i love this game, too awesome:)
Vous avez entendu parler de la Nuit blanche 2023 à Paris et vous voulez tout savoir sur les événements à ne pas manquer ? Le Mag’ a prévu le coup et revient avec vous sur le programme de la 21ᵉ édition.
Remembering Delight © Col Mitchell Paper, acrylic, inks on-canvas-16inx12in- SOLD Prints available society6.com/product/remembering-delight_print#1=45
Check out my set "Most Interesting 500" here! Visit my Waldorfschool/Steinerschool related pinboards here!
Jean-Honoré FRAGONARD (1732 - 1806) Young Woman Playing with a Dog
Images from the exhibit “Salley Mavor: Sewn Stories," on view at the Brattleboro Museum & Art Center July 15 - October 23, 2011. For more information, please visit www.brattleboromuseum.org.
This gallery contains pictures of costume, textiles and reproductions pre-17th Century.
las loucas de pedra lilas de de brasil con colaboradoras de diferentes paises actuando como panteras airadas en las calles de copenhague durante la COP15. NO HAY JUSTICIA CILMATICA SIN JUSTICIA DE GENERO Y JUSTICIA SOCIAL! foto: Rotmi Enciso
“안녕하세요! 클래스 101에서 클래스를 오픈하였습니다📖 잘 부탁드립니다 클래스 페이지🔻 https://t.co/HSdOaqyk6a”
Minami Masahiko 1, 2, 4. 3. Minami, Masahiko (1968 - Present) Sympathy
We'd love you to meet the crochet artist: Joana Vasconcelos - her work is varied, exciting, and socially conscious, and will amaze you!
Tableau de Jacques-Louis David (Château de La Malmaison)
Mi aportación al proyecto TATTOO THE GIRL. Os animo a participar! www.tattoothegirl.com/ tattoothegirl.tumblr.com/
In the relationship between form and information, it may happen that a poetic source is stronger than a scientific or historiographical one, even when this former is not verified by the evidence. A good example is provided by the way in which artists have dealt with the subject of "Ugolino…
Date: 19th century. Geography: British Columbia, Canada. Culture: Native American (Northwest Coast). Medium: Wood, pigment. Dimensions: Height: 2 5/8 in. (6...
Happy New Year!!!! Today I am going to share with you, a card I made & some LO's I did for the year 2014,using the Beautiful Maja Design Col...
According to historians, the legend of the unicorn first emerged in 398 BC courtesy of the Greek physician Ctesias.
Something that is junk to us, is often a treasure for somebody else. For example, Simon Brown (or thegentlemanfelter) collects old and worn out brushes that anyone else would think of as useless. But he turns them into meadows for foxes or tree branches for birds, and he fills these creations with curiosity and life.
Nothing is wasted in the garden :)
Framed Print Premium Framed Print Canvas Print Metal Print Photographic Print Poster Print Fine Art Print Jigsaw Puzzle Photo Mug Pillow Mouse Mat crop_portraitFramed PhotosBuy from $79.99DreamsMidsummer Nights DreamScene from A Midsummer Nights Dream, 1873. Creator: Simmons, John (1823-1876)Midsummer Nights Dream"King John, "at Her Majestys Theatre (engraving)Gustave Dore Bible: The vision of death (engraving)Shakespeares Midsummer Nights DreamQueen Elizabeth II. Princess Elizabeth as Junior Commander in the ATS inspectingIllustration for A Midsummer Nights Dream (chromolitho)Illustration for A Midsummer Nights Dream (chromolitho)Nativite (Nativity) Painting by Grechetto (Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione) (1610-1665)Women of the Isle of Nio or Ios, Greece, 1818 +Shipping +Choices +Reviews +Guaranteed
Using cake as inspiration, Leah Rosenberg forms colorful stacks of paint. Each layer is made by pouring acrylic paint onto trays & peeling after drying.
The Ohio Northern University gallery program opens its 2012–13 art exhibition and gallery season at the Stambaugh Studio Theatre Gallery with a show entitled “The Prints of Paul Jacoulet.” The exhibit runs September 3 through December 14. The pieces on display during the exhibition are representative of a collection of Asian art given to Ohio Northern by Col. Elmer E. Welty, LLB ’27, Hon.D. ’82, and his wife, Lyla. The Welty Collection includes more than 500 pieces of carvings, porcelains, sculpture, furniture and prints. Representative items from the 19th century, Ch’ing Dynasty, Meji period, plus numerous Kutani and Imari China pieces make this an outstanding and diverse collection of academic and cultural use by Ohio Northern. Col. Welty studied law at Ohio Northern from 1924–26 and then attended the Command and General Staff College in Leavenworth, Kan. He continued his education with special studies in Far Eastern affairs at Yale University. The Weltys lived in Asia for 30 years, and this print exhibit features acquisitions of Jacoulet’s work made during that period. Later, Col. Welty formed the firm of Welty, Shimeal and Tokotori, specializing in international law and patents. He was presented with an ONU Alumni Award in 1979 recognizing his career accomplishments and reflection on Ohio Northern. In 1982, Col Welty received an honorary doctor of laws from ONU. He donated his entire Asian collection in 1991 to Ohio Northern. This exhibition features the work of the French artist Paul Jacoulet (1896-1960) who lived in Japan most of his life. During a span of 26 years, he produced 166 masterfully printed color woodcuts inspired by his travels to Japan, Korea, China, Mongolia and numerous islands of the South Pacific. His inventive compositions reveal a synthesis of traditional Japanese printing techniques with modern European aesthetics and are examples of superb craftsmanship. Each print involved as many as 300 pressings of handmade paper against as many as sixty carved cherry wood blocks. As a young boy, Jacoulet moved to Tokyo where his father taught French at the School of Foreign Languages. Jacoulet’s formal education in Japan was supplemented by private instruction in languages, calligraphy, painting and music. Following an early career as an interpreter for the French embassy in Tokyo, he decided to devote himself exclusively to his art. During his extensive travels, he filled his sketchbooks with drawings and also painted hundreds of watercolors. In the execution of his prints, Jacoulet collaborated with master carvers and skillful young printers, personally supervising the pulling of each print. He often credited their significant role by stamping their names along the margins of his prints. Jacoulet’s woodcuts evoke the themes and methods of the traditional Japanese woodblock print genre known as ukiyo-e. Dating back to the 17th century, ukiyo-e prints typically featured theater performers, beautiful courtesans, landscapes and scenes from history and everyday life. Jacoulet is often associated with the Shin Hanga ("New Prints") movement that sought to revitalize this tradition by introducing Western realism and new subject matter. Jacoulet further invigorated the ukiyo-e tradition through his experimentation with elaborate new techniques and innovative materials. For example, he used precious metals and natural pigments in devising new shadings as well as colored mica, powdered semi-precious stones and small embossing blocks for added texture.
12+ Unique sympathy gifts for children & families. What to give and do for someone who is grieving the loss of a loved one.