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This file comes from the Roger Puta collection, which passed to Mel Finzer.They were scanned/posted by Marty Bernard and are in the public domain. Attribution to "Roger Puta" is not required for a public domain image, but should be done as a matter of courtesy to a major Commons contributor.
The following year, Dunkley received a bronze medal for "notable contribution to the art of the world" at the New York World's Fair. Three works, "Back to Nature", "Jerboa" and "Pastures" were exhibited at the Institute of Jamaica's 1945 Survey of West Indian Painting, a show that also traveled to Canada. Four paintings including "Banana ...
Albany Institute of History and Art, New York West Rock, New Haven: 1849: Oil on canvas: 27 + 1 ⁄ 8 in × 40 + 1 ⁄ 8 in (690 mm × 1,020 mm) New Britain Museum of American Art, Connecticut [4] Mountain Landscape: 1849: Oil on canvas: 34.6 × 48.5 cm: Brauer Museum of Art, Valparaiso, Indiana Above the Clouds at Sunrise: 1849: Oil on canvas ...
Works by both Basil Watson and his son Kai, a painter, were exhibited in New York at the fifth annual "Art Off the Main" exposition in October 2008, sponsored by the Savacou Gallery. [7] That December, Watson was added to the list of artists invited to provide works for the National Gallery of Jamaica's National Biennial exhibition. [8]
Jamaican art dates back to Jamaica's indigenous Taino Indians who created zemis, carvings of their gods, for ritual spiritual purposes. The demise of this culture after European colonisation heralded a new era of art production more closely related to traditional tastes in Europe, created by itinerant artists keen to return picturesque images ...
Artist died more than 70 years ago public domain art (5 F) U.S. prior to 1923 public domain art (232 F) Media in category "Public domain art"
Dorothy Henriques-Wells (1926 – 5 March 2018) was a Jamaican painter and art teacher. She is known for her sparse, vibrant watercolors depicting the plants and landscapes of Jamaica. She has works in the National Gallery of Jamaica and she received the Silver Musgrave Medal for Art in 1987. [1]
Ebony Grace Patterson [1] (born 1981, Kingston, Jamaica) is a Jamaican-born visual artist and educator. She is known for her large and colorful tapestries created out of various materials such as, glitter, sequins, fabric, toys, beads, faux flowers, jewelry, and other embellishments.