Naming your original art is a very personal thing that I'd think you wouldn't want to share with anyone. Does it have a message or is it just a pretty picture? What was your intent when you began the work? Some great artists have used names like Number 25 or Still Life # 121 for their work. I've used both descriptive names and numbers on mine.
2007-06-03 09:04:39
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answer #1
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answered by Alice K 7
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first off don't be so serious about what you do pick ten pieces and give then the absolute craziness names you can think of that will help you loosen up. Now after you have picked those ten pieces lay them out in a row and attaches these names to them and grin a bit from the absurdity of it all. good luck
1. Marsha's death wish
2. the cockatoo's revenge
3. Stick Mates
4. A Fool for Chocolate
5. Terrorist Tranquility
6. Mach Five point Five
7. Lillies Sure Thing
8. Banjo Lessons Cancelled
9. In the Wheeeeeeee Hours
10. The Ice Cube Rebellion
see how easy it is when you just open up and go for it. If you really want some help with names get on my reg. e-mail and send me some thumbnails of pices that you are stuck with and I will be glad to help then when you r rich and famous send a some bing cherrys each month from Harry and David and a case of eithr good Merlot or a great Shiraz have fun man its your work call it watcha want to.............
2007-06-03 09:08:06
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answer #2
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answered by doc 4
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It would not precisely greater healthful, yet i could look into "Vir Heroicus Sublimis" by utilising Barnett Newman. that's a extensive canvas painted purple with 4 skinny vertical lines of distinctive colours, which Barnett reported as "zips". inspite of this is super length, the portray is meant to be veiwed from a short distance and is meant to envelope the veiwer interior the journey. between the significant subject concerns of the artwork is a loss of context, be it historic, biblical, mythological,figural, gestural, or nostalgic. truly, the viewer is confronted with what Newman calls the "chic", or as British logician Edmund Burke placed it, "a feeling engendered by utilising a vastness one can not comprehend". i'm uncertain if this is what you have been searching for, however the portray, and this is intentions are exciting.
2016-10-09 09:28:39
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I usually go for the simplist title, just what the artwork depicts or what I was thinking of when I nemd it. Some people try to have clever titles for their art but I think the art should speak for itself.
2007-06-03 09:06:09
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answer #4
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answered by laughingnovemberrain 3
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go with what the painting , drawing or design make you think of and what you feel when you see it.
2007-06-03 15:20:39
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answer #5
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answered by College Girl 2
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so u see..everyone wants 2 help u..but how?u should have posted a link with at least one of u'r works....good luck
2007-06-03 09:51:00
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answer #6
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answered by aly_alex 2
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Call them all "untitled" like untitled one, untitled two and so on. It makes you sound intellectual. Either that or anything in latin. If you don't know latin, you can use pig latin as in "untitleway ootway".
2007-06-03 09:07:09
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answer #7
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answered by hermanius_bosch 2
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tradegitawaint art
2007-06-03 09:01:38
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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don't we have to see them to name them?
2007-06-03 09:00:27
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answer #9
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answered by krystal c 3
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