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João Carqueijeiro (born 1954), plastic artist; Nicolau Chanterene (1485-1555), French sculptor and architect who worked mainly in Portugal and Spain; Eduardo Teixeira Coelho (1919-2005), comic book artist; Evelina Coelho (1945–2013), painter; José Dias Coelho (1923-1961) Jorge Colaço (1868-1942)
Museums exhibiting paintings by Portuguese artists, outside Portugal, include the Hispanic Society of America (New York): Works – Collections – Hispanic Society of America and the Centre Pompidou, Paris [2] Paintings with their own Wikipedia page are listed here pt:Categoria:Pinturas_de_Portugal (in Portuguese).
Portuguese artist stubs (111 P) Pages in category "Portuguese artists" The following 39 pages are in this category, out of 39 total. This list may not reflect recent ...
In 2012, Vasconcelos showed her work at the major annual contemporary art exhibition in the Palace of Versailles. She was the first woman and the youngest contemporary artist to exhibit in Versailles. [5] In 2013 the artist represented Portugal in a solo show at the country's pavilion at the Venice Biennale.
Abel Salazar (1889–1946); Julião Sarmento (1948–2021); Domingos Sequeira (1768–1837); Silva, Maria Helena Vieira da: see under Vieira da Silva: Maria Helena Vieira da Silva (1908–1992)
In 2012, the modern art collection “Portugal Telecom Foundation” continues to be one of the only collections that has been touring around the country during the last years, promoting some of the most important modern Portuguese artists from the 1960s and onwards, like (apart from P. Rego) Joaquim Rodrigo , Lourdes Castro, Alberto Carneiro ...
Aurélia de Souza (1866–1922), Chilean-born Portuguese painter; Sofia Martins de Sousa (1870–1960), Portuguese painter; Teresa Nunes Alves de Sousa (born 1979), visual artist; Katherine Swift (1956–2004), Irish-born Portuguese painter
Os Independentes. Portuguese abstract art is historically linked to the Portuguese artist group Independents' exhibitions.The exhibitions' main organizer and coordinator, painter and architect Fernando Lanhas, coincidentally is the central figure of Portuguese abstractionism.