What I Saw at the Brocante: Paintings Galore
Comments
17 responses to “What I Saw at the Brocante: Paintings Galore”
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I like “After Fishing” because of the color and little people. 🙂
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No, I have never cropped a painting, I just paint them! I love I love the lighthouse painting, it is a nice study in reflected light and the sepia sailboats is great!
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Love the snowy church. Reminds me of a Sisley painting. Paintings are the FIRST thing I look for at a brocante…
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yes I have– just 3 days ago— for the first time altered a piece of art I purchased from a French woman in Bordeaux-she made it– I didn’t care for the element placement…. so change it I did and it did look better in my opinion-my favorite painting is the flowers-normally the table scape would rank there-1st place– that is– but those colors were too brash for me-same with the one right below it-normally I do not like “just flowers” as the subject-I prefer them in nature or in a setting with other elements like people etc-nautical themed paintings are tricky-colors time of day..or night beach open water type of boat etc-such a subjective subject…thought provoking….
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“The lack of color attracted my attention.” This sounds SO MUCH like you. Made me laugh.
I noticed that in the first painting, the shadows of the front fruits go to the front on one and to the back on its neighbor. Hmmm. Magical light source.
I was looking at the entire painting you were proposing “cutting” and thought, no, I like it whole. but then there was your cropped version, and oh the beauty of photoshop. I DO like the mysterious version you created!
I like best the one you have for sale. Lovely. -
What I see on a canvas has been a moment captured in time. The thought of the artist absorbed in his or her labor would stop me immediately from cutting into the painting. Just recently discovered portions of a painting hidden away when having it reframed. The original painting is now in full view…along with the crease and newly discovered work encompassing the entire canvas. Paintings are full of stories, intrigue. Eventually, overtime, they will reveal themselves. You wouldn’t want to cut that away would you?
I much prefer the thick-impasto-like works in your post today. -
I like the snow scene best.
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The Cassis lighthouse!If at that brocante, I would have bought it 🙂
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I particularly like the navy-blue and rose-colored flowers and the snow scene, although I would be interested in purchasing many of these paintings. An unusually beautiful collection!
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INteresting! I liked the painting much, much better before the photoshop. I would not buy a painting and cut it off. I would leave it…not buy.
Some of these paintings are fabulous…..some are very ordinary.
A fascinating post! Thank you!!! -
When I see that painting I want to grab the rope and pull!
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Check out Theresa’s link!
I agree with you, sometimes a painting isn’t the subject as much as it is the technique. -
Oh Sisley, so true!
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Oh Vincent while reading your comment, I saw you sitting in Arles with your straw hat.
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It’s too hard to choose. But I do like nice, thick paint.
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Hi Corey, there is a saying when in doubt, don’t! But this does not apply to shopping at yard sales, thrift stores, church rummage sales or antique shops. Buy! It is windy again at home today. Do u remember me? I’m very much looking forward to shopping at the vet’s hall on the 21st. Daughter will be in Marseilles today. I hope she calls! Laurie xo
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Oh my, I L O V E these, I wish I were there with you shopping…. I would never cut a painting, perhaps my own.. but not someone else’s painting. The legend is that Jackson Pollock cut off an end of his commission for Peggy Guggenheim’s NYC apartment because it didn’t fit the spot it was supposed to go in. Imagine what that sliver of canvas would be worth today. The pieces you photographed here are WONDERFUL. Thank you
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