분류 전체보기27 Giacometti: So Thin, So Human There’s a man walking—his arms and legs stretched like wires,his posture leaning ever so slightly forward,his body impossibly thin, like he might topple over with a gust of wind.But he doesn’t fall.He walks on.This is Alberto Giacometti’s Walking Man, and if you’ve seen it in person, you know—it’s not just a sculpture.It’s a feeling.A body stripped down, a soul laid bareBorn in Switzerland in 19.. 2025. 5. 13. Mark Rothko: Why People Cry in Front of His Rectangles Two giant rectangles.No sharp lines, no fancy brushstrokes.Just soft fields of color, floating quietly on the canvas.It sounds simple — maybe too simple.But stand in front of a Rothko painting, and something shifts.People cry. Literally. Not because it’s sad, but because it feels like something deep inside is being touched.Why?Because Rothko wasn’t painting “pictures.”He was creating experiences.. 2025. 5. 12. Marcel Duchamp: The Guy Who Made a Urinal into Art — and Got Away With It Imagine walking into an art gallery and seeing... a urinal. Not a fancy sculpture, not a painting. Just a plain, upside-down urinal with the name “R. Mutt” scribbled on it.Welcome to Marcel Duchamp’s world.In 1917, Duchamp entered this piece — called “Fountain” — into an art show. And yeah, people freaked out.“Wait, this is art?” they said.And Duchamp, cool as ever, basically replied:“I picked i.. 2025. 5. 12. René Magritte: Making the Ordinary Feel Seriously Weird You’re walking past a painting. Nothing crazy, just a bunch of men in bowler hats floating in the sky.Totally normal… until you realize — wait, why are they floating?That’s what René Magritte does. He makes everyday stuff — apples, pipes, suits — feel totally off, and you can’t stop looking. He doesn’t scream “look how weird this is!”, he just lets you notice it… and then your brain does a littl.. 2025. 5. 12. Francisco Goya: The Painter Who Saw the Darkness When you stand before a painting by Francisco Goya, it's not just your mind that reacts—it’s your heart.The blood. The screams. The silence.It’s more than just a piece of art; it feels like a witness testifying to something dark and painful.One of Goya’s most powerful works is "May 3, 1808 in Madrid."In this painting, a man stands before a firing squad.He's dressed in a white shirt, arms raised .. 2025. 5. 12. Vermeer: The Girl with the Pearl Earring and Her Quiet Gaze It’s a moment frozen in time.A girl turns her head slightly, her lips parted just enough to suggest a thought—half-formed, never spoken.She wears a luminous pearl earring and looks directly at us.This is Johannes Vermeer’s The Girl with the Pearl Earring.Not a portrait, not a depiction of a real person.This painting belongs to a genre called tronie—a study of facial expression and costume, popul.. 2025. 5. 12. 이전 1 2 3 4 5 다음