RE: Katya in medieval dress with jag on balcony with night village view
Well, well, well! Finally a medieval-themed art piece in the Northern European lands! Where should we start! Let's conveniently start with the background, for it feels the most supportive in connecting the painting World to ours. In what ways that simply that Katya nor the village couldn't pull off? None really, just that even the little details count; from the many dozens of dots plastered there to the feeling of a micro-borealis (light spersing fog fo' sho'. Now taking a gander to the midground, it's clearing feeling a post-impressionist/impressionist art style leaning. Focused more on the things and the impressions they give off, not the actual and "realistic" beauty they could express. Which works so well with the atmospheric perspective and the blurring out of objects over a long distance eventually when our eyes cannot capture every single detail of what is too far to see.
To now move to the foreground but not conveniently talk about Katya yet (Christ I might wanna get hired as a broken record). The only remark is that the bench actually feels real despite blurring into the building while standing out. To move unto Katya herself: the purty dress she wears with the shoulders expoused, the vase she handles with both hands, the underdress having good contrasting colours, her hair so brown that it stands out from all of her colours and the life snow-blanketed below. A really good job in all this, especially the drapery/fold work in an impressionist/post-impressionist/basically not romanticism nor realism medium of artwork.
To touch upon the video itself: good job on making the time-lapse and the dialectical changes over time that went into the art piece. Nothing ever can just be what we first imagined and it takes a life of its own when we work on things where we wonder if we imagined it all and just came into being to recognize it our it really did coming after making the brush strokes we made. Also the medieval-inspired musicry really is on point for the video, feels medievally. Also showing that yah did this in an art program now? Well good, saves a lot of physical resources and allows the impeccable advantage: trying again without wasting a canvas.! :D :D!!!!~
Wow, such a detailed analysis :) thx
Welcome for the comment! ~^^~
Thanks for making the post again!!!!~