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Thread 7997149

156 posts 262 images /wg/
Anonymous No.7997149 [Report] >>7997150 >>8027167
Pointillism
Only have a few pointillism wallpapers, but I'm going to post what I have. Post pointillism if you have them.
Anonymous No.7997150 [Report] >>7997151
>>7997149 (OP)
Anonymous No.7997151 [Report] >>7997153
>>7997150
Anonymous No.7997153 [Report] >>7997154 >>8033308
>>7997151
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>>7997153
Anonymous No.7997204 [Report] >>8047518 >>8093296
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Anonymous No.7998841 [Report] >>7998900 >>8028206
Anonymous No.7998900 [Report] >>8000172 >>8016321 >>8018821 >>8035414 >>8058694 >>8086509 >>8102689
>>7998841
strictly speaking not traditional pointillism, but I guess Afremov's method could perhaps be considered a variation of traditional pointillism

both methods are generally based around oil paints, though traditional pointillism almost exclusively uses a brush to apply small spots of colours to a canvas; but small spots of bare canvas may be left exposed between the painted spots to add some light and texture to the painting. This method can give an appearance when viewed at distance similar to watercolour painting, but when viewed close-up will clearly resemble the kind of multicolor halftone printing methods used in magazines, etc.

whereas Afremov mostly used a small palette knife to apply larger spots (or daubs) of colour to build up an image all over the canvas, usually leaving no bare canvas exposed, with any light in one of his paintings coming directly from the combination of paint colours used, this generally gave his art a darker more textured appearance than you'd get with traditional pointillism, with the artwork maintaining it's distinctive bold oil painting appearance whether viewed close-up or from distance.
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Anonymous No.8000172 [Report] >>8001385 >>8042501 >>8097406 >>8102689
>>7998900
good work wiki-warrior... nobody cares
Anonymous No.8001381 [Report]
>11 megabyte png
https://files.catbox.moe/khjiyh.png
Anonymous No.8001385 [Report]
>>8000172
not a wiki-warrior at all, never used wikipedia infact, just a fan of Afremov's work
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Anonymous No.8005288 [Report] >>8005368
Extremely yeatsed thread, thank you anon. Anyone have a high-quality pape of Le Bec du Hoc, Grandcamp by Seurat? Probably my favorite Pointillist piece
Anonymous No.8005368 [Report]
>>8005288
>High-res photo of the framed painting
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Georges_seurat,_il_bec_du_hoc,_grandcamp,_1885.jpg

>2560x1440 wallpaper cropped from it (too big to post directly without reducing quality; pic related is a reduced 1920x1080 version)
https://files.catbox.moe/2dqtqu.png
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>8 megabyte png
https://files.catbox.moe/3mykil.png
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Henri Matisse
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>4444x3146
https://files.catbox.moe/vovonq.jpg
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>>7998900

now let's see Paul Allens Pointillism method
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>>7998900
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>>7997149 (OP)
I find this style quite harsh on the eyes.
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>>7998841
Kitsch
Anonymous No.8028212 [Report]
pointillism is shit, always was shit
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Anonymous No.8029019 [Report] >>8030085 >>8072969
Can this art style be called pointillism? If not what is the name of this style?
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>>8029019
That would fall under "pixel art".
Anonymous No.8030951 [Report] >>8059608 >>8059609
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Anonymous No.8032169 [Report]
good thread
Anonymous No.8033308 [Report] >>8084162
>>7997153
Marseille, i live here :)
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Anonymous No.8035414 [Report]
Maybe a slight Tangent but the Anon at >>7998900 has piqued my interest. How was Pointillism made, what's the history yadda yadda
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Anonymous No.8042501 [Report] >>8058694
>>8000172
Normal Fags will see a quirked up autistic white boy go to town on some interesting art history. just to poop in their hand and say some shit like this
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>6229x4973
https://files.catbox.moe/jb86s1.jpg
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>>7997204

>4096x3298
https://files.catbox.moe/a44k3u.jpg
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>5059x4074
https://files.catbox.moe/i5eixy.jpg
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>6486x5220
https://files.catbox.moe/7pw32e.jpg
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>>8042501
>>7998900
Fucking five star posts
Anonymous No.8059569 [Report]
>Clara Oswald - Pointillist (sorta) drawing

>Digital drawing of Clara from Doctor Who. The pointillist effect was achieved by using the rotate symmetry tool on firealpaca (it's sorta like a digital version of spirograph and i really enjoyed using it lol!)
Anonymous No.8059573 [Report]
Can't post pointilism cause I don't have any all I know is wherever I am I must also bump
Anonymous No.8059606 [Report]
fantastic thread
Anonymous No.8059608 [Report] >>8059609
>>8030951
also
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>>8030951
>>8059608
and
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>7959x5610
https://files.catbox.moe/r99i27.jpg
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>>8029019

What you're showing there is pixelised art. The colours are posterised and the highlights and shadows are rendered as pixels. Pointillism requires that you start by adding points, not creating an image and turning them into a colour grid.
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>3712x2992
https://files.catbox.moe/6p1n12.jpeg
Anonymous No.8075849 [Report]
> Belgian artist Georges Lemmen adopted the pointillist style—which used uniform dots or dabs of color to create forms—after seeing Georges Seurat’s A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte at an exhibition in Brussels in 1887. While most artists avoided this systematic and inflexible technique for portraits, Lemmen was one of the few who successfully applied it to a psychologically intense likeness. In this depiction of his sister, Julie Fréderique Lemmen, the artist captured what his daughter described as Julie’s “biting personality” while also signaling her vulnerability through her demure pose.
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Anonymous No.8078107 [Report]
> In 1886 Vincent van Gogh left his native Holland and settled in Paris, where his beloved brother Theo was a dealer in paintings. Van Gogh created at least twenty-four self-portraits during his two-year stay in the energetic French capital. This early example is modest in size and was painted on prepared artist’s board rather than canvas. Its densely dabbed brushwork, which became a hallmark of Van Gogh’s style, reflects the artist’s response to Georges Seurat’s revolutionary pointillist technique in A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte.

> But what was for Seurat a method based on the cool objectivity of science became in Van Gogh’s hands an intense emotional language. The surface of the painting dances with particles of color—intense greens, blues, reds, and oranges. Dominating this dazzling array of staccato dots and dashes are the artist’s deep green eyes and the intensity of their gaze. “I prefer painting people’s eyes to cathedrals,” Van Gogh once wrote to Theo. “However solemn and imposing the latter may be—a human soul, be it that of a poor streetwalker, is more interesting to me.”

> From Paris, Van Gogh traveled to the southern town of Arles for fifteen months. At the time of his death, in 1890, he had actively pursued his art for only five years.
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Anonymous No.8083593 [Report] >>8097407
What’s the point of this thread?
Anonymous No.8084162 [Report]
>>8033308
My condolensces
Anonymous No.8084164 [Report]
Thanks for all the great posts, bros
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>>7998900
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>>7997204
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>>8000172
what a pathetic unnecessary comment. gfy greaseball
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>>8083593
what's the point of your shit post? thanks for the bump, kys
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>>8000172
>>7998900
I care.
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We're all just points on a pointillist painting.
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Anonymous No.8116537 [Report] >>8116780
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>>8116537
I love the color scheme, gonna try to steal it for a piece of mine
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> 4748x2898
https://files.catbox.moe/u8ea7a.jpg
Anonymous No.8119680 [Report] >>8119854
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>>8119680
If anybody is interested in hearing more about van Rysselberghe, check out this podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wIE0XCWBFo
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Anonymous No.8121875 [Report] >>8121908
> 4792x5731
https://files.catbox.moe/a3tn9w.jpg
Anonymous No.8121908 [Report] >>8121946
>>8121875
any painters in this thread? How would this pic look if he had blended each dab of paint a little bit with the ones around it?
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>>8121908
That's what the Fauvists did.