Saturday, June 1, 2019
Subject Placement in American Gothic, The Third of May, Acrobatââ¬â¢s Fami
Subject Placement in American Gothic, The Third of May, The Acrobats Family, and The Waterseller            Besides bright or dim colors, and fine or rough brush strokes, artists use centralized composition to convey their interpretations in The Acrobats Family with a Monkey, Amercian Gothic, The Water-Seller, and The Third of  May,1808.         Grant Wood strategically places objects and characters to emphasize the central object, the pitchfork, expressing an  line of unwelcomness, in his painting American Gothic.  The pitchfork attracts the viewers attention as the most prominent feature of the painting. Its sharpness and rigidity cause the viewer to feel  ill-fitting and uninvited. The elderly couple behind the pitchfork further exemplifies Woods placement technique.  Wood gives the pitchfork more significance by  placing it in the center in  move of the couple.  The pattern in the mans overalls resembles the pitchfork, which is a reference back to the pitchfork, further supportin   g the theme of the painting.  The couple becomes analogous to a No Trespassing sign. They do not want anyone to be around. At the top of the painting, the windows of the house resemble a  church services windows.  The sharpness and straightness in the windows refer to the pitchfork again.  Although the house resembles the actual church it is also used to continue the theme of unwelcomeness.  A hard to notice aspect of the painting is the cactus near the front door of  the home.  The cactus replaces the traditional welcome mat.  No one would go near the front door due to the possible harm. The sharpness from the thorns of the cactus reminds the viewer again of the pitchfork in the center of the painting.  Woods ...  ... lesser  screw than the water-seller causes him to defer to  the water-sellers maturity therefore, he stands in the background, watching the process and increasing his knowledge. The water-seller himself stands to the far right of Velazquezs painting, occupied with pou   ring water into a  trumpery for the boy. He has  lived longer than the other males in the painting and therefore has the most knowledge and the most experience of them all. The water-seller also appears to be the most distinguished of the  one-third dressed in red robes, which are similar to those that might be  worn by a Cardinal, thereby reflective of his position in life.        many a(prenominal) of these artists works contain subtle hints to the authors opinion on the subject.  By analyzing their central  compositional effects, the viewer can obtain a greater appreciation and  instinct for the art.                   
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