Harumi Kosugi | A Japanese watercolorist | ArtLiveAndBeauty - ArtLiveAndBeauty - Masterpieces of Paintings All The Times Harumi Kosugi | A Japanese watercolorist | ArtLiveAndBeauty | ArtLiveAndBeauty - Masterpieces of Paintings All The Times

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Tuesday 2 November 2021

Harumi Kosugi | A Japanese watercolorist | ArtLiveAndBeauty

 

Harumi-Kosugi's-Watercolor-Paintings 


Japanese paintings, particularly watercolours, are always thin, delicate, and highly detailed. This ability to make paintings with great detail while preserving the overall lightness and sensitivity of the image allows us to appreciate such watercolour masterpieces! Harumi Kosugi's major subject matter is flowers. Her paintings are all in the realistic style. Her paintings depict the condition of blogging and reverie. As in meditative looking. Her still life is an in-depth examination of the condition of awareness.










Harumi Kosugi is a Japanese artist who resides in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture. She began painting on the spur of the moment once she had accomplished parenting her children. She admits that the inclination came to her out of nowhere. : "I want to paint!", And now she is crazy about watercolors. Instead of applying the forces of mind and imagination, Harumi succumbs to paints, water and paper, and then unexpected harmony itself is born and pulsates ...










In 2013, a combined exhibition of paintings by Harumi Kosugi and Irina Miklushevskaya, the first lady of the Primorsky Territory, was organized in Vladivostok. Harumi Kosugi was unable to fly from Japan to Vladivostok, but the first lady stated that it was Harumi Kosugi's art that encouraged her to establish a collaborative show. Her paintings are done in the same style as the Japanese artist.













Anastasia Kalcheva - art critic - writes about Harumi Kosugi's painting :


“The Japanese sense of beauty comes from sensations. Japanese art focuses on the fact that beauty is how people feel, not the concept of beauty as perceived by the mind as it is understood in the West. Japanese sense of beauty ("bigaku") is very subjective and depends on each individual, without unconditional criteria for judging by the masses. "






















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