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Painting Joy at the Deepest Point of Tragedy Rather than focusing on death and suffering, ... In this painting and others, like “K.-6-1951” (1951), animal motifs emerge.
Her paintings were often derided by art critics, yet Siddal had only just begun learning, whereas the men of her circle had been honing their craft, under expert tutelage, for many years.
Contrary to commonplaces in art history, Mark Rothko’s “paintings are not about color or form, or the process of painting or the process of viewing, and they are not about abstract ideas ...
Art of the 1980s: A Decade of Hype and Tragedy. ... D.C., “Brand New: Art and Commodity in the 1980s,” displays these artists’ scathing and sly commentaries on the decade.
The exhibition, "Just a Dream,” presents 25 years of work from Vincent Valdez in a series of chapters that look at both personal and collective histories. Senior arts correspondent Jeffrey Brown ...
How artist Cat Spilman’s paintings have come out of tragedy of losing husband to cancer. Cat Spilman, an American artist in York, likes to fill her canvas with fluid swirls and shapes.
Her first art sale was a painting to two of her teachers at North for $50. She described the painting as full of teenage angst inspired by “The Scream” by Edvard Munch and painted in oil on wood.
To better prepare undergraduates for life’s complexities, place tragedy front and center in humanities classes. In The Birth of Tragedy, Friedrich Nietzsche’s seminal 1872 study of the origins and ...
The extraordinary story of the legendary beauty Lizzie Siddal is both surprising and tragic, and led to a strange myth that persists today. Lucinda Hawksley explores her legacy.
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