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In general, artists are included that are mentioned at the ArtCyclopedia [1] website, in the Grove Dictionary of Art, [2] and/or whose paintings regularly sell for over $20,000 at auctions. [3] Active painters are therefore underrepresented, while more than half of the artists are baroque painters of the 17th century, roughly corresponding to ...
[1] [2] It is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in New York. [1] The painting shows the enslaved Afro-Creole teenager Bélizaire together with the three children of the New Orleans merchant and banker Frederick Frey. [3] Frey's family purchased Bélizaire (b. 1822) and his mother, an enslaved woman named Sallie, when ...
Pavel Filonov (1883–1941), Russian painter, art theorist and poet; Willy Finch (1854–1930). Belgian ceramicist and painter; Perle Fine (1905–1988) American artist; Leonor Fini (1908–1996), Argentine painter, illustrator and author; Ian Hamilton Finlay (1925–2006), Scottish artist, writer and gardener; Hans Fischer (1909–1958), Swiss ...
Funeral of a Mummy on the Nile (also known as Funeral of a Mummy, French: Les Funérailles d'une momie) is an oil on canvas painting by American artist Frederick Arthur Bridgman. It was painted between 1876 and 1877 and is considered his most acclaimed painting. Since 1990, it has been exhibited in Louisville, Kentucky, at the Speed Art Museum.
The Portrait of Frederick II of Prussia by Johann Georg Ziesenis is a portrait of Frederick the Great painted by the German-Danish painter Johann Georg Ziesenis in 1763. In 1913, the archivist and historian Jean Lulvès (1866–1928), son of the painter Jean Lulvès , claimed it was the only painting for which Frederick sat during his lifetime ...
In 1929–30, the Picture Gallery was set up again, and 120 of the 159 works marked in the catalogue as purchased by Frederick returned from Berlin. During World War II, all the paintings were moved to Rheinsberg Palace in Rheinsberg. Only ten paintings returned from there in 1946, and most of the pictures seemed lost.
Frederick Lincoln Stoddard (March 7, 1861 - February 24, 1940) was an artist known for his stained glass, paintings and murals, with notable pieces designed as public works in Missouri, New York, and Massachusetts.
Sanssouci (meaning Free of Care), was Frederick's summer palace at Potsdam, near Berlin. The painting depicts, in a pre-impressionistic, painterly 19th-century style, an 18th-century musical soirée at the palace at which a piece of music is being played with King Frederick himself playing the flute center stage.