Who is your favorite painter?

Grayox@lemmy.ml to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world – 32 points –

Ive recently gotten into painting and am looking for inspiration, so please hit me with your favorite artists. I've currently only done master copies and tutorials in the style of Van Gogh, but want to branch out. Unfortunately i didnt appreciate the required art appreciation class enough in college.

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Caravaggio - an absolute master of contrast and light. He manages to balance a painterly hand with realism in such a pleasing way. I’ve had the pleasure of seeing some of his works in person, and they’re all just so impossibly smooth and polished.

DUDE!!! I spent forever looking at his works last time i saw them in person forgot his name though. Love how dark his paintings are.

Ooh, a subject I love!

Number one all-time, Mark Rothko, no hesitation.
From a more classic tradition, JMW Turner and Caspar David Friedrich.
From the French impressionists, Paul Cézanne.
From the Renaissance, Giorgione of Venice.
From antiquity, the wooden tomb portraits of Fayum, Egypt.

Ok I know he called himself an illustrator but I don't care. To me Rockwell is the supreme. The way he could just tell a story with a single image. The way he could just tell you that story the way his target audience wanted to see it.

I got a book of his top paintings once and was looking through it, my wife came home from work and I showed her, then I had to go run an errand. On the way back it clicked in my head: she was going to leaf through the book and stop at the picture of the before and after of the family beach trip. When I get home the book will be on that page. Sure enough it was.

I didn't get the Picasso until I saw some of his paintings in person. What's even crazier is that he mastered realism by like 10yrs old and thought it was too easy.

Willem de kooning. Early 20s, figure drawing instructor said my live sketches reminded him of de kooning. I'd never heard of him. Few years later, in San Francisco moma, stood in front of one of his Woman paintings, entranced. Thus my love of abstract expressionism began.

Goya, in his blue period, feels very relevant to us today

I love Goya, but for me his early portrait works. They just glow with life! Though I definitely discovered him vis his darker paintings, particularly Saturn.

Saturn Devouring His Son is actually so freaky. I can't imagine what it was like for Goya to live in his house at the end of his life surrounded by all of his black paintings...

Holy Melencoly Batman, those paintings are so dark, i love them.

Hmmm. Hans Bellmer is probably my favorite overall, but he's better known as a surrealist photographer and illustrator. (His illustrations are almost affordable; I don't know if he's just not that well known, or if his surrealist eroticism isn't to everyone's taste, or what. But his 'puppet' photos are really fantastic and disturbing.)

Second is Egon Schiele, who died far, far too young during the Spanish Influenza epidemic. He was a protege of Gustav Klimt, and, IMO, would have eclipsed him had he lived.

Third is Lucien Freud, who has such expressive brushwork, and was a master of color and composition.

René Magritte is one of my favorites that hasn’t been mentioned yet. Surrealism, minimalism, and conceptual.

John Constable. I like the way he does clouds. Gives me the same feeling as if I were really just sitting there staring at the sky for real.

I really love Dali, and the whole surrealist movement. Just saw two of his paintings over the weekend.

Love his works, they are just so refined and polished, dont think I'll be able to copy and of his till my brushstrokes skills get good ha. What's your favorite work of his?

I like Robert Delaunay, and also his wife, Sonia Delaunay. Their work involves a lot of bright, vibrant colors. It also was rather abstract or impressionistic, which I enjoyed. I think I like Piet Mondrian for similar reasons. Jan Sluyters would be another.

I also like JMW Turner a lot. I'm a sucker for lighting and dynamic skies in paintings, and his work features that very prominently. Frederic Edwin Church is another painter along these lines that I really enjoy.

A more contemporary passive that I like is Nina Tokhtaman Valetova. Her work also involves a lot of bold colors.

Others have mentioned Caravaggio so I’ll add Fragonard. I love his style and I also love how mischievous his subjects can be. For instance, Progress of Love.

Mary Whyte is my favorite modern watercolor artist. She does absolutely stunning paintings of people in their environment.

I really like Degas and Monet, and to a larger extent impressionism as a whole. To me their painting transcend vision only and I feel like I can hear the sound and smell the air of the scene depicted. By far my favourite art movement.

I also love Jan Van Eyck and how precise and tangible his paintings are. The Arnolfini portrait and Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele are what immediately come to mind. Fur, silk, wood, paint, metals, reflections and soft shadows, everything is just incredibly lifelike and three dimensional. The reflection in the mirror in the Arnolfini portrait is also pretty crazy considering the entire thing is about a square foot in size.

There's plenty of others like Caravaggio and Rembrandt for their incredible use of chiaroscuro and depiction of emotions or Hieronymus Bosch with his wild scenes that often look like lsd infused fever dreams.

Lucien Freud, Francis Bacon, Phillip Pearlstein, Bronzino, Pontormo, Velasquez, El Greco, Artimesia Gentileschi, Otto Dix, Kathe Kollwitz, Jenny Saville, Zhi Lin

Currently it's Kim Diaz Holm

But it changes for me a lot, much like my taste in music

It flip flops all over the place but he's one artist I keep coming back to

I even have some prints of his art on my walls which I don't do very often

Probably Zdzisław Beksiński. Not because he paints nice things to look at but rather he paints things that some may call horrible in a very interesting way. I kind of think it makes me appreciated life in a way since it could be so much worse, but I'm not sure if this really describes why I like him. I think this is a collection of most of his paintings

Edit: For nice things to look at I recently took a closer look at Caspar David Friedrichs Landscape paintings.

Those are grotesquely interesting so cool.

Many that I like are mentioned already here, so I'll just add Mark Rothko. His paintings are very simple, but they have such depth and power, especially when you see them in person. They just look out at you, almost like they're pulsing.

yellena james because watercolor reef

Frida Kahlo! The reasons are: vibrating colors, latino/mexican elements and the "rawness" brutality of the elements depicted on her art, without trying to be "cute" at all.