krini, and the architect Drago Ibler. The Earth group tried to figure out how to solve social problems. Their program stressed the importance of creative freedom and was against blindly copying styles from other countries. They didn't want to make art just for the sake of art. Instead, they thought it should reflect the real world and the needs of the modern community. The government of the time was getting more and more upset by what was going on at the group's exhibitions, so in 1935, the group was banned.
Hlebine School
From about 1930 on, this term was used to describe naive Croatian painters who worked in or around the village of Hlebine, which is near the border with Hungary. At this time, the village was just "a few muddy, winding streets and one-story houses," according to the World Encyclopedia of Naive Art (1984). However, it produced such a great crop of artists that it became almost synonymous with Yugoslav naive painting.
Hlebine is a small, beautiful town in the north of Croatia. In the 1920s, a group of self-taught peasants started to paint in a way that was different and even a little bit revolutionary. Leading intellectuals of the time, like the poet Antun Gustav Mato and Miroslav Krlea, the most famous name in Croatian literature, pushed for this. They wanted a unique national style of art that was not influenced by the West. Krsto Hegedui, a well-known artist from Hlebine, took these ideas and used them to start the Hlebine School of Art in 1930. He did this to find "rural artistic expression" on a national level.
Ivan Generali was the first master of the Hlebine School. He was also the first artist to create a unique style and reach a high level of art. After the Second World War, the next generation of Hlebine painters focused more on stylized, made-up pictures of life in the country. Generali stayed the most important person and helped other artists, including his son Josip Generali, get started. With the 1952 Venice Biennale and shows in Brazil and Belgium, the Hlebine school became known all over the world.
Some of the best known naive artists are Dragan Gaži, Ivan Generalić, Josip Generalić, Krsto Hegedušić, Mijo Kovačić, Ivan Lacković-Croata, Franjo Mraz, Ivan Večenaj and Mirko Virius.
What are some famous Naive paintings?
Naive art is made up of simple, childlike techniques and ideas. Because of this, modernists who don't like what they see as the fake sophistication of work made in the traditional system have praised it. Henri Rousseau is the best-known naive artist working today, so we'll start with one of his works.
The Dream (1910) by Henri Rousseau
The young girl has been taken to a jungle, where a local musician plays a brass instrument and sings to her. Yadwigha, who is half hidden by the jungle's shadows, reaches out to the musician while looking out over a beautiful view of jungle greenery with lotus petals, parrots, monkeys, an elephant, two lions, and a snake. The snake coming toward the scene in the lower right corner of the picture makes me think of the Garden of Eden. A pink snake moves through the bushes. Its shape, which is like a snake, looks like a woman's legs and hips.
In this piece of art, a naked model is sitting on a sofa, which brings together the familiar and the strange. The painting "The Dream" shows why the Surrealists liked Rousseau's work. It has amazing attention to detail, bright colors, and a strange mix of images.
At least 22 different shades of green were used to paint the jungle plants. Poet and art critic Guillaume Apollinaire was blown away by the work. "The painting is absolutely gorgeous!" he exclaimed. I don't think anyone will laugh this year."
This picture looks like a dream because the only thing in it is a naked woman lying on a sofa in the tropics. But it's not clear if the art shows Yadwigha's dream or Rousseau's. But one of the best things about the picture is how open it is to different interpretations. Rousseau's trips to the natural history museum and the Jardin des Plantes in Paris gave him ideas for this piece, which has a lush jungle, wild animals, and a mysterious horn player. "When I'm in these hothouses and see strange plants from other places, it feels like I'm entering a dream," the artist said of his visits.
Death ship (1942) by Alfred Wallis
The main idea behind Alfred Wallis's Death Ship is a huge black ship with dark gray steam billowing from it. Five sailors in black suits and caps can be seen as the ship moves over icy white water. This picture, which has a good name, is a great example of the kind of work Wallis did in his later years. They show how sad the artist was feeling at the time.
Wallis made these paintings while he was alone and his eyesight was getting worse and his mind was getting worse. No one knows for sure when Wallis finished making these last changes. They were made either while Wallis was living in the Madron poorhouse or just before he was sent there, which was something he had been afraid of for a long time. Death Ship disproves the idea that Wallis couldn't use deep and complicated symbolism in his work because he was a "naive" artist. The ship is a sign of death and destruction, which is more of a metaphor than a literal representation of the things Wallis paints. It is a mix of the feelings Wallis had when he was at sea and when he was near the coast of St. Ives.
The Broken Column (1944) by Frida Kahlo
After she was badly hurt in a car accident when she was 18, most of Frida Kahlo's self-portraits are about her physical and mental pain. As her health got worse, this theme came back and got much stronger as her life came to an end. Her graphic pictures of herself in pain show how hard it was for her to deal with physical problems and pain. "The Broken Column," a painting by Kahlo, was made soon after she had surgery on her back.
This was just one of many times she had to go to the doctor to fix problems caused by an injury she had in the past. Kahlo had to wear a steel corset while painting, which was different from the plaster casts she had worn before. In the picture, Kahlo is standing in a broken, empty place that looks like it has been through as much trouble and tragedy as she has. Due to a deep, jagged crack that runs the length of her almost-naked body, her spine looks like a broken Ionic stone column. Her spinal column looks like it's about to break, especially at the bottom. Nails of different sizes go through her whole body and face, making her pain even worse. She has a lot of tears running down her cheeks.
Kahlo painted herself naked at first, except for the medical support girdle she wears. Then she added a white covering that looks like it came from a hospital to cover her bottom half. Her breasts are showing, and even though her body has been cut up, her sensuality shines through. The way nails and sheets are shown also has strong echoes of the Christian symbol of martyrdom. Even though she is in pain, Kahlo's face shows that she is strong and will not give up. Even though her body has been hurt and tortured, it is clear that her spirit has not been hurt.
This is the end of our look at Naive art, a style that looks simple and childlike. This word is used to describe paintings made in cultures that are more or less advanced but don't have the traditional skills to draw things. The colors are bright and not natural, the view isn't scientific, and the meaning is literal or childish.
Bent u op zoek naar Originele schilderijen te koop ?
Ontdek alle stijlen en alle schildertechnieken: hedendaagse schilderijen, straatkunst, abstracte kunst, figuratieve kunst, landschappen, portretten, stillevens, naakten, aquarel, olieverf, acrylverf... Artmajeur is voor iedereen met artistieke gevoeligheden en viert schoonheid aan uw zijde voor 20 jaar met meer dan 2 miljoen hedendaagse kunstwerken om te ontdekken ... of te verwerven! De wereldstandaard voor hedendaagse schilderijen. Ontdek werken van hedendaagse kunstenaars van over de hele wereld om je interieur met klasse te decoreren! Eenvoudige kunstliefhebber of overtuigd verzamelaar? Vind het favoriete canvas of schilderij dat uw decoratie echt zal verbeteren. Artmajeur biedt u originele werken, limited editions en art prints van de beste hedendaagse kunstenaars ter wereld. Op Artmajeur worden de schilderijen geselecteerd door liefhebbers en experts op de kunstmarkt. We selecteren voor u de originele werken van trendy, bekroonde en erkende schilders, evenals nieuwe opkomende waarden op het gebied van hedendaagse kunst om u te begeleiden en te helpen bij uw proces van online schilderijen kopen.
Kunstwerken kopen met als thema " crayon graphite ":
Koop kunst waar u van houdt zonder risico op Artmajeur! Koop unieke creaties die je niet elders kan vinden! Meer Opties:
Buy original artworks on Artmajeur
Immerse yourself in a world of beauty, inspiration, and creativity with contemporary art. We know the spellbinding allure of these unique pieces, how they captivate our minds and hearts with their dynamic stories, vibrant hues, and breathtaking composition. Each artwork is a testament to the zeitgeist of our age, mirroring societal landscapes and personal narratives through abstraction, realism, and other distinctive styles. Often, you’ll find these pieces showcasing a myriad of innovative materials and supports that align with their modernist vision, from acrylics and oil paints on canvas to mixed media pieces featuring elements of wood, metal, and even digital components.
Intriguingly, purchasing a contemporary artwork isn’t just about enhancing your space aesthetically; it’s a testament to your discerning taste and an intelligent investment. History has shown us that art, especially of the contemporary genre, tends to appreciate over time, becoming even more valuable as the artists’ reputation grows. This timeless truth makes acquiring a contemporary art piece an attractive and rewarding venture.
At the intersection of aesthetics and investment lies Artmajeur, an international online art gallery that we’re excited to introduce. Among the sea of online platforms, Artmajeur stands unparalleled, housing an expansive, exclusive selection of contemporary artworks. This carefully curated gallery boasts a multitude of pieces by emerging artists and established masters alike, offering you a broad palette of artworks to resonate with your unique taste and style.
What sets Artmajeur apart as an online art gallery isn’t just the quality and range of the artworks available. It’s the compelling blend of world-class service, buyer-friendly policies, and highly competitive pricing that makes our platform an absolute standout. It means you’re not just buying an artwork; you’re investing in an experience. Our gallery’s free shipping policy worldwide is a cherry on top, ensuring your chosen artwork will reach you safely, no matter where you are. Plus, with a free 14-day return policy, you can purchase with peace of mind, knowing that you can revisit your decision if needed.
Dive into the exceptional world of contemporary art with Artmajeur, and let your space be a canvas for the extraordinary. Embark on this artistic journey with us, knowing that each piece you bring into your life isn’t just a stroke of beauty but a stroke of genius in investment too. As we traverse this beautiful landscape of contemporary art together, may we discover the joy of being not just consumers but patrons and connoisseurs of the arts.