Sand Beauty
for Elegant and Lotus Date: 10.Oct.2018 Photographer: Me MUA Neda bakhtiyari Model Shagy
The color schemes of this make up Beauty Editorial are inspirations by a number of popular paintings which shall follow. The Brush make‐up technic uses the concepts of the paintings in addition to dotted style which can implicate sand and the shore. The sand illustrated in the pictures implies the summer in a humid day on the beach, as well as the antiquity of the paintings.
Inspiered by: The Virgin of the Grapes 1640s Mignard, Musée du Louvre, Paris This early painting by Mignard, intended for private devotion, was inspired by Raphael’s Madonnas.
Inspured by: Dance at Bougival (1883) Pierre-Auguste Renoir (French, 1841–1919) currently in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America. It has been described as “one of the museum’s most beloved works.
Inspured by: La Berceuse (Augustine Roulin) 1889 Vincent van Gogh Of the five versions of Van Gogh’s portrait of Augustine Roulin, wife of his friend the postmaster of Arles, the present canvas is the one the sitter chose for herself. Van Gogh remarked that “she had a good eye and took the best.”
Inspired by: Madame Cézanne in a Red Armchair (1877) Paul Cézanne (French, 1839–1906) Cézanne’s wife, Hortense Fiquet, was his most frequent model, he painted nearly thirty portraits of her.
Inspired by: La Musique (1910) Henri Matisse The painting was commissioned by Sergei Shchukin, who hung it with Dance on the staircase of his Moscow mansion.
Inspired by: Irises (1889) Vincent van Gogh In May 1889, Vincent van Gogh chose to enter an asylum in Saint-Rémy, France. There, in the last year before his death, he created almost 130 began Irises, working from nature in the asylum’s garden.