Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Sergey Andriaka’s methodics: step-by-step guide to painting a winter night landscape in multilayer watercolor technique

View through CrossRef
.
Academy of Watercolor and Fine Arts of Sergey Andriaka
Title: Sergey Andriaka’s methodics: step-by-step guide to painting a winter night landscape in multilayer watercolor technique
Description:

Related Results

In Memory of Sergey Andriaka
In Memory of Sergey Andriaka
Sergey Nikolaevich Andriaka (July 14, 1958 - May 16, 2024) was a distinguished Russian watercolorist, a celebrated artist and educator, and a pivotal figure in national art educati...
A Comparison of Watercolor Painting and Boneless Painting: From Technique to Connotation
A Comparison of Watercolor Painting and Boneless Painting: From Technique to Connotation
Watercolor painting is a western painting method, which is concerned with the relationships of light and shadow as well as brightness and darkness. Chinese painting includes brush ...
Advancing Chinese Landscape Painting Research with DDE-Outcrop 3D Technology
Advancing Chinese Landscape Painting Research with DDE-Outcrop 3D Technology
       The article discusses how the DDE Outcrop-3D provides a new perspective on the research and dissemination of ancient Chinese landscape pa...
GIS-based landscape design research
GIS-based landscape design research
Landscape design research is important for cultivating spatial intelligence in landscape architecture. This study explores GIS (geographic information systems) as a tool for landsc...
Characteristics of winter-to-winter recurrence of atmospheric temperature in the northern area of East Asia
Characteristics of winter-to-winter recurrence of atmospheric temperature in the northern area of East Asia
Seasonal evolution of atmospheric temperature with winter-summer-the following winter (winter-to-winter) characteristics in the northern area of East Asia (40–50°N, 100–130°E) from...

Back to Top