Renaissance Art: Il Redentore by Leonardo Da Vinci
fine art, il redentore, italian art, Leonardo Da Vinci, Renaissance Art
View ArticleCard Players by Paul Cezanne
Paul Cézanne was the boldest spirit in the circle of the Ecole de Batignolles that gathered round Manet. The essential principle among all of them was not color–this varied in every case–but flat...
View ArticleThe Garden of Eden in Art Scene
The Garden of Eden is described in the Book of Genesis as being the place where the first man, Adam, and his wife, Eve, lived after they were created by God. Literally, the Bible speaks about a garden...
View ArticleA View of Pele, the Hawaiian Goddess of the Volcano
Described as “She-Who-Shapes-The-Sacred-Land” in ancient Hawaiian chants, the volcano goddess, Pele, was passionate, volatile, and capricious. In modern times, Pele has become the most visible of all...
View ArticleItalian Art: Mars, Venus and Amor by Titian (Tiziano Vecellio)
Tiziano Vecellio (Titian) Tiziano Vecelli or Tiziano Vecellio (c. 1488/1490 – 27 August 1576 better known as Titian was an Italian painter, the most important member of the 16th-century Venetian...
View ArticleMichelangelo, Fiorentine and Renaissance Art
For Michelangelo was a Florentine, and many of the major episodes of his life took place in the very buildings and squares. Nearly half of the statues made by Michelangelo now stand in Florence: at the...
View ArticleMichelangelo and Sistine Chapel Artworks
Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel fresco is both a masterpiece and the object of one of the fiercest-ever campaigns about morality and decency. The unveiling of Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel fresco in 1541...
View ArticleNude Maja by Francisco de Goya
An image of Venus in the nude, lying on a green velvet divan with pillows and a spread. Legend would have it that this was the Duchess of Alba, but the sitter has also been identified as Pepita Tudó,...
View ArticleImpressionism: Deux Soeurs Art Print by Renoir
French painter; born in Limoges; died at Cagnes in the south of France. Renoir’s beginnings differed very little from those of the many who followed conventional art courses, except that he showed...
View ArticleRenoir as a Portrait Painter
The last Man died, as it were, with the XVIIIth century; the Individual strove to subsist in Romanticism; and Impressionism appeared to be seized with a desire to give him his quietus, -preceded and...
View ArticleImpressionism: Reading Woman circa 1900
Always the Same Draperies and the Same Virgins! After such a profession of faith as this, how is it possible to contend that Renoir was heedless or disdainful of all elevated thought? With Cézanne and...
View ArticleThe First Signs of Renoir’s Trend Towards Impressionism
Renoir’s meeting with Diaz goes down as one of the turning points in Renoir’s career, to which must be added the revelation of Courbet and Manet. Everything points to an influence of Delacroix at this...
View ArticlePortrait de Mademoiselle Channel by Marie Laurencin
Born on October 31, 1883 in Paris, the young Marie Laurencin was sent to Sèvres by her mother in 1901, where she got familiar with porcelain painting. Her education continued at a school in Paris,...
View ArticleAll About The French Impressionism
Impressionism was a 19th-century art movement that originated with a group of Paris-based artists whose independent exhibitions brought them to prominence during the 1870s and 1880s. The name of the...
View ArticleReligion Art: Adam and Eve After the Expulsion from Paradise
The Renaissance, in the largest sense of the term, is the whole process of transition in Europe from the medieval to the modern order. The Revival of Learning, by which is meant more especially the...
View ArticleCubism: An intellectual revolt against the artistic expression of previous eras
Cubist Theory Cubism began as an intellectual revolt against the artistic expression of previous eras. Among the specific elements abandoned by the cubists were the sensual appeal of paint texture and...
View ArticleArgenteuil and Impressionism
The outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War ( July 18, 1870) found Claude Monet at Le Havre, where he remained as that fateful summer wore on. On September 2 came the German breakthrough at Sedan; Napoleon...
View ArticleThe Accolade Ceremony by Fine Arts View
The accolade is a ceremony to confer knighthood that may take many forms including, for example, the tapping of the flat side of a sword on the shoulders of a candidate or an embrace about the neck. In...
View ArticleBaroque Art: Noble subjects, landscapes, still lifes, and genre scenes
Baroque in art and architecture, a style developed in Europe, England, and the Americas during the 17th and early 18th cent. The baroque style is characterized by an emphasis on unity among the arts....
View ArticleSalvador Dali and Rose Meditative
Dalí, May 11, 1904, in Spain’s Catalonia region located in the town of Figueres, Salvador Dalí and Felipa Domenech Ferres i Cusí couple’s second child came into the world. The couple’s first child was...
View ArticleArt Nouevau: A decorative-art movement centered in Western Europe
Art Nouevau is decorative-art movement centered in Western Europe. It began in the 1880s as a reaction against the historical emphasis of mid-19th-century art, but did not survive World WarI. Art...
View ArticleReligion Art: Adam, Eve and That Famous Apple
Apart from narrative images, portraits of Adam and Eve are not common. Those one does find are likely to be nude sculptures of the first parents in their prelapsarian state – attractive young adults,...
View ArticleThe Legend of Lady Godiva, 1897
Some 900 years ago an extraordinary occurrence took place on Market Day in the English midlands town of Coventry. Two monks at St. Albans Abbey in Hertfordshire first recorded this amazing story in...
View ArticleFrancisco Goya: The Father of Modern Art
Francisco Goya, considered to be “the Father of Modern Art,” began his painting career just after the late Baroque period. In expressing his thoughts and feelings frankly, as he did, he became the...
View ArticleRenoir Art: Two Sisters on the Terrace, 1881
Two Sisters or On the Terrace is an 1881 oil-on-canvas painting by French artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir. The dimensions of the painting are 100.5 cm × 81 cm. The title Two Sisters (French: Les Deux...
View ArticleThe Sensational Character of Art
The first force of a work of art is its appeal to the senses. This is direct and immediate. It is the physical effect, almost utterly unescapable whenever there is presented to anyone a vigorous...
View ArticleLiberty Leading People by Eugene Delacroux
In the Salon of 1822, Eugene Delacroix ( 1798-1863), exhibited a scene from the Divine Comedy. But there was nothing in this livid vision of Virgil and Dante in Hell very surprising to a public...
View ArticleThings You Didn’t Know About the Mona Lisa
Her tricky smile and timeless allure have inspired academic study and artistic emulation for more than five centuries. But the story of this perplexing portrait is even richer than it looks. “Mona...
View ArticleThe Strange Side of Edgar Degas
A new exhibition of rare Edgar Degas monotypes reveals a more daring and experimental side to the artist. Ballet Scene, 1879 Edgar Degas is celebrated for his impressionistic studies of ballet dancers,...
View ArticleThe Mystery of Van Gogh’s Madness
On a summer’s day in 1890, Vincent Van Gogh shot himself in a field outside Paris. What does the painting he worked on that morning tell us about his mental state? On 27 July 1890, Vincent Van Gogh...
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