This WWI poster by Leyendecker was parodied by a recent Deadpool comic book cover.... Close ups of a Romeo and Juliet SATURDAY EVENING POST cover…. According to the new book on the artist, they credit J.C. with inventing the New Years baby on his SATURDAY EVENING POST holiday covers. Here is one from 1932… MORE IN PART V
Comic work by German composer has been reinterpreted for modern audiences
One of the most famous Norwegian painters, Adolph Tidemand, incorporated traditional Bridal Crowns in many pieces of his art: Adolph Tidemand became and has remained, one of the prominent painters …
Explore julianna.lees' 8806 photos on Flickr!
Оригинал взят у maximus101 в Евгений Край и его скифы Картины на скифские темы, которые создал прекрасный художник-иллюстратор Евгений Край https://vk.com/id387122112 Его изображения скифов отличаются не только живописностью, но и достоверностью. Головной убор вождя каменской культуры…
Stevyn Llewellyn
About The Artwork "Birds IV" is a Limited edition (10) manufactured with a high resolution and printed on highest quality Museum Wrap 300 gsm natural cotton canvas and stretched onto a high quality 2 cm frame. For the 120x80 cm size edition, "Birds IV" comes in a limited edition of only 10 prints. Once all 10 of the prints in this edition have sold out, there will be no other prints of "Birds IV". Anna Sidi is commonly known to create digital paintings which feature the process of metamorphosis, allowing the viewer to break away from the traditional representation of various visual realities when creating the pieces of art. Her inspiration comes from the infinite, refreshing and everlasting water flow present in natural landscape. The artworks emphasize layers or texture as well as fluidity, creating a calming and relaxing effect and permitting the viewer to experience the painting's journey in their own way. Original Created:2017 Subjects:Portrait Materials:CanvasWood Styles:ExpressionismPop ArtPortraiturePhotorealismImpressionism Mediums:Digitalink canvasC-type Details & Dimensions Photography:Digital on Canvas Artist Produced Limited Edition of:10 Size:31.5 W x 47.2 H x 0.8 D in Frame:Not Framed Ready to Hang:Not applicable Packaging:Ships in a Box Shipping & Returns Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments. Handling:Ships in a box. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines. Ships From:Ireland. Have additional questions? Please visit our help section or contact us.
I am still enjoying my photos from the Festival of Quilts, even though this is not exactly news anymore. They have a competition category called Quilt Creations, where you may enter every quilty th…
Il s’est passé quelque chose de très drôle ce week-end. Je reprends, « drôle » n’est peut-être pas le bon mot. Fascinant, je dirais.
serpentsea: The Dream of Queen Katherine (Shakespeare, Henry VIII, Act IV, Scene 2), 1781, Henry Fuseli
by Leo Kwok
Posted on May 15, 2019 On this date in 2017, James Turrell opened the monumental art project he's been working on for more than 40 years to guests making big donations. An art project called Roden Crater. Roden Crater was a cinder cone - the remains of an ancient, extinct volcano - located in the Painted Desert of Arizona. And it wasn't for sale. This was back in the early 1970s. Artist James Turrell wouldn't take "no" for an answer; after working on the purchase for three years, he was able to buy Roden Crater. And then he was able to start building a naked-eye observatory for viewing the sun and the moon, winter and summer solstice, and other sky sights. What's the connection between a cinder cone and an observatory? Turrell is utilizing the remote location as a way of gaining darker night skies than most of us are used to. He's using the desert location as a way of gaining more sunny days and clear night skies than many other locations. And Turrell is utilizing the inner cone of the crater as a way of focusing our sight of the wide Western skies into a smaller viewpoint, a more narrow aperture. The observatory is not something that intrudes much into the desert landscape - it's what is called "minimally invasive" - and the tunnels and viewing spots inside the crater are specially engineered to create a truly different way of experiencing and seeing light. Now, when I first discovered that such a cool naked-eye observatory was being built - and so near me! - I assumed that there were one or two viewing spots within the crater. But there are TWENTY-ONE! And it may be that Turrell is planning an eventual 23 different viewing spots, plus six different tunnels connecting them! You can browse some of these spots, right now, before the observatory opens to the general public some time in the next five years, on this website. The lucky folks who already got to experience the Roden Crater had to pay quite a bit for their luck - they made $5,000 donations to Turrell's non-profit organization to fund further work. Some people kicked in another $1,500 for a hotel room, onsite dinner, and breakfast the following morning! Check out this video and this other video on Turrell's Roden Crater project, and this video that shows one of Turrell's other works (also seen in the still photo below). Also on this date: San Isidro Day in Madrid Straw Hat Day Archeologist Marta Rieche's birthday Wizard of Oz author L. Frank Baum's birthday Paraguay's Independence Day National Slider Day Birthday of activist Diane Nash Turn Beauty Inside Out Day (Third Wednesday of May) Plan ahead: Check out my Pinterest boards for: May holidays May birthdays Historical anniversaries in May And here are my Pinterest boards for: June holidays June birthdays Historical anniversaries in June
More than five centuries have passed since, and people might still wonder: what exactly happened with the two children of King Edward IV, who reigned
serpentsea: The Dream of Queen Katherine (Shakespeare, Henry VIII, Act IV, Scene 2), 1781, Henry Fuseli
by Leo Kwok
Posted on May 15, 2019 On this date in 2017, James Turrell opened the monumental art project he's been working on for more than 40 years to guests making big donations. An art project called Roden Crater. Roden Crater was a cinder cone - the remains of an ancient, extinct volcano - located in the Painted Desert of Arizona. And it wasn't for sale. This was back in the early 1970s. Artist James Turrell wouldn't take "no" for an answer; after working on the purchase for three years, he was able to buy Roden Crater. And then he was able to start building a naked-eye observatory for viewing the sun and the moon, winter and summer solstice, and other sky sights. What's the connection between a cinder cone and an observatory? Turrell is utilizing the remote location as a way of gaining darker night skies than most of us are used to. He's using the desert location as a way of gaining more sunny days and clear night skies than many other locations. And Turrell is utilizing the inner cone of the crater as a way of focusing our sight of the wide Western skies into a smaller viewpoint, a more narrow aperture. The observatory is not something that intrudes much into the desert landscape - it's what is called "minimally invasive" - and the tunnels and viewing spots inside the crater are specially engineered to create a truly different way of experiencing and seeing light. Now, when I first discovered that such a cool naked-eye observatory was being built - and so near me! - I assumed that there were one or two viewing spots within the crater. But there are TWENTY-ONE! And it may be that Turrell is planning an eventual 23 different viewing spots, plus six different tunnels connecting them! You can browse some of these spots, right now, before the observatory opens to the general public some time in the next five years, on this website. The lucky folks who already got to experience the Roden Crater had to pay quite a bit for their luck - they made $5,000 donations to Turrell's non-profit organization to fund further work. Some people kicked in another $1,500 for a hotel room, onsite dinner, and breakfast the following morning! Check out this video and this other video on Turrell's Roden Crater project, and this video that shows one of Turrell's other works (also seen in the still photo below). Also on this date: San Isidro Day in Madrid Straw Hat Day Archeologist Marta Rieche's birthday Wizard of Oz author L. Frank Baum's birthday Paraguay's Independence Day National Slider Day Birthday of activist Diane Nash Turn Beauty Inside Out Day (Third Wednesday of May) Plan ahead: Check out my Pinterest boards for: May holidays May birthdays Historical anniversaries in May And here are my Pinterest boards for: June holidays June birthdays Historical anniversaries in June
More than five centuries have passed since, and people might still wonder: what exactly happened with the two children of King Edward IV, who reigned
Explore Fu-Ran-Ku's 11598 photos on Flickr!
One of the most famous Norwegian painters, Adolph Tidemand, incorporated traditional Bridal Crowns in many pieces of his art: Adolph Tidemand became and has remained, one of the prominent painters …
Ffo is a Moscow-based artist who creates beautiful, strange and surreal collages from anatomical illustrations, classical art, 1950’s pop culture images and Art
The Kritias boy, shortly before 480 BC. Taken by the Acropolis Museum. Athens, Greece. Scanned by Minolta Scan Dual IV.
Public-domain images from the Book of Kells, free for your use, here at the Medieval History site.
#ibispen #pen #ink Instagram @rkkr4696
Les problèmes propres à notre société moderne expliqués grâce à des œuvres empruntées au classicisme, c’est la perspective utilisée par Mehmet Geren. Depuis plus de...