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Artist Palette Challenge

Created Dec 4, 2010

Artist Palette Challenge

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Welcome!

New challenge's are posted on Sun, Tue & Thu

1) The challenge is to create a palette (more than one if you like) based on a painting by the chosen artist.

2) Tag your palette with 'APC' and the APC challenge number

3) Copy and paste the badge code into the description box using the link to the code provided

4) When you are ready post your palette and image to the relevant Artist conversation, there is a link at the bottom of the challenge badge

Please DO NOT USE HOTLINKED images

APC #258 Tingatinga

Showing 1 - 20 of 30 Comments

Wordofmouse



COPY PASTE BADGE CODE

Tingatinga - www.insideafricanart.com
Tingatinga - Google image search

Please to do not hotlink to images on other websites ~ Try using a free picture hosting service instead, there is a good one here: imgur.com

See ycc2106's tutorial on 'How To ' embed and resize images here


As always, where possible please credit the peice of work you have chosen and for this challenge also credit the artist where known.


**Works by any Tingatinga artist qualify for this challenge

Wordofmouse

Tingatinga

Tingatinga (also spelled Tinga-tinga or Tinga Tinga) is a painting style that developed in the second half of the 20th century in the Oyster Bay area in Dar es Salaam (Tanzania) and later spread to most East Africa. Tingatinga paintings are one of the most widely represented forms of tourist-oriented art in Tanzania, Kenya and neighboring countries. The genre is named after its founder, Tanzanian painter Edward Said Tingatinga.
Tingatinga paintings are traditionally made on masonite, using several layers of bicycle paint, which makes for a brilliant and highly satured colors. Many elements of the style are related to requirements of the tourist-oriented market; for example, the paintings are usually small so they can be easily transported, and subjects are intended to appeal to the Europeans and Americans (e.g., the big five and other wild fauna). In this sense, Tingatinga paintings can be considered a form of "airport art". The drawings themselves can be described as both naïve and caricatural, and humor and sarcasm are often explicit.

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The History of Tingatinga

Edward Tingatinga began painting around 1968 in Tanzania (Dar es Salaam). He employed low cost materials such as masonite and bicycle paint and attracted the attention of tourists for their colorful, both naïve and surrealistic style. When Tingatinga died in 1972, his style was so popular that it had started a wide movement of imitators and followers, sometimes informally referred to as the "Tingatinga school.
The first generation of artists from the Tingatinga school basically reproduced the works of the school's founder. In the 1990s new trends emerged within the Tingatinga style, in response to the transformations that the Tanzanian society was undergoing after independence. New subjects related to the new urban and multi-ethnic society of Dar es Salaam (e.g., crowded and busy streets and squares) were introduced, together with occasional technical novelties (such as the use of perspective). One of the most well known second-generation Tingatinga painters is Edward Tingatinga's brother-in-law, Simon Mpata.
Because of his short artistic life, Tingatinga left only a relatively small number of paintings, which are sought-after by collectors. Today it is known that fakes were produced from all famous Tingatinga paintings like The lion, Peacock on the Baobab Tree, Antelope, Leopard, Buffalo, or Monkey.

It is controversial whether Tingatinga's style is completely original or a derivative of traditional art forms of East Africa


Source: /Tingatinga - Wikipedia
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Article Image: Tingatinga artist George Lilanga

Badge Image: Tingatinga painting by Amani

prairiedove

Tingatinga APC 258



Three_Drummers_APCDrummers_APCThree_APC

prairiedove

Tingatinga APC 258



Spotted_APCSeeing_Spots_APC

prairiedove

Tingatinga APC 258



Family_Life_APCFamily_APC

Wordofmouse

Tingatinga painting TT 788 by Bakir




Bakir_Swim_APC

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