Tuesday, November 29, 2011


REFLECTION

Blog was very new for me. I have learned a lot from the blog. Now, i know how to work on my own
blog. I can post my blog work and i can see other students work on the blog. I spent the entire of time
on the blog posts outside of the class. Everyday i open my blog account and find what is new. Blog is the another way to express your idea and expression. In that case we can say blog is one kind of art. My favorite activities on the blog is giving commands on others blog and also getting some commends from somebody. If somebody commends on my blog so i can know how i am working.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Henri de Toulous-Lautrec

Practice post# 6

What themes does Toulouse usually use in his artwork?

Ans: He  use for his artwork themes's are mostly ladies dancing in a bar, social views, in the cafe,bar girls etc.

What type or types of media does he uae?

Ans: He use watercolors, prints, posters, drawing, canvases, some ceramic and stained glass work . He also uses litho crayons, litho pencils, or  a greasy lipuid called tusche for lithography.

Do you like Toulouse-Lautrec style?

Ans: I like his artwork style because he reflect his fellings and convay information in a very different ways with useing the lithography style mostly in his artwork. According to the book" Artforms" i knew that he created more than three hundred lithographs in the space of about ten years.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Art Food Yum!

How to make Tuna fish Kabab

Tuna fish kabab is very famouse in Bangladesh because we make this special food for special holiday like Eid , Marrige, Bithday partise and any special occation. Tuna fish kababs are easy, quick, and so tasty that you''ll wonder why you don't make them more often. Nowadays, Tuna fish Kababs are useing for snacks. Therefore today i am going to show you how to make Tuna Fish Kababs.

INGREDIENT:
  •  500 gm.Tuna fish
  • 1 cup mass potatos
  • 2 eggs beaten
  • 1 Tbsp lemon juice
  • 2 Tbsp finely chopped onion
  • 1 Tbsp green chilli cut into small pieces
  • 2 Tbsp chopped coriander leaves
  • salt as per taste
 *oil for shallow frying and bread cramb.

Step 1: Boiled Tuna fish with lomon juice and little soya souce and make dry

Step 2: Mixed all the ingredient except bread cramp and one egg.


Step 3:  Now give them a round shape.


Step 4: Put them in the beaten egg and mixed with bread cramb and fry them until those turning browen color.

Last Step: Now serve them with tomato sauce. I hope you will try them and enjoy!!!!!!!!

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Blog post# 4 - Met Meseum Paper

                                I went to the Metropolitan Museum of Art trip and i saw the cultural halls which include Egyptian art and Greek art. I want to highlight the Egyptian culture.

                               Arab Republic of Egypt, is a country in North Africa that include the Sinai Peninsula, a land bridge to Asia. Covering an area of about 1,001,450 spuare kilometers (386.660 sq mi), Egypt boards Libya to the west, sudan to the south and the aza strip and Israil to the east. The Northern coast borders the Mediterranean sea; the eastern coast borders the Red Sea.

                               Ancient Egypt was a civilization in eastern North Africa concentrated along the middle to lower reaches of the Nile River in what is now the modern nation of Egypt. The civilization began around 3150 BC with the political unification of upper and lower Egypt under the first pharaoh, and it developed over the next three millennia. The Metropolitian Museum's collection of Egyptian art is one of the finest and most comprehensive outside Egypt. Consisting largly of pieces excavated by the Museum's curators and archaeologists, the collection is particularly rich in the arts of the middle kKingdom (ca. 2000-1640 B.C) and early New Kingdom (ca. 1550- 1300 B.C) and in the funerary arts of the third intermidiate and Late Periods ( 1st millenennium B.C) 
                               From 1906 to 1936, the Egyptian Expedition of the Metropolitan Museum's Department of Egyptian Art conducted excavations at several sites in Egypt. During these three decades, while working in the cemeteries in western Thebes, across the Nile river from the modern city of Luxor, the museum's archaeologists uncovered a number of intract tombs belonging to nonroval individuals.  By the terms of the Museum's contract with the Egyptian Antiquities service, the finds from these tombs were divided, with approximately half going to the Egyptian Museum in Cairo and half coming to New York.