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Woman with Umbrella in Front of a Hat Shop is an oil-on-canvas painting executed in 1914 by the German painter August Macke. It depicts a woman peeking into a hat shop, painted in an Expressionist style. The painting is in the collection of the Museum Folkwang in Essen. [1] [2]
Kouji Miura (三浦 糀, Miura Kōji, born 28 March 1995) is a Japanese manga artist best known for the I Love You, My Teacher and Blue Box manga series. She won a special honorable mention for new artists at the 90th Weekly Shōnen Magazine Awards in 2013, and a second honorable mention at the 91st Weekly Shōnen Magazine Awards that same year.
The leader of the SSC. Their true identity is unknown, but they wear a formal black suit and tie, and their head is covered by a white TV with a cute face drawn on the front. Slayer (スレイヤー, Sureiyā) Voiced by: Yu Serizawa [10] A young woman dressed in Gothic Lolita style who wields an umbrella and works under Shobon. Nick (ニック ...
Review: "Really cute umbrella - bright color will show up nicely on overcast, rainy days. The umbrella fits easily back into the sleeve, it's easy to open, easy to close and seems like it will ...
The composition appears natural, but the angles of the umbrellas are carefully arranged to form geometric shapes, with the main figure's bandbox and the girl's hoop adding rounded elements. The colours are largely blues and greys: a pattern of umbrella canopies across the top of the painting, and the dresses and coats of the people lower down.
In America, the film was sold as Ten Ladies in One Umbrella; in Britain, the title was Ten Girls in One Umbrella. [3] The variant title Ten Ladies in an Umbrella was used for David Shepard's 2008 restoration of the film. [4] A paper print of the film survives at the Library of Congress. [5]
This is a list of main characters from the manga Kekkaishi by Yellow Tanabe and the anime television series adapted from it. Kekkaishi is about teenagers Yoshimori Sumimura and Tokine Yukimura, heirs to rival clans of kekkai (barrier magic) users, who must defend their school from the spirits drawn to the sacred land it is built upon.
Art critic Zacharie Astruc and writer Émile Zola both viewed Renoir's Lise with a Parasol as a continuation of Monet's Camille. [48] Astruc, who was also Renoir's personal friend, described Lise as the "likeable Parisian girl in the woods", [ 49 ] and viewed the painting as part of a trinity beginning with Manet's Olympia , followed by Camille ...