Flint Institute of Art Ginny Ruffner - Aesthetic Engineering Ginny Ruffner loved flowers and created a lot of floral paintings while being in her garden. As she matured, Ginny decided to make floral art of out glass. Her floral series Aesthetic Engineering was very creative and eye catching. She made the stems of the flowers mimic DNA strands, she did this because she was creating her own species of flowers. This artwork caught my eye as I think that blown glass is very intriguing and eye catching. I have always thought that the Netflix shows that were about glass blowing or glass art were always interesting to watch. The colors incorporated throughout this artwork done by Ginny Ruffner are beautiful. The fact that she incorporated the mimicking of DNA strands as stems to create her own species of flowers was also a great add-on to make the piece stand out. You can really tell how much she enjoys flowers
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The Artist: Amy Sherald Amy Sherald is best known for her portrait of Michelle Obama (pictured below) and her painting of Breonna Taylor for the Vanity Fair magazine cover. Sherald is part of Activism in art. https://npg.si.edu/learn/classroom-resource/michelle-obama Amy Sherald uses a grayscale technique to paint Black people. Sherald likes to create alternative views and/or perspectives of people of color instead of thinking of "struggle" every time you see or talk about a Black person. This artist interests me due to the unique technique that she uses to create her artwork as well as the meaning behind each piece. The fact that Amy Sherald is trying to change the perspective people have on Black lives and only being known for "struggling through life" or "having a hard or difficult life" is amazing to me. Her artwork is very unique and speaks volumes. Sherald knows that there are not many Black women in art like her, and she strives to be a great rol
Lynette Yiadem-Boakye: Bracken or Moss
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The Background: Lynette Yiadem-Boakye was born in London in 1977 and currently still lives there. She has had many awards and accomplishments throughout her life relating to Art such as being the 2018 recipient of the Carnegie Prize and being short-listed for the 2013 Turner Prize. She is apart of many institutional collections such as the Art Gallery of Southern Australia and the Yale Center for British Art, Connecticut. The Artwork: The type of artwork that Yiadem-Boakye does is mainly oil paintings. Her main area of expertise are character studies where she combines dark hues and characters that are posed in specific, elegant poses. As she described in an interview, she likes to think of her characters are " suggestions of people...They don’t share our concerns or anxieties. They are somewhere else altogether.” Yiadem-Boakye believes that the lack of a fixed narrative makes it so the interpretation of the art is up to the viewer and their imagination can run wild. Most ar