-
Jonas Lie painted an oil painting on a canvas.
Norwegian-born artist Jonas Lie received great acclaim for his luminous renderings of New York City. His unique merging of Impressionism with a bold, painterly realism was admired for its potency and vigor, which was seen as a healthy antidote to the more delicate styles of many American Impressionists. Afterglow also intrigued contemporary critics for its depiction of the city. -
frank charles peyraud, american partist
-
Edward Henry Potthast painted the picture.
A Holiday depicts one of the beach scenes for which Edward Henry Potthast was best known. Capturing a quintessentially Impressionist setting a sun-dappled landscape with women and children enjoying leisure time. -
Joseph Stella revisited his native Italy and became fascinated by Renaissance painting. Emulating Italian artists such as Sandro Botticelli, Stella began to produce decorative, detailed, symbolic compositions such as A Vision, which was originally a mural commission. The painting’s fantastical subject also allies it with modern art, particularly Surrealism.
-
Mickey mouse first appeared as a single test screening of the short Plane crazy.
-
kathleen blackshear, american artist
-
Ralston Crawford, created 'lights in an Aircraft plant in 1945. it was an oil painting on a canvas. it is at the National Gallery of art Washington D.C
-
Ada S. Garrett Prize Fund and Goodman Fund, 1947.472
-
Wentworth Greene Field Memorial Fund, 1951.56 Attraction | The Art Institute of Chicago
-
The Art Institute of Chicago
-
ivan abright, american artist 1897-1983
-
Gift of Eldzier Cortor in memory of Sophia Cortor, 2012.586
-
Anselm Kiefer critically engages with myth and memory, referencing totems of German culture and collective history. “Germans want to forget [the past] and start a new thing all the time, but only by going into the past can you go into the future,” he says. Revealing the influence of his tutelage under Joseph Beuys, Kiefer's epic-scaled, dense sculptures and paintings are often exposed to elements like acid and fire, and incorporate materials such as lead, burned books, concrete.
-
Though the quote “good artists borrow, great artists steal” is traditionally attributed to Pablo Picasso, it could well be Richard Prince’s motto. Prince mines mass-media images to redefine concepts of ownership and authorship, a practice he conceived of while working in the tear-sheets department of Time-Life. In his “Cowboys” series, for example, started in the early 1980s, he re-photographed Marlboro ads, cropping out text to generate close-ups of mythical cowboy figures.
-
Best known for laying aggressively directive slogans over black-and-white photographs that she finds in magazines, Barbara Kruger developed a visual language that was strongly influenced by her early work as a graphic designer (at magazines including House and Garden, Mademoiselle, and Aperture). Among her most famous pieces are I shop, therefore I am (1987) and Your body is a battleground (1985). Informed by feminism, Kruger's work critiques consumerism and desire.
-
Robert Capa, he was a hungarian war photographer and photo journalist. the stamp was issued a postage stamp in Capa'shonor in 2013. that same year it issued a 5,000 forint, gold coin. also in his honor showing an emgraving of capa.
-
-
Billy Schenck: New Paintings at Blue Rain Gallery, July 28 – Aug. 12, 2017
-
Billy Schenck