YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :French Artist James Tissot
Essays 241 - 270
the likes of John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg, and Jasper Johns (Wiener, 1998). In 1961, Yoko returned to Japan with Cage in order ...
sometimes knowing what the artist was thinking or saying influences a viewers interpretation and appreciation in a negative way. I...
the foreground. While the sight of a butcher shop would be quite familiar to Antwerp citizens, Houghton points out that prior to "...
young man meant he wanted to be a white poet. The point is that this young mans words brought this issue to mind for Hughes, and t...
since by making the marks she is "preserving a finite ritualistic event and presenting it as a timeless work of art" (Wright, 2004...
Arts ("Milton Glaser," 2005). He would for the most part get his education in New York, but his stint in Italy likely broadened hi...
and the work only shows the back of his head and his body down to just below the waist. Drawn in stark, bold lines, the body is r...
seems to have earned a portion of his income by supplying pornography to Viennese collectors (Lucie-Smith). Both Schiele and Mun...
to salvage their relationship. When a scratch on his leg goes untreated with iodine, it becomes gangrenous, and as he lay dying, ...
see these influences in his depiction of the legend of Sardanapalus. Delacroix, like any good author, was immediately drawn to t...
religious themes or other such esoteric spiritual works. Repin sought to bring real life into his artwork. One way that he...
In five pages this paper examines how the Eastern philosophies of Zen Buddhism, Taoism, Keiji Nishitani, and Dogan can influence t...
In eight pages this essay analyzes these great artists and the profound artistic influence each continues to exert. Six sources a...
In five pages and a 3 time period breakdown this paper examines Otto Dix's artwork and discusses how the World Wars I and II exert...
"unreal city" (as T.S. Eliot put it) indicates the crucial importance of a metropolitan social life for the emergence of modernist...
the "breakbeats" (Beau PG) and other natural vocal rhythms. It was not until within the past several years that they took on a ne...
to the gracious host to the worldwide event known as the 2000 Summer Olypmics. Art, Wartime and the land "Down Under"...
movement, and the unofficial capital of the international avant-garde. This was as much of a shock to American artists as it was t...
(Thomas Cole). In these works there is undeniable evidence of the pristine nature of his subjects (Thomas Cole). Cole renders hi...
better than his master and having seen that Verrocchio swore never to pick up a paint brush again (Hellmich, 1997). In 1481, Leon...
and during the 1960s "serious health problems sidelined him for good" (Sellman, 2002; tt_154.htm). As mentioned, Robeson was th...
Paris during the nineteenth century for an artist to be accepted and gain success it was necessary for their world to be accepted ...
of his arm, and it also affected his ability to paint. In 1920, Pippin would marry Ora Giles of South Carolina and they settled i...
the nude for an artist, or a class of artists, they become very modest when the session is over. Indeed, artist models are often q...
the depiction of characters. In this case, the artists were employed to tell an accurate account of the daily rituals the leaders ...
Gallery, 2002). The human conditions, his paintings seem to say, tend to be in chains and bound, no matter what country these huma...
that had been the result of a bus accident in 1925 at the age of 18. Boldly Timid -- Strongly Fragile In each of her works, espec...
them again because they are the eternal symbols upon which we must fall back to express basic psychological ideas. They are the sy...
seductive powers of the imagination at an early age. In her candid autobiography, Dancing on My Grave, she recalled, "In crossing...
the obvious contradictions between his life and his works (Candido Portinari, 2002). For example, although he was a staunch Commu...