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Fata Morgana, a giant kaleidoscope art installation. 2012. Buckley worked in various digital and video medias including "moving image, kinetics, sound, light, sculpture and digital print". [5] She described to Bomb magazine in 2014 that she had stopped painting and started "painting with light". [4] She hoped her work made people feel: "A ...
A toy kaleidoscope. A kaleidoscope (/ k ə ˈ l aɪ d ə s k oʊ p /) is an optical instrument with two or more reflecting surfaces (or mirrors) tilted to each other at an angle, so that one or more (parts of) objects on one end of these mirrors are shown as a symmetrical pattern when viewed from the other end, due to repeated reflection.
Louis Wain's Cat Painting Book (c.1910) Louis Wain's Cats and Dogs (c. 1910) The Louis Wain Nursery Book (c. 1910) Louis Wain's Cat Mascot (postcard coloring book, c.1910) Father Tuck's Struwwelpeter As Seen by Louis Wain, Told in Merry Rhymes by Norman Gale (c.1910), second Edition Fidgety Phil and Other Tales (c. 1925) The Happy Family (c. 1914)
Paula Nadelstern (born 1951, Bronx, NY) is an American artist, quiltmaker, author and teacher known for her kaleidoscope-themed quilts.. Nadelstern has achieved international recognition, including a one-person exhibition at the American Folk Art Museum in New York City in 2009, Kaleidoscope Quilts: The Art of Paula Nadelstern. [1]
Vädersolstavlan (Swedish for 'The Sundog Painting '; pronunciation ⓘ) is an oil-on-panel painting depicting a halo display, an atmospheric optical phenomenon, observed over Stockholm on 20 April 1535. It is named after the sun dogs (Swedish: Vädersol, lit. 'weather sun') appearing on the upper right part of the painting.
The Assumption of the Virgin is a fresco by the Italian Late Renaissance artist Antonio da Correggio decorating the dome of the Cathedral of Parma, Italy.Correggio signed the contract for the painting on November 3, 1522.
In the 1990s Odita was a critic for Flash Art International, and a consulting editor and writer for NKA, Journal of Contemporary African Art. [7] From 2003 to 2005 he was a Visiting Critic in Painting at Yale University School of Art. [7] From 2002 to 2003 he was a Visiting Associate Professor in Painting at the University of South Florida ...
Kim Hong-do (Korean: 김홍도, 1745–c. 1806 to 1814) was a Korean painter during the Joseon dynasty. He is mostly remembered for his depictions of the everyday life of ordinary people, in a manner analogous to painters of the Dutch Golden Age. [1]