Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Journal des Débats was the most read newspaper of the Restoration and the July Monarchy, before being surpassed by Émile de Girardin's La Presse and later by Le Petit Journal. The many contributions established the Journal ' s reputation as a major influence on French culture, and especially French literature for the first half of the ...
In April 2000, Connaissance des arts was acquired by the luxury group LVMH (through the Les Échos-Le Parisien group) and, in 2002, Guy Boyer replaced Philip Jodidio. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] In 2019, Connaissance des Arts became a 48% shareholder of the company Agence d'Evénements Culturels which organizes the Paris-based arts fairs Fine Arts Paris and ...
Verlat was a versatile artist who practised painting, watercolor and etching. He also was an avid draughtsman. [2] His subject matter was wide-ranging and included animal paintings, portraits, religious compositions, Orientalist works, genre scenes, including a number of singeries, and some still lifes.
Today, arts journalism has an extended reach due to the impact of developing technology, such as social media. Some studies on arts journalism explore how technology has impacted the way the general public views art, an example being that performances are now videoed live and images can be instantly uploaded. [2]
The Journal de Trévoux, formally the Mémoires pour l'Histoire des Sciences & des beaux-Arts, but often called the Mémoires de Trévoux, was an influential academic journal that appeared monthly in France between January 1701 and December 1782. The journal published critical reviews of contemporary books and papers on a broad range of ...
The commune of Pornichet was created in 1900 from parts of Saint-Nazaire and La Baule-Escoublac. [4] Situated on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean, the area that will become Pornichet developed in the middle of the 19th century with seaside tourism, as evidenced by its original villas, some of which have escaped the destruction caused by ...
The purpose of CNAP was defined as support and promotion of artistic creation in different forms including photography, graphic arts, design and crafts. [2] The CNAP acquires and commissions works of art, and disseminates them, contributes to modern application of ancient crafts, and to application of new technologies and materials, supports visual artists and provides education to the public ...
While his early works reflected the influences of his friends in Montmartre, Vlaminck, Utrillo and Frank Will, he soon developed dynamic form of expressionism reflecting influences as varied as Toulouse-Lautrec, Van Gogh, Cézanne, Goya, Velázquez and El Greco. Between 1925 and 1929, he produced many of his best works.