Seascape Oil Paintings Never Lose Dramatic Appeal
By Dorothy Dixon
Seascape oil paintings have never lost their appeal to art collectors. And artists remain enthralled with this motif after two centuries of art production. The challenge of painting water in its full splendor keeps artists studying the light effects, weather conditions and moods of a body of water.
It is also true that art collectors are attracted to seascapes when looking to purchase. With the Impressionists, seascapes gained in status. These men and women painted in all the varying conditions, times of day and light patterns. Before them, the English watercolorists made painting water popular with ethereal effects that have not been replicated to this day. That does not mean artists have given up trying.
A seascape can be about special effects or it can be about the everyday life at the seashore. Some artists love to paint boats and they do so with delight. Others prefer rocks and the rugged land surrounding a body of water. Some like to capture people and animals at the beach and others prefer harbor scenes. All of these motifs are categorized as seascapes.
Birds and animals are often depicted. Some artists fill up the canvas with the details of life: sunbathers, dog walkers, swimmers. Illustrators use the sea as a backdrop for life while others use the sea for reasons more ephemeral.
In the age of abstraction, the sea can be used to represent space. It can be as minimal as a line for a horizon or a sea of monochromatic haze. It can be suggested without the use of any representational details at all. It can be a splash of color or a horizontal brush stroke. The sea can be portrayed indefinitely in any style.
Seascape oil paintings are as popular today as they ever were. Artists never tire of a subject that changes by the minute and offers any number of surprising effects. To have one of these paintings hanging on your walls is to invite contemplation, as if sitting at the shore, waiting for the sun to rise, to set or to just change mood. That is why they remain the most popular subject for paintings. Read more about: seascape oil paintings
It is also true that art collectors are attracted to seascapes when looking to purchase. With the Impressionists, seascapes gained in status. These men and women painted in all the varying conditions, times of day and light patterns. Before them, the English watercolorists made painting water popular with ethereal effects that have not been replicated to this day. That does not mean artists have given up trying.
A seascape can be about special effects or it can be about the everyday life at the seashore. Some artists love to paint boats and they do so with delight. Others prefer rocks and the rugged land surrounding a body of water. Some like to capture people and animals at the beach and others prefer harbor scenes. All of these motifs are categorized as seascapes.
Birds and animals are often depicted. Some artists fill up the canvas with the details of life: sunbathers, dog walkers, swimmers. Illustrators use the sea as a backdrop for life while others use the sea for reasons more ephemeral.
In the age of abstraction, the sea can be used to represent space. It can be as minimal as a line for a horizon or a sea of monochromatic haze. It can be suggested without the use of any representational details at all. It can be a splash of color or a horizontal brush stroke. The sea can be portrayed indefinitely in any style.
Seascape oil paintings are as popular today as they ever were. Artists never tire of a subject that changes by the minute and offers any number of surprising effects. To have one of these paintings hanging on your walls is to invite contemplation, as if sitting at the shore, waiting for the sun to rise, to set or to just change mood. That is why they remain the most popular subject for paintings. Read more about: seascape oil paintings
HARI DEEP
Saturday, 20 August 2011
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