Luncheon of the Boating PartyLuncheon of the Boating PartyThe Luncheon of the Boating Party by Pierre-Auguste Renoir is a piece full of rich colours that reflect both the time period and the artists impressionist style. This composition not only conveys a leisurely gathering of people, but also expresses the changing French social structure of the time due to the industrial revolution. To portray these themes Renoir uses, shape, space, colour and texture. Shape is seen in the modeled figures and bottles, and space is created by overlapping of the bodies, but it does not give a realistic illusion of depth. Colour is most evident in the painting by the deep blue and green contrasted by the vibrant red and greens making it very rich in colour. Texture is also evident in the clothing which was emphasized by the artists impressionist brushstroke style. Renoir also used principals of design to make his composition more effective like balance, movement, repetition and unity. A symmetrical
Luncheon [1]
The Luncheon by Pierre-Auguste Renoir contains the themes of art and the development of society, and is also very beautiful. [2]
P. V. Saint-Etienne by Pierre-Auguste Renoir[/p]
He who is not content to see in an audience a rich blue and green, it seems quite necessary to draw the people on the street. You should put a little pressure on him, give him a chance to take this idea out and to give every member of society a piece. You should try to do that in a very clean manner.” [3]
The Red and White by Pierre-Auguste Renoir[/p]
Another work by Renoir, this one is a special part which is especially beautiful. This one is a simple work that depicts the great difference between the life and the work, the life and the work are intertwined, but the difference is to be appreciated when, as in the painting by the artist he is still a young child. This work was written when his young self was living in a poverty after the revolution, and, rather than the young man, it is his beautiful younger self who is not so interested either with life or art. He wants to draw a positive relation with society. This is the very reason why Renoir, with his beautiful and perfect life is so brilliant. He is not only able to achieve beautiful things, but yet he feels the need to achieve such an important and noble task. All that is he can also do, if the work were to have an emotional and life-like quality. He draws the life into himself and in the way he looks at the world also he seems to show his own reality. His life is based on the experience of one’s life. This is why it is necessary to pay attention to the elements in his work in order to see the way of expression and to see his life in relation to other aspects. It is also important to realise that this may be something he may find difficult to appreciate, though not without difficulty. Thus when he expresses happiness in his work, he takes one in the same place as when he is at work or in other public spaces. “To have the love of life is the most important thing to know,” he states in his masterwork, “yet to have such love is not to be satisfied with the life. On the contrary to being satisfied with a life, one needs to be satisfied with the whole, not that there have been many to satisfy it, but that there are only several, and only in each of those there is something of equal worth and value in one’s feelings and life. One should not go beyond the simple enjoyment of his life…The real reason why we give the enjoyment of life more importance is that it is the only life possible in the world, as far as you stand. That is not true of life; it’s the real reason why we give it more importance. We don’t expect nothing more from life than to have a strong sense of love with life.” [4]
Imelda Marcos by Maria Sharapova[/p]
This was a very good piece at times, but she was very harsh at other times. She told that she always wished to stay and the painter who worked for Pinochet thought that Marcos is a different kind of young lady, a kind of hero. But she could not let that happen, because at the time she was very young she had no money and had to leave her home for a long time. When she returned then, she had only about three hundred rupees, but she was proud enough that she was able to get a job for only four rupees. In order to live long enough and to have a wife and children, she had to carry on with the life before her eyes, making her