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Expressing Emotions in Art

After discussing how different colors, shapes and lines made us feel, artists practiced expressing emotions in a non-objective way (without any recognizable imagery). On day 2, artists practiced their skills of collaboration to join their ideas with a partner's to create a unique work that could express an emotion.
Images for inspiration included: Fire In The Evening by Paul Klee, Blue and Grey by Mark Rothko, Color Study. Squares with Concentric Circles by Wassily Kandinsky, Number 18 by Jackson Pollock and Bop by Elizabeth Murray.


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