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From 1928-1972, LaSelle was an art instructor and professor at The College of Industrial Arts (renamed as Texas Women's University), [9] while simultaneously engaging with the burgeoning concepts and processes of modernism as part of her own intellectual and artistic pursuit. During sabbaticals and summers, she sought out teachers and mentors ...
List of modern artists; List of contemporary artists; List of 20th-century women artists; List of 21st-century women artists; List of sculptors; List of architects; List of graphic designers; List of illustrators
Therefore, it seems that the paintings of this time were executed on almost precisely the same plan as contemporary sculptural reliefs. Polygnotus employed only a few simple colours. [1] Technically his art was primitive. His excellence lay in the beauty of his drawing of individual figures, especially in the "ethical" and ideal character of ...
Antoinette Eno "Tony" Pinchot Pittman Bradlee (January 15, 1924 – November 9, 2011) was an American socialite, ceramist, and painter. She was the second wife of The Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee and the sister of Mary Pinchot Meyer , a mistress of President John F. Kennedy .
Antoinette Lubaki (Atoinet Lubaki, Atoinet Mfumbi) [1] (Bukama, Congo Free State) (1895-?) was a Congolese watercolourist, and Congo's first known female artist. She is considered one of the forerunners of modern art in Congo, alongside her husband, painter and ivory worker Albert Lubaki and the tailor-painter Djilatento . [ 2 ]
Hortense Haudebourt-Lescot, born Antoinette Cécile Hortense Viel (14 December 1784 – 2 January 1845) was a French painter, mainly of genre and historical scenes. Biography [ edit ]
Source: [1] Suzanne de Court (fl. 1600) - enamel painter in the Limoges workshops, possibly the daughter of Jean de Court; Mademoiselle Alée - lace-maker; Louise Moillon (1610 - 1696) - painter of still lifes, of an artist family who were Protestant refugees from the southern Netherlands.
Dogana and Santa Maria della Salute, Venice. She was born on January 13, 1848, in Miskovice (near Kutná Hora) in Bohemia, Austria-Hungary. [2] The first bibliographical indication of Antonietta Brandeis dates from her teens, when she is mentioned as a pupil of the Czech artist Karel Javůrek of Prague. [3]