“How’s life?”
Me:
The mammalian desire to stand at the edge of the ocean.
@jabronibaloney / jabronibaloney.tumblr.com
“How’s life?”
Me:
The mammalian desire to stand at the edge of the ocean.
Jan Klępiński [Polish, 1872-1913] “Wieczór nad morzem” [Evening by the Sea], oil on canvas, 1905 [via Rempex].
Alexei Savrasov
Beholders - Mia Bergeron , 2024.
American, b. 1979 -
Oil on canvas , 24 x 24 cm.
The Wave. Alex Alemany. 1943.
The Wave Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson — 1917 Oil on canvas
Point Bonita lighthouse, oil on canvas. — Frederick Ferdinand Schafer (American/German, 1839-1927)
the way ivan aivazovsky looks at the sea…i think…i think that’s what love looks like.
love is surrounding yourself with people who see you this clearly
Still the freakiest fact about him is that despite being as tall as a person or more, he banged out these beauties in a day or two at most (and smaller ones ina matter of hours). The longest he spent on a painting, at age 81, to make his largest ever painting, was TEN DAYS:
It is 2.9×4.3 meters large. That’s 9'4"×14'1" for people in other measurement systems. It’s HUGE. There are artists out there that spend years on paintings much smaller than this. He was not one of them.
He also didn’t only paint the sea, but he MOSTLY painted the sea. Very few people could draw light filtering through waves the way this guy did and apparently it was tied into his layering technique that allowed him to paint so goddamn fast.
He is obviously my most favorite painter ever.
!!!
“Still the freakiest fact about him is that despite being as tall as a person or more,”
Initially I didn’t realise this referred to the size of the paintings and briefly thought Ivan Aivazovsky was “as tall as a person or more” and imagined a freakishly tall Slavic artist lovingly painting the enchanting play of light and colour on the sea
Sunset at Sea after a Storm by Francis Danby (c. 1824)