Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Provincetown Art Association and Museum (PAAM) in Provincetown, Massachusetts is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums. [1] It was founded as the Provincetown Art Association on August 22, 1914, [ 2 ] with the mission of collecting, preserving, exhibiting and educating people about the work of Cape Cod artists.
For artists with more than one type of work in the collection, or for works by artists not listed here, see the Artic website or the corresponding Wikimedia Commons category. Of artists listed, less than 10% are women. For the complete list of artists and their artworks in the collection, see the website.
In 1924, after serving in the United States Army and traveling across Europe, Moffett returned to Provincetown, Massachusetts and became one of the early founders of the Provincetown Art Association and Museum (PAAM). [4] Moffett had his first one-man show at the Frank Rehn Gallery in New York and also at The Art Institute of Chicago in 1928. [6]
Mother and Child, Syracuse Museum; Net Mender, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence; Venetian Girl, Worcester Art Museum; The Family, Buffalo Fine Arts Academy; Crew of the Philomena Manta, 1915, [7] Provincetown Art Collection. [8] Fish Cleaners, Provincetown Art Collection [9] Untitled (Study of girl in white) [10] 1927, Provincetown Art ...
Provincetown Art Association Exhibition, 1927 [15] Charles J. Martin with water colors, circa 1930s. Morton Galleries, New York City, 1929 [16] International Water Color Exhibition, Art Institute of Chicago, May 2 – June 2, 1929 ; Provincetown Art Association Exhibition, 1931 [17] Morton Galleries, New York City, 1931
Norfeldt was an early member of the Provincetown Printers art colony in Massachusetts. [3] In 1921, Nordfeldt was elected an associate member of the Taos Society of Artists . [ 4 ] He exhibited his work frequently with the Chicago Society of Etchers both before and after the war, showing between 1911-1918 and 1926–1929. [ 1 ]
Mars and Squire helped to form the Amateur Art Study Club, now the Springfield Art Association, in Springfield during a 1909 trip to the United States. After returning to Paris, they sent works of art to the group for exhibition. [1] Ethel Mars, Provincetown, c.1918, Department of Image Collections, National Gallery of Art Library, Washington, DC.
Provincetown Printers were a group of artists, most of them women, who created art using woodblock printing techniques in Provincetown, Massachusetts during the early 20th-century. [1] [2] It was the first group of its kind in the United States, developed in an area when European and American avant-garde artists visited in number after World ...