Damascus-SANA
In an atmosphere full of enthusiasm and passion for plastic art, a group of students and recent graduates from faculties of fine arts in Syrian universities presented about 45 plastic paintings in a group exhibition entitled “Oriental Art”.
The paintings of the exhibition, which was held in the hall of the Cultural Center in the field, varied between impressionist and abstract schools and portraits, and through some of them, a number of participants conjured works by great artists through oil, acrylic and other colors.
Laila Saab, head of Al-Midan Culture, said in a statement to SANA reporter that the exhibition is an opportunity to support young and amateur plastic artists and discover real talents that deserve attention.
Among the participants in the exhibition, the plastic artist Mais Nasser, a student of fine arts specializing in sculpture, indicated that she participated in a painting as a first experiment in the field of painting, through which she embodied a sculpture of the Italian Michelangelo using acrylic colors.
A graduate of the Faculty of Arts, Marah Sarah, participated in a painting that embodied sublime meanings, which carried the title of the goal, using the oil colors that she loves, indicating that a person must strive to achieve his ambition, regardless of the difficulties and circumstances he faces.
The third-year student, Muhammad Rostom, made a sculpture in which polyester was used to represent the psychological state of a person who is going through harsh conditions and is trying to challenge it to be another human being.
The cubism school has a special impact on the plastic artist, Alyssa Azar, who embodied the sublime meanings of music through her work, through a young man and a girl playing musical instruments, indicating that it was her first participation.
Plastic artist Aya Ismail Agha participated in a painting in which she painted herself to indicate that plastic art consoles the soul and expresses the psychological states of the artist using fiery colors.
Plastic artist Nour Hamdan chose the specialty of Impressionist school photography to embodied it in a painting by the French artist Paul Cézanne, who is considered one of the pioneers of this school and diversified with two other works her ideas between the idea of peace and portraits of people using oil colors.
Hadi Omran
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