Pretentious Yet Pointless | |
| Artist: | Aris, Sol |
| Medium: | Acrylics on virtual canvas |
| Title: | Randomly generated image 2056087051 |
| Date: | Sat Jul 4 16:47:51 UTC 2026 |
| Description: |
In this sculpture Sol Aris
shows
the relationship between
sugar and wine.
In this work Sol Aris
delineates
the relationship between
summer and winter.
It is useful to note that the
idea behind constructive colour theory
is that it enables the artist
to understand form in terms of
dimensionality,
rather than mass.
A notable feature of this image is the arena of contrasting tone and hue
contrasting strongly with
the here and now experience of
size and perception so clearly visible.
The piece shares not only Sol Aris's
death-identification
but also his cosmic perspective and obsession with power.
An interesting side of the piece is that it is the essential distinction between pattern and texture.
A particularly contentious aspect of this particular drawing is that it is a reflection of the artist's soul.
This image is an expression of one of the central preoccupations of Sol Aris's art, the understanding of the strongly distorted rapidly reaching components where the relationship of the viewer to the sketch is an image of the process of creation. The never-ending curves are closed in a tribute to post-impressionistic art. This striking piece is representative of one of the central preoccupations of Sol Aris's art, the understanding of the shapes where the scale and openness to the piece is not completely concrete. The spectator is drawn by the extraordinarily refined aesthetic sensibility of the prototype into the world of images strong in meaning and emotion. ``It is important to know under what circumstances simultaneous effects will occur and how they can be counteracted. There are many problems in colour that preclude solutions using simultaneous contrast.'' [Johannes Itten, The Art of Color] |
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