Sunday, February 17, 2019

Skecthing Gustave Calliebotte’s Paris Street; Rainy Day Essay -- Infor

Skecthing Gustave Calliebottes Paris Street Rainy Day I can smell the rain on my jacket as my fingers numbly make their way across the pad, trying their best to capture an secondment in time on a piece of yellow, college-ruled, notebook paper, in spite of my now apparent lack of artistic ability. As I am watching the scene unfold, I hardly notice the spate give the axe around me, gazing at the same thing I am, before they move on. Cuddling under an umbrella, a man and his wife are coolly strolling through the light fog. Their attention is caught by something off to their right, so he does not notice when his top hat is almost bumped to one case by the umbrella as another pedestrian tries to pass on the narrow sidewalk. Further off in the distance, several other sets of people can be seen composedly walking through the gentle blot out of rain. It seems as though they are not even aware of the stand as they make their way from shop to shop, content on this snug evening. To my left, a couple of gentlemen are discussing their affairs as they move gone a horse-drawn carriage. The pudd...

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