Archive for the ‘Arts’ Category

Your insulated Lunch Tote

October 24, 2009 - 1:15 am No Comments

You can give your kids healthier lunches with more variety if you pack hot foods in their school lunches. The Lunch & Go insulated lunch tote makes it easy for kids to carry anything from leftover macaroni to chicken tenders and keep them hot. The Lunch & Go keeps cold foods cold, too. But you can’t carry hot and cold foods together in this toddler backpack at the same time. customized mint  nap mat is perfect for young kids and toddlers. The place to personalize the nap mat is on the outside pocket or on the bottom corner of your blanket. This are designed for children as young as five or four, so I will find and search this item to the internet and buy it and give to my daughter.

Roman Painting

August 5, 2009 - 8:46 am No Comments

Painting is mainly a decorative art in Rome. As wall-decorations, Roman fresco-painting consisted of architectural vistas, landscape or figure compositions. In general, Roman wall decoration continued to make use of architectural elements of architectural divisions as the basis of its schemes, Roman painters, inspired by Greek painting, painted epic scenes, landscapes, still life, scenes from everyday life. However, during the time of August, there was a fashion for garden painting which gave the illusion of opening up the wall with a view into a garden.

Roman developed the “impressionistic” technique which especially used in fantasy landscapes – view of imaginary countryside with buildings, houses, harbor scenes. The impresionistic technique appears first as an experiment in the treatment of light and color. It was accepted by the artist, and became powerful influence in the development of painting.

Pre-Spanish Period

July 24, 2009 - 8:45 am No Comments

Like most of other primitive cultures, the early culture of the philippines performed as the activities of daily living with with an awareness of their  world being governed by forces beyond their central life but if properly “approached” could be influenced to inspire art on man’s behalf. In all of his activities, the Filipino invited these forces to extend themselves into his daily living. Dance for him was a form of worship, convocation with the unseen powers by which he lived. His dancing was full of images of this immediate world: the wind and the rain, the passing of seasons, movements of birds and animals, rites of fertility, courtship, birth, death, hunting, harvesting, praying for success, and celebrating of victory.

Gestures used in story telling were developed to the point that feeling the story became a full scale, man took another step in pushing the dance from the realm of the Filipino ritual to the world of art. At the time when the esteemed explorers came, dance as a social function had already started to blossom in the Philippines.