Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Threptin Biscuits Is Good For Health

Nicholas Oyuela Claudio Tomassini

BICENTENNIAL
Three different views about careers
Buenos Aires Buenos Aires, May 28, 2010. The painter Nicolas Oyuela with Paula Cecchi Paul Noce and presented the project "Three eyes, portraits of contemporary professions and trades" with the Government of the City of Buenos Aires, for the Law of Patronage. The same arises from the need to tell young people through his paintings a fragment of the history of the city of Buenos Aires as part of the celebration of the Bicentennial, answering the question: Who are the locals in 2010?
"Three eyes, portraits of contemporary professions and trades" is a project that aims to show the professions and trades that exist in Buenos Aires and the subjective eyes of each person who interacts with them. Therefore, the artists portray simultaneously patterns in different professions and trades. The three artists will paint at the same time, the same person, each in its web in preset formats and sizes natural. The initiative aims to show the painting as a means of observation and reflection through the contrast of the three plays resulting from each model portrayed.
"This project emphasizes the link and time. During the times when you perform a session generates a link to the model creates a space of silence that leads to the observation, the notes to the model and painter in his paintings not only portray their subjective view of what it perceives the other, but also the link between the parties, it is extremely rewarding, "says Nicholas Oyuela.
The project, which was recently submitted to the city of Buenos Aires for rated by the law of patronage, consists of two stages. In the first instance the development of thirty portraits of trades and professions by Nicholas Oyuela painters, Paul Noce and Paula Cecchi and a second, the exhibition of selected paintings.
"We chose the picture as a means to express, because it is without doubt the best way to give rise to our need to look and examine the observation time and dedication, from looking at the man, we reflect on what happens to us . Essential questions awake and last, and we generate the space of silence and find ourselves. Who poses
also takes time for reflection, because the sessions are long. That is what we convey to people who look at our paintings, "says Nicholas.
"We believe that today, more so on the occasion of the Bicentennial celebration, we should promote space for people who look around you and yourself, just from observation aware of things that citizens can understand us happens, and learn to live in society, "concluded Nicholas.
http://nicolasoyuela.com/

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