Johannes Pogi

Cards (43)

  • Artists
    Dedicated only to the creative side. Visually pleasing work only for the enjoyment and appreciation. No functional value.
  • Artisans
    Create things with great beauty as well as being functional.
  • Artists
    Focus on creating aesthetically pleasing works
  • Artisans
    Focus on accessorizing and functionality more than aesthetics
  • Artists' work
    Shown in museums or galleries
  • Artisans' work

    Sell their crafts at fairs and shops
  • Artists' work
    Unique, one-of-a-kind piece
  • Artisans' work
    Can be replicated or mass-produced
  • Artists' work

    More expensive
  • Artisans' work

    More affordable and accessible
  • Manager
    Advises, represents or handles the business affairs of artists
  • Curator
    Person who selects artwork and often interprets art. Arranges for the setting and provides information for artists regarding shipping or documentations needed and responsible for writing labels, catalog essays and other supporting content for an exhibition as well, must have an academic degree in art and art history.
  • Dealer
    Buys art at the right time with the right price and sells it at the right time with the right price, but not necessarily deal with artists on a personal level
  • Collector
    A person who loves certain pieces of art/paintings and collect art not necessary to sell later but the chance is there
  • Pre-production
    The artist always begins with an idea that he wants to express or communicate with his audience. It may not be necessarily fully formulated. Explore exposure, research, and other approaches to gather idea before actually making the artwork.
  • Production
    Gathering and sourcing the materials needed for the creation of the artwork.
  • Post production
    Process where decision is drawn as to how an artwork will be circulated not only in the world of art, but also in the many publics.
  • Medium
    The means by which an artist communicates his idea.
  • Water color
    • As a medium it is difficult to handle because it is difficult to produce warm and rich tones. While changes may be made once the paint has been applied such changes normally tend to make the color less luminous.
  • Water color
    • Turkish Bath with Self-Portrait by Charles Demuth, 1918
  • Fresco
    • This is the painting on a moist plaster surface with colors ground in water or a limewater mixture. The colors dry into plaster, and the picture becomes a part of the wall. Fresco must be done quickly because it is an exacting medium.
  • Fresco
    • The Sacrifice of Noah by Michelangelo, 1512
  • Tempera
    • Paints that are mineral pigments mixed with egg yolk or egg white and ore. They are often used as a binder due to its film forming properties and rapid drying rate.
  • Tempera
    • Holy Trinity Icon by Andrei Rublev, 1411
  • Pastel
    • This is a stick of dried paste mage of pigments ground with chalk and compounded with gum water. Its colors are luminous, and it is a very flexible medium. Some artists use a fixing medium or a protecting surface such a glass, but when the chalk rubs, the picture loses some of its brilliance.
  • Pastel
    • When Will You Marry? by Paul Gauguin, 1892
  • Encaustic
    • This is one of the early mediums used by the Egyptians for the painted portrait on mummy cases. This is done by painting with wax colors fixed with heat. Painting with wax produces luster and radiance in the subject making them appear at their best in portraits.
  • Encaustic
    • Flag by Jasper Johns, 1954
  • Oil
    • In oil painting, pigments are mixed with linseed oil and applied to the canvas. One good quality of oil paint as a medium is its flexibility. The artist may use brush, palette knife or even his bare hands when applying paint in his canvass. In some cases we do not even notice the artist's strokes because the paint is applied very smoothly.
  • Oil
    • The Starry Night by Vincent Van Gogh, 1889
  • Acrylic
    • This medium is used popularly by contemporary painters because of the transparency and quick drying characteristics of water color and the flexibility of oil combined. This synthetic paint is mixed with acrylic emulsion as binder for coating the surface of the artwork.
  • Acrylic
    • The Dancers V by David Hockney, 2014
  • Charcoal
    • These are carbonaceous materials obtained by heating wood or other organic substances in the absence of air. Charcoal is used in representing broad masses of light and shadow. Like drawing pencil, soft charcoal produces the darkest value, while the darkest produces the lightness tone.
  • Charcoal
    • Study for Goslar Wave by Robert Longo, 2011
  • Crayons
    • These are pigments bound by wax and compressed into painted sticks used for drawing especially among children in the elementary grade. They adhere better on paper surface.
  • Bistre
    • It is a brown pigment extracted from the soot of wood, and often used in pen and wash drawings.
  • Bistre
    • Two Witches by Hieronymus Bosch
  • Mosaic
    • Mosaic is usually classified as painting. Although the medium used is not strictly pigment.
  • Mosaic
    • One World, One Family, One Coffee by Saimir Strati, 2011
  • Stained glass
    • As an artwork is common in Gothic Cathedrals and churches. This is made by combining many small pieces of colored glass which are held together by bands of lead.