Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Vase with White and Red Carnations is a work by Vincent van Gogh. It is an oil on canvas painting in a private collection, painted in the summer of 1886 in Paris. [1] The painting depicts white and red carnation flowers in a gold and dark brown vase. Provenance: [1]
The flowers range from white with a yellow or red center to dark pink with a darker red center, with a basal tube 2.5–3 cm (1.0–1.2 in) long and a corolla 2–5 cm (0.8–2.0 in) diameter with five petal-like lobes.
Still Life of Flowers: 1949: Image online [190] Blue Landscape: 1949: Image online [191] Clock with a Blue Wing: 1949: Image online [192] The Poet: 1949 to 1950: Image in La Mariée The Bride: 1950: featured in the 1999 film Notting Hill: Image online [193] Lovers in the Red Sky: 1950: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art: Image online [194 ...
Annelies, White Tulips and Anemones: 1944 Oil on canvas 60 × 73 cm Honolulu: Honolulu Museum of Art [a] Asia: L'Asie: 1946 Oil on canvas 116 × 81 cm Private collection [a] Two Girls in a Yellow and Red Interior: Deux fillettes, fond jaune et rouge: 1947 Oil on canvas 61 × 49.8 cm Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Barnes Foundation [a]
These are 30 stunning white flowers to enhance your garden and landscape. Learn planting tips for classic varieties and find new favorites for every space.
Their flowers are usually large, showy, and brightly coloured, generally red, orange, pink, yellow, or white. They often have a different coloured blotch at the base of the tepals, internally. Because of a degree of variability within the populations and a long history of cultivation, classification has been complex and controversial.
“The unexpected red theory is basically adding anything that’s red, big or small, to a room where it doesn’t match at all and it automatically looks better,” Brooklyn–based interior ...
Deux fillettes, fond jaune et rouge (Two Girls in a Yellow and Red Interior) (1947), oil on canvas, 61 x 49.8 cm (24 x 19 5/8 inches) is a painting by Henri Matisse in the collection of the Barnes Foundation, Merion, Pennsylvania. [1] Albert Barnes became one of Matisse's most important patrons.