Saturday, 2 February 2019

Art Exhibition


The theme of this virtual exhibition is flowers and human beings, and its purpose is to highlight how by destroying plants and trees and disturbing the environment, human beings create problems for themselves.
References
Adamson, N. (2016). Black Flowers Blossom: Bachelard, Soulages and the Material Imaginary of Abstract Painting. Art History, 39(4), 654-675. doi:10.1111/1467-8365.12264
Purdy, W. F. (1918). Flowers and Silver. The Art World, 3(5), 434. doi:10.2307/25588353
Hogh-Olesen, H. (2018). The First Humans and the First Art. Oxford Scholarship Online. doi:10.1093/oso/9780190927929.003.0003
Flowers, B. (2010). Mayne, Thomas. Oxford Art Online. doi:10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.t2088495
Grossberg, S., & Zajac, L. (2017). How Humans Consciously See Paintings and Paintings Illuminate How Humans See. Art & Perception, 5(1), 1-95. doi:10.1163/22134913-00002059
Lee, J. W. (2018). Antiques Matters: Chinese Bronzes in Chang Sŭngŏp’s Paintings of Antiques and Flowers. Korean Society for Science of Eastern Art, 39, 237-258. doi:10.19078/ea.2018.39.10
Lee, Y. R., Kim, Y. S., & Soh, H. O. (2018). The Study of Body Art Using Folk Paintings (Paintings of Flowers and Birds) in the Chosun Dynasty. Journal of the Korean Society of Costume, 68(1), 126-138. doi:10.7233/jksc.2018.68.1.126