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Newark, New Jersey, 1912. From roughly 1860 to 1920 [1] [2] painted photography backdrops were a standard feature of early photography studios. Generally of rustic or quasi-classical design, but sometimes presenting a bourgeoisie trompe-l'œil, [3] they eventually fell out of fashion with the advent of the Brownie and Kodak cameras which brought photography to the masses with concurrent ...
Grandma Moses American Primitive was the first popular catalog of works by Grandma Moses by Otto Kallir, published in 1946. Moses’ first solo exhibition had taken place in 1940 "What a Farmwife Painted", at the Galerie St. Etienne in New York. It was organized by Louis J. Caldor and Otto Kallir and since that time Kallir himself had become a ...
Image of the painting as "First color reproduction in 1948" in the 1975 abridged version of Otto Kallir's 1973 catalogue raisonné, plate 58, page 55; Otto Kallir, Grandma Moses, Complete edition, New York, Harry N. Abrams, 1973, cat. nr. 276 p. 292, plate 89, Grandma Moses record book nr. 442.
Anna Mary Robertson Moses (September 7, 1860 – December 13, 1961), or Grandma Moses, was an American folk artist. She began painting in earnest at the age of 78 and is a prominent example of a newly successful art career at an advanced age.
Black Horses, or Lower Cambridge Valley is a 1942 oil painting by the American outsider painter Grandma Moses, produced at age 82 and signed "Moses". It was in the collection of Otto Kallir in 1975. [ 1 ]
In 2021, the American Psychological Association reported that 4 in 5 psychologists are white, while less than 10% are Black, Asian, Hispanic, or of another racial or ethnic group. ... backgrounds ...
He'd warned his child against making friends with Black students at Bellarmine because "they are not like you," recounted the student, whose name is being withheld to protect their privacy.
The shifting backgrounds became increasingly bizarre, presaging things to come. The strip expanded to a full-page black-and-white Sunday strip on April 23, 1916. [d] Herriman made full use of his imagination and used the whole page in the strip's layout. [47]