12/6/2023 0 Comments Ocean reflection paintingThe ocean’s gentle whisper is like a baby’s lisp or purring of a cat and at the same time like the roar of a hundred disturbed lions – it can be all of that! “There is, one knows not what sweet mystery about this sea, whose gently awful stirrings seem to speak of some hidden soul beneath…” Herman Melville in his famous novel Moby Dick poetically describes the ocean as a reflection of the living soul: The ‘furious ocean’ presented in this work – the roar of the woken up Lions – alludes to the fury of human soul. The Ocean is a living creature, it can be tender but it can be angry as well. Music appears in the artist’s painting Born from the Sea: in the steady stirring of the waves we hear the peaceful Ocean singing a gentle lullaby to its offspring. They say that inspiration for the Tales from the Vienna Woods by Johann Strauss came while the great composer was riding in a horse-drawn carriage through the spring forest: the singing of the birds, the gentle murmur of the stream, the leaves rustling in the passing wind – the sounds of nature chiming in as he moves along. 3.We know that sounds evoke images and vice versa – there is a certain music behind the magic of an image. The stately HMS Temeraire is much larger than the tugboat and rises from the sea in an elegant manner that seems to fade into the misty background. ![]() The artist captures the symbolism of this warship in its former glory being overtaken by the newer, less attractive ship. Turner paints the ship as being towed by a single, blackened tugboat as it is being dragged out to a scrapyard to be broken up and parted out. ![]() The old warship was known to have played a major role in the Battle of Trafalgar, which was a significant military encounter between the French and British naval forces during the Napoleanic Wars. Turner saw the fading beauty in this once-might warship’s final passage and painted a scene that lingers in the minds of many British art enthusiasts. This work depicts a point in time when sailed ships had begun to be rendered obsolete by steam and other powered ships that were able to cover distances faster and more efficiently. One of England’s most famous paintings is The Fighting Temeraire Tugged to her last Berth to be Broken Up by J.M.W Turner. The Fighting Temeraire Tugged to her last Berth to be Broken Up – J.M.W Turner The vessel that is in the center of the painting appears to be on the verge of being swallowed by an incoming rogue wave. The artist also includes ships that are also dwarfed by the huge waves around them. The mountain has a strange resemblance to the ocean waves in color, it’s snow-capped peak appearing much like the crest of the waves in the sea. Mount Fuji is actually visible in the crest of the largest wave as a small, distant landscape that can barely be distinguished from the rest of the ocean’s waves. Hokusai chose to paint the work in a gripping blue coloration that mostly features the giant, roaring waves rising and crashing. This particular painting was the most famous as it depicted the ocean near Mount Fuji in all its famously unpredictable anger, which filled many sailors with an extreme sense of trepidation at having to sail near this area. Hokusai painted this work as a series of scenes he labeled Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji. This painting is also known as The Great Wave off Kanagawa and focuses completely on the unpredictable and often raging seas near Japan’s famous Mount Fuji. Painted in 1831, Katsushika Hokusai’s work titled The Wave was one that quickly garnered significant attention throughout the world despite Japan being under a strict period of isolation from much of the world. ![]() Here are 10 of the most famous ocean paintings ever done. Regardless of how the sea is portrayed, there is a significant level of mastery in being able to accurately depict the ocean in its many different forms. Some artists have found it most challenging to depict the calm, still water and its reflective properties while others have sought to show the sea in all its raging glory with giant, dangerous waves and boisterous winds. ![]() Painting the ocean has presented many different challenges in its own right. Many great artists have sought to portray the ocean and how it interacts with the many different actions and decisions of mankind.Ĭapturing the sea in all it’s individualistic glory is a tall task for many painters, but the most skilled have found ways to portray the sea and it’s lofty waves in a manner which adds as much intrigue and amazement as any social dynamic that can be imagined by a playwright or other creative artist. The ocean, like any other creature of a person, seems to have its own personality with characteristics like anger, excitement, calamity, gentleness, and other qualities. The Ocean covers almost three-quarters of the Earth’s surface and has long been a central focus and source of inspiration for many of the most famous painters throughout history.
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