Something New

As the title of the post suggest, today I'd like to show you something new, you may have never seen before. It was new to me, but I hope it's not the only time I see this style. The truth is, there's always something interesting and new at every exhibition, but not all styles are memorable. Ok, let's see what I saw in December, at the last exhibition I visited.

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Ágnes Forró - Faces On The Wall

This was an interesting painting, both as the composition and colors. I think it ties your attention down for a good few minutes, if you want to have a proper look at it. The idea and the execution are both brilliant in my eyes. In the worlds of art, the glory goes to those who can bring something new, something extraordinary and this painting fits the description.

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Ágnes Forró - Two Gates and Two Roosters

It's a very particular style, that I like a lot. What stands out in my eyes, besides the painting is the texture of the paper. Or was it canvas? I can't remember exactly, but I love it. It's a simple village scene, but that blue the artist has chosen is perfect.

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Dorel Cozma - Escape From Hell

As dramatic as this scene is, as brilliant the painting. It hurts you just to think what those people went through, trying to escape and the artist painted a real picture of the scene, literally. Look at the horror on their faces.

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Levente Herman - The Rhythm of Request

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Here you can see how big some of the paintings are, specially Escape From Hell.

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Levente Fodor - Thermopylae

Before I tell you the deep meaning of the artwork, let's have a look at the details.

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I took a partial photo for you to see what the artwork is made of. These are buttons of the same size, painted in different colors.

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Now let's see what Thermopylae means.

The Battle of Thermopylae was fought in 480 BC between the Achaemenid Persian Empire under Xerxes I and an alliance of Greek city-states led by Sparta under Leonidas I. Lasting over the course of three days, it was one of the most prominent battles of both the second Persian invasion of Greece and the wider Greco-Persian Wars.

Around the start of the invasion, a Greek force of approximately 7,000 men led by Leonidas marched north to block the pass of Thermopylae. Ancient authors vastly inflated the size of the Persian army, with estimates in the millions, but modern scholars estimate it at between 120,000 and 300,000 soldiers. They arrived at Thermopylae by late August or early September; the outnumbered Greeks held them off for seven days (including three of direct battle) before their rear-guard was annihilated in one of history's most famous last stands. During two full days of battle, the Greeks blocked the only road by which the massive Persian army could traverse the narrow pass. After the second day, a local resident named Ephialtes revealed to the Persians the existence of a path leading behind the Greek lines. Subsequently, Leonidas, aware that his force was being outflanked by the Persians, dismissed the bulk of the Greek army and remained to guard their retreat along with 300 Spartans and 700 Thespians. It has been reported that others also remained, including up to 900 helots and 400 Thebans. With the exception of the Thebans, most of whom reportedly surrendered, the Greeks fought the Persians to the death. source

Knowing the story behind the artwork, scroll back and look at it again, this time try to imagine what those buttons represent. I'd say it's a brilliant representation of the historical story. It's always fascinating to see historical and biblical stories on canvas and each time you get something very different, even if it's the same story. That's the beauty of art. Each artist has their own vision and interpretation style.

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Levente Fodor - Patch on Patch with Cherry Syrup

The title of the artwork is quite funny, but I think it meant to be funny. At first glance it looks like patchwork, and it is symbolizing patchwork indeed, but it's a painting, with some stitches added, to look like patchwork. I can really appreciate this kind of art and love this.

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Levente Fodor - After A Night On The Beach

If you thought the fun is over, look at the artwork above. I can only guess, but I think those white spots represent the stones or the shells you can collect on certain beaches. The color of the canvas is fascinating in my eyes. I really admire the creativity of the artist. He had 3 works hung one next to each other, all three absolutely amazing.

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After visiting the whole exhibition, I went back and took a photo of all three artworks belonging to Levente Fodor as I think these three are the most interesting. For me at least they are. Out of the box thinking for sure.

As I mentioned before, this is one of my favorite galleries because the artworks you see here always exceed your expectations. I go in without any expectations as most of the times I have no idea what exhibition I'm going to see, or who's the artist and always have part of a big surprise, in a good sense of the word.

Lately I've been thinking about how many artists are using historical and biblical topics and themes and how amazing all of those artworks turn out. It requires a lot of imagination and talent to depict something you can only read about though.

If you're a newbie, you may want to check out these guides:


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32 comments
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This is indeed something new, a different kind of artwork I have never seen before. I love the village painting, it if course reminds me of my village, lol! The art with buttons looks very beautiful, the artist must have putting in a lot of energy to bring the beauty out.

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There's always something new and trust me, no matter how much experience in art you have, there's always a bunch of new artworks to surprise you.

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Thermopylae is pretty striking. More than escape from hell, at least to me. One, it is in a style that I cannot stand. And two, the story captured in it is intense. I keep thinking if any of these would end up in my collection or house like you say, but no, none of them actually.

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Some paintings and artworks in general, can be interesting, even fantastic, but that doesn't mean you want to hang them in your living room 😉

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!WOC

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Amazing work on Woc, @erikah! kairke(7/8) is impressed by the energy and effort you've put into this post. Your contributions are truly appreciated.

This post is truly outstanding! @kairke wants to show their appreciation with a gift of 0.3 WGOLD. Keep doing what you're doing!

BTW! WGOLD is the token of the War of Clans ecosystem, you can use it to have discounts in all our games or stake it and earn rewards now!


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(Edited)

I read your post and I now know about preresearch

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After A Night On The Beach is a fun and nice piece. Escape from Hell is well done but not something I would want to see on my wall 😅 Thermopylae is another work I like. Nice post 👍

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Yes, as I mentioned above, in one of my replies, there are artworks that are amazing from artistic point of view but not what you want in your living room 🙂

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Very good exhibition. You have very good taste in art. I really enjoyed your blog.
Of what you showed, what I liked the most was the painting "Dorel Cozma - Escape From Hell".
Greetings!

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I don't know if I have good taste in art or not as this is highly subjective but I like art and if I like what I see, then I'm happy.

Escape from hell is a very good one. Excellent choice.

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Very beautiful exhibition with great artwork. Very creative artist with creative painting ideas. This is really scary, friend @erikah. I always wait for your latest exhibition :))

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Indeed, it was a good exhibition and I'm looking forward to the next one already. So stay tuned as there's more to come.

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Thank you friend for sharing, of course I will wait for the next post.

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If people who don't understand about art, maybe they take pictures like they think it's normal, but for this one of the extraordinary works of art, you can't imagine the ideas and creativity of these great painters came from where, for sure my eyes are very spoiled with some of the paintings you display today.
All the artwork looks cool.

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That stuff is so cool man, escape from hell, what an artistic piece

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Yes, I agree with you on that. It's very sad and even terrible, but from artistic point of view is a masterpiece!

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Bastante dolor y desesperación se ve en muchos de esos rostros, y pensar que en la vida real existen personas que sienten eso pero en su cotidianidad contexto.

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Not just in everyday context in my opinion as there were cases in attacked areas where this scene or similar one must have happened.

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You gotta love the endless twists art takes and the neverending ideas that are born every second. I also feel blessed to discover so many branches of exhibitions through your posts 😘

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Indeed, as you say, endless twists in art is the keyword and it's true as well. I'm glad you enjoy them 😘 😊 🤗

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k75bsZMwYNu2L3iBMXq5y7xeiy1isFJsZxnMZSXuXEsxe4ee1cUkGyPPtKGFwonWi428fMDojnR1bMxy5Z3zhZ3PNke9C1NsvfRsVVnyW1AHecmYSYBY7wYGR2Q45FwdP64JqgLmfcZ6ZmjJyRQdtfrw5VDrXqrLv.jpg

Am I the only one who is seeing the eyes, windows, shadows, and 1 big rooster and another half rooster!! I must be hallucinating...

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Lol, you're not hallucinating and definitely not the only one who noticed that. I was looking at those pairs of eyes and thought of mentioning it in my post but decided against it as I think sometimes I need to leave sometimes to the users as well, not write all myself. And you're the only one mentioning it, so I'm impressed 😉😘

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I think sometimes I need to leave sometimes to the users as well, not write all myself.

Oh that's nice. I thought why I am seeing those eyes 🤣. I am glad I am not alone...

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This is how I know artists are really talented because me as a normal person,none of these ideas would even cross my mind.
Giving a first look at the Escape from hell,you’d know Dorel Cozma really poured out emotions on the painting.

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