There are certain artists or painters who find in their career or artistic life a common element and for which they profess a very special predilection. Van Gogh and his sunflowers is one of the examples to which we can go quickly to find a maxim in certain painters if not almost say in many.
Last week i remembered a hyper-realistic Hungarian painter which had the figure of women as the recurring theme in much of his work. Something that happens with Iván Aivazovski in his devotion to the marinas and those landscapes where the horizon line is drawn by an infinite sea or ocean.
Aivazovski is an Armenian-Russian painter who in the late XNUMXth century painted some high-quality works of seascapes that give the sensation of being able to submerge in that wave that is about to fall on one of the sides of those ships that faced the tempestuous storms.
A work that mixes the power of the sea and skies that sculpt a perfect symbiosis, where blue is the predominant color to move to the darker and lighter tones, or to be impregnated with yellow that gives the greenest tones at certain times of the day where the clarity of the water gives way to the warm and relaxed of a calm sea in its waters.
A painter who gained general recognition for his ability to recreate with sublime quality the power of nature and the oceans at their peak, which is when the storm turns these currents into dangerous waves many meters high.
An excellent painter that we share from these lines with a few of his works that show that passion for the sea, its tranquility and its fierceness.