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Midsummer Dance is an 1897 oil on canvas painting by the Swedish artist Anders Zorn. There are three versions of the painting; the most well-known one is exhibited at Nationalmuseum in Stockholm. [1] Another version, painted at the same time, is now exhibited at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow. [2]
Anders Leonard Zorn (18 February 1860 – 22 August 1920) was a Swedish artist who attained international success as a painter, sculptor, and etching artist. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] His portrait subjects include King Oscar II of Sweden and three American Presidents : Grover Cleveland , William H. Taft , and Theodore Roosevelt .
Author: National Gallery of Art: Image title: Anders Zorn (Swedish, 1860 - 1920), An Irish Girl, 1894, etching, Rosenwald Collection 1943.3.8840; Short title
In case you haven’t heard, the Tumblr girl era is back - and in a bigger way than ever before. Unlike 10 years ago, when American Apparel tennis skirts and black wire chokers inundated our ...
Emma Zorn Användare:Ainali/Listeria över konst med potentiellt svenskt motiv Wikipedia:Projekt GLAM/NM/Lista av kvinnor representerade i Nationalmuseums konstnärsdatabas och på Wikidata
The Zorn Collections, or Zornsamlingarna, is a Swedish state museum, located in Mora, dedicated to preserving the works by painter Anders Zorn. Anders Zorn was one of Sweden's internationally best known artists. His fame abroad was founded mainly on his portraiture, with his ability to capture the character and personality of the depicted person.
Isabella Stewart Gardner in Venice (1894), by Anders Zorn (Gardner Museum). In 1874, Isabella and Jack Gardner visited the Middle East, Central Europe, and Paris. Beginning in the late 1880s, they frequently traveled across America, Europe, and Asia to discover foreign cultures and expand their knowledge of art around the world.
To this end, Zorn adopts an unusual perspective, tilting the plane of the floor upwards and assuming the position of the girls himself. In all this he was foreshadowed by his Paris-based contemporary Mary Cassatt, whose 1878 Little Girl in a Blue Armchair also sought to observe the private world of her subject. [1]