Trapeze Angels
by Michele Avanti
Title
Trapeze Angels
Artist
Michele Avanti
Medium
Painting - Digital Painting
Description
How will a red onion inspire you? A group of them inspired me to create this abstract...how does one see angels floating in a red onion? I have no idea..but I do hope you enjoy this piece, it was fun to create. I hope you discover something here that uplifts you and makes you smile.
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Contest Winner:
1st Place Feb 2015 Group Logo - Figurative Abstraction
An angel is a supernatural being or spirit, often depicted in humanoid form with feathered wings on their backs and halos around their heads, found in various religions and mythologies.
The theological study of angels is known as "angelology". In Zoroastrianism and Abrahamic religions they are often depicted as benevolent celestial beings who act as intermediaries between Heaven and Earth, or as guardian spirits or a guiding influence.
The term "angel" has also been expanded to various notions of spirits found in many other religious traditions. Other roles of angels include protecting and guiding human beings, and carrying out God's tasks.[2]
In art, angels are often depicted with bird-like wings on their back, a halo, robes and various forms of glowing light.
Trapeze
A trapeze is a short horizontal bar hung by ropes or metal straps from a support. It is an aerial apparatus commonly found in circus performances. Trapeze acts may be static, swinging or flying, and may be performed solo, double, triple or as a group act.
The art of trapeze performance was developed by Jules L�otard, a young French acrobat and aerialist, in Toulouse in the mid-1800s. He invented the flying trapeze, practising over his father's swimming pool.
Types of trapeze
Static trapeze refers to a trapeze act in which the performer moves around the bar and ropes, performing a wide range of movements including balances, drops, hangs while the bar itself stays mostly in place. The difficulty on a static trapeze is making every move look effortless. It is like dance, in that most people of a reasonable level of strength can get onto the bar for the first time and do the tricks but an experienced artist will do them with much more grace and style.
Swinging trapeze (or swinging single trapeze) refers to an act performed while the trapeze swings. The performer builds up swing from a still position, and uses the momentum of the swing to execute the tricks. Usually tricks on a swinging trapeze are thrown on the peaks of the swing and involve dynamic movements that require precise timing. Most of the tricks begin with the performer sitting or standing on the bar and end with the performer catching the bar in his/her hands or in an ankle hang (hanging by the ankles by bracing them between the rope and the bar). This act requires a great deal of strength, grace, and flexibility.[1] The trapeze bar is weighted and often has cable inside the supporting ropes for extra strength to withstand the dynamic forces of the swing.
Flying trapeze refers to a trapeze act where a performer, or "flyer," grabs the trapeze bar and jumps off a high platform, or pedestal board, so that gravity creates the swing. The swing's parts are the "force out" (sometimes called the "cast out") at the far end of the first swing, the beat back and the rise (a.k.a. "seven") as the performer swings back above the pedestal board, and then the trick is thrown at the far end of the second swing. The performer often releases the bar and is caught by another performer, the "catcher," who hangs by his or her knees on another trapeze, or sometimes on a cradle, which can be either stationary or also swinging. People of any size are able to execute basic trapeze maneuvers. Flying trapeze is generally done over a net, or occasionally over water.
Washington trapeze (also known as head trapeze or heavy trapeze) refers to a variation on static and swinging trapeze where the aerialist performs various headstand skills on the bar, which is typically much heavier than a normal trapeze bar and has a small (about 4-inch round) headstand platform on it. The trapeze is supported by wire cables rather than ropes, and the apparatus will often be lifted and lowered during the act.[1]
Dance trapeze (also known as single-point trapeze) refers to a trapeze used by many modern dance companies in aerial dance. The ropes of the trapeze are often both attached to a single swivel, allowing the trapeze to spin.
Double trapeze (also known as the French trapeze) is a variation on the static trapeze, and features two performers working together on the same trapeze to perform figures and bear each other's weight. It can also be performed swinging, in which case the act is called "swinging double trapeze."[1]
Multiple trapeze
Triple trapeze
refers to a number of different shapes and sizes of trapeze, including double trapeze, triple trapeze and larger multiples designed for use by multiple simultaneous flyers. Shaped trapezes are apparatuses that can take virtually any shape imaginable.
Uploaded
September 16th, 2014
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Comments (58)
Maria Faria Rodrigues
Congratulations, on Honourable Mention, in ABSTRACT OR IMPRESSIONISM DIGITAL ART, contest! v/f
Gary F Richards
Outstanding conceptual composition, lighting, shading, color and artwork! F/L voted for this piece in the contest CONCEPTUAL ABSTRACTS 4
Lorraine Baum
Michele this is gorgeous! Congratulations on your Special Feature in the "Book Covers 1 Per Day" group discussions!
Rosalie Scanlon
Congratulations, your excellent work has received a special promotion on the home page of the Book Covers Group as taken from the discussion group "Pay it Forward" http://fineartamerica.com/groups/book-covers-1-per-day.html L/shared
ARTography by Pamela Smale Williams
Fun colors and feel to the piece. Clever creation Michele! V/Twt/Pamela