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  2. Annie Lee (artist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annie_Lee_(artist)

    The painting shows a tired, faceless Black woman sitting on the edge of her bed about start her workday. The artist first conceived of the painting while getting ready to catch a bus to work on a cold winter morning. [9] As of 2011, Blue Monday was the most mass-produced and popular painting of the artist. [10]

  3. Allegorical Painting of Two Ladies, English School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegorical_Painting_of...

    Allegorical Painting of Two Ladies. Allegorical Painting of Two Ladies, English School is a 17th-century allegorical painting by an unknown artist, and dated from the 1650s. For its period, the painting is considered unusual in its depiction of a black woman and a white woman sitting side by side. [1]

  4. Category:Paintings of women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Paintings_of_women

    The Bar (painting) A Bar at the Folies-Bergère; The Bathers (Renoir) Bathers with a Turtle; The Bathers (Cézanne) Beatrice Hastings in Front of a Door; The Beauty; Beijing 2008 (painting) The Beloved (Rossetti) Berlin Street Scene; Bertha Wegmann Painting a Portrait; Bharat Mata (painting) The Black Brunswicker; Black Woman with Child

  5. Waiting for the Hour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waiting_for_the_Hour

    Watch Meeting—Dec. 31st 1862—Waiting for the Hour is an 1863 painting by the US artist William Tolman Carlton. The location of the original painting is not known, but a different version, possibly a study, is displayed in the Lincoln Bedroom at the White House. Watch meetings originated as nighttime religious services of the Methodist Church.

  6. Emma Soyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_Soyer

    Emma Jones (later Soyer), Two Children with a Book, 1831, (private collection, on loan to the Tate Britain since 2022) In September 2018 Soyer's painting of two black girls, in a tropical landscape, possibly painted for the slavery abolitionist cause in Britain, was featured on the BBC One television programme Fake or Fortune?. [7]

  7. Black Woman with Peonies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Woman_with_Peonies

    Black Woman with Peonies by Frédéric Bazille (1870) located at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.. Black Woman with Peonies also known as Négresse aux pivoines, Young Woman with Peonies, or Negress with Peonies, is a pair of paintings created by the French Impressionist painter Frédéric Bazille in the spring of 1870.

  8. Portrait of Madeleine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_of_Madeleine

    Portrait of Madeleine, also known as Portrait of a Black Woman (French: Portrait d'une femme noire or Portrait d'une negresse), is an oil-on-canvas painting by the French artist Marie-Guillemine Benoist, created in 1800.

  9. William Cumming (artist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Cumming_(artist)

    William Lee Cumming (March 24, 1917 – November 22, 2010) [1] was a noted 20th-century American artist, often associated with the Northwest School.A controversial figure - he was a hardcore Stalinist for a long period, was married seven times, and was generally outspoken and opinionated [2] - he eventually came to be respected as an important innovator and highly distinctive stylist in modern ...