Learn About Art

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The Rococo Style – Sophisticated and Yet Enchantingly Pretty

The Rococo Style – Sophisticated and Yet Enchantingly Pretty

The Rococo style was delicately elegant with a distinct preference for asymmetry. It was presided over by France’s King Louis XV’s mistress, Madame du Pompadour, a sophisticated lady of impeccable style.

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Early Civilisations – In the Beginning

Early Civilisations – In the Beginning

All cultures on earth, just like individuals, have distinct modes of existence. Creation stories are something they all have in common in a logical attempt to rationalize the presence of humans on earth.

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Kahlil Gibran Prophet, Artist & Man of Words for all Seasons

Kahlil Gibran Prophet, Artist & Man of Words for all Seasons

Kahlil Gibran (1883-1931) is one of those rare geniuses in history, who may have slipped entirely through the cracks of our civilization, had it not been for those that surrounded him surmounting many challenges so they could provide the level of support that he needed to shine. They did it without seeking a reward.

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Ancient Rome – An Important Precinct of Power and Glory

Ancient Rome – An Important Precinct of Power and Glory

During the reign of Augustus (31BC – 14ACE) Rome emerged as an economically successful city with a population approaching one million. To become a free citizen of Rome was considered a great honour.

Whoever you were if you were born within the boundaries of the Roman Empire you had the right to hold the highest office in the State. Under Augustus the concept of an eternal Rome emerged, revealing its link to the legendary past and its promise of a new era.

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Love Jewellery from Cupid to Cartier

Love Jewellery from Cupid to Cartier

When people today talk about jewels, jewellery, gemmology and gems it is clear the vocabulary has become confused. Gemstones are treasured minerals found in the earth. ‘Gems’ are the objects fashioned from them. Jewels are gem ready for mounting into jewellery and other objects of art. And, jewellery – it is the finished product that if its designer from Cupid to Cartier has succeeded, adorns its wearer well.

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The Lady and the Unicorn and ‘Millefleurs’ Style Tapestries

The Lady and the Unicorn and ‘Millefleurs’ Style Tapestries

In the late medieval period of the fifteenth century the now famous millefleurs tapestries first appear characterized by their backgrounds made of hundreds of tiny flowers. The most well known in this style are known as La Dame á la Licorne, or the Lady & the Unicorn. A group of six tapestries they are woven from a combination of woolen, silk and gold thread and have exercised an almost universal fascination on all those who have encountered them for hundreds of years.

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Alan Bennett Playwright – a Class Act like No Other

Alan Bennett Playwright – a Class Act like No Other

‘You are a rent boy. I am a poet. Over the wall lives the Dean of Christ Church. We all have our parts to play’ It seems to me that it is always a perfect time of year for an Alan Bennett celebration. England’s local hero highly acclaimed author and playwright Alan Bennett (1934 – [...]

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Ancient Greek Art – A Meeting of the Human with the Divine

Ancient Greek Art – A Meeting of the Human with the Divine

Greek sculpture was the first, the only ancient art to break free from conceptual conventions, for that of representing men and animals. Artisans wanted to explore consciously how art might imitate nature, or even improve upon it. There was no conscious striving towards realism at first, especially until it was understood to be a possible and desirable goal. This began six centuries before the Christ event.

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Artist Marcel Desbiens – Creating Natural Connections

Artist Marcel Desbiens – Creating Natural Connections

Artist Marcel Desbiens student of nature, who records the minute details of a petal from a flower on Exhibition, Lethbridge Gallery at Brisbane November 12-27

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Meissen Porcelain – Princely Power and Prestige

Meissen Porcelain – Princely Power and Prestige

Today we have our morning cup of tea, or latte, from a cup, or mug without much thought about the ‘China’ we drink it from, because it has become such an integral aspect of twenty first century lifestyle. However, as a commodity, the ceramic ware it derived from, known as porcelain, aided the growth of both the east and western world’s economies and benefited their social and cultural development for centuries.

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Tapestry Tales, heavy with meaning and intention

Tapestry Tales, heavy with meaning and intention

A commission of six tapestries for William Knox D’arcy’s Dining Room at Stanmore Hall in Middlesex illustrates the story of the Holy Grail quest, as told in Sir Thomas Malory’s Morte d’Arthur. They took five years to weave and are considered among the most significant works made during the nineteenth century when romanticism was at its height and they paint a beguiling picture of lovely maidens and dashing knights in a style that was very appealing.

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Arts & Crafts Movement – William Morris the Art that is Life

Arts & Crafts Movement – William Morris the Art that is Life

In England, during the second half of the nineteenth century, painter, writer, textile designer and social activist William Morris (1834-1896) became the spiritual leader of a revival in arts and crafts that encompassed all the visual arts, including architecture and interiors.

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Three Wise Men – Achieving Celebrity Status

Three Wise Men – Achieving Celebrity Status

January 6 the climax of the Christian Twelve Days of Christmas celebrates The Epiphany when three wise men brought gifts of Gold Frankincense and Myrrh to the baby Jesus. But why?

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Palladio – In Pursuit of the Perfect House

Palladio – In Pursuit of the Perfect House

A villa by architect Andrea Palladio was a place where the owners could feel happy, secure and content, which is after all, what most of us still require and aspire to, a place where one can cultivate the head, heart, body and the soul.

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A Passion for Gothic Decoration

A Passion for Gothic Decoration

The decorative arts were never considered secondary by Augustus Welby Pugin. As an architect he might design the structure of a house, church or institution, but he conceived of the building, its fittings and furnishings as a ‘complete work of art.’

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Fashion, is it more than a Frock?

Fashion, is it more than a Frock?

From skinny self sacrificing super models to those demanding the use of ‘real people’, costume accommodates a desire to be noticed. It is the look at me, look at me syndrome, which has been in play for thousands of years. Today it collectively reflects a western society in which privacy has been stripped completely bare. But is fashion about more than a frock?

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