#harold sohlberg
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Harold Sohlberg (b. 1869). Winter Night in the Mountains. C. 1901 - 1921
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Journaling- 6 Principles
Unity and Variety- Unity is how everything comes together and becomes one. Variety is the difference and makes the design pop out more. Ex: My family. Our personalities vary, but we are united in the same house.
Balance- Creating stability and preventing one side from falling.Ex: The design James Hoban had for the White House.
Emphasis and Subordination- Emphasis is to give importance to one area or spot. Subordination is the opposite which has less importance and is in the background. Ex: Pieter Bruegel The Eldr's Landscape With The Fall of Icarus. The man in red steals the attention and makes the rest the subordinate.
Directional Forces- The direction or angles capturing how the viewer will follow. Ex: Harold Sohlberg, Flower Meadow in The North, where flowers make our eyes follow it to the moon in the back.
Repetition and Rhythm- Repetition is the same thing happening again. Rhythm gives order and diversity to repetition. Ex: Afghanistan Weavers War Rug, where a pattern is used of grenades and vehicles.
Scale and Proportion- Scale is the size between two things. Proportion is the size that makes it whole. Ex: Cildo Meireles Cruzeiro do Sul where the hand looks large with the finger holding a small wooden block.
0 notes
Text
Winter Night in the Mountains by Harald Sohlberg (Norwegian), oil on canvas, genre: Neo-Romanticism, 1914
158 notes
·
View notes
Text
Harold Sohlberg (Norwegian Neo-romantic painter, 1869 – 1935), Moonlight, 1907
#Harold Sohlberg#moon#moonlight#art#painting#book of khidr#bookofkhidr#norway#norwegian art#norwegian artist#neo romanticism
6K notes
·
View notes
Text
'Moonlight'. Harold Sohlberg. 1907.
51 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Harold Sohlberg (Norwegian Neo-romantic painter, 1869 – 1935), Moonlight, 1907
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
Be Like The Moon
“Be like the moon. The moon does not fight. It attacks no one. It does not worry. It does not try to crush others. It keeps to its course, but by its very nature, it gently influences. What other body could pull an entire ocean from shore to shore? The moon is faithful to its nature and its power is never diminished.”
Deng Ming-Dao
Artwork by Harold Sohlberg
0 notes
Text
Water Lily Pond — Claude Monet
Arrangement in Grey & Black No. 1 (Whistler’s Mother) — James McNeill Whistler
The Philosopher’s Conquest — Giorgio de Chirico
Paris Street; Rainy Day — Gustave Caillebotte
Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare — Claude Monet
Study from Life — John Singer Sargent
Fisherman’s Cottage — Harold Sohlberg
Time Transfixed — Rene Magritte
Visions of Eternity — Salvador Dali
Self-Portrait — Vincent van Gogh
Chrysanthemums — Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Poppy Field (Giverny) — Claude Monet
Portrait of Charles Deering — John Singer Sargent
Inventions of the Monsters — Salvador Dali
Out My Window — Hanns Kralik
Young Woman Sewing — Pierre-Auguste Renoir
A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte — Georges-Pierre Seurat
The Drinkers — Vincent van Gogh
The Eventuality of Density — Giorigio de Chirico
Nighthawks — Edward Hopper
Action Bronson
The Artist looks at Nature — Charles Sheeler
Chicago
0 notes
Photo
Harald Sohlberg (Norwegian, 1869-1935), Flower Meadow in the North, 1905. Oil on canvas, 37.8 x 43.7 in. (96 x 111 cm)
554 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Harald Sohlberg - Blomar, 1905
55 notes
·
View notes