Friday, 30 January 2009

Are there contrasting elements such as color, shapes, forms, texture, direction, or size regarding the painting American Gothic by Wood?

This famous
and much-loved (or at least much-discussed) painting does indeed contain many contrasting visual
elements. These contrasting elements may in fact bolster many art scholars' claims that it's a
very iconic painting. For example, the relativeof scale of the house and the landscape stands in
stark contrast to the somewhat exaggerated depiction of the two figures, especially their faces
which are somewhat caricatured (which has led to a number of parodied images of the painting,
one of the most recognized in the American oeuvre). The subdued colors, which one would normally
associate with a realistic landscape or figure subject, contrast to the almost formal and
somewhat artificial feel of the placement of the subjects, whose centering in the frame's
foreground (making them loom very large in comparison to their homestead in the background)
lends an odd feeling of perspective that is not quite "real." These contrasts are what
give the painting a somewhat "surreal" quality, despite its very simple and "down
to earth" subject matter. 

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