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In the following list, the artist's name is followed by the location of one of their works and its page number in the guide. For artists with more than one work in the collection, or for works by artists not listed here, see the Philadelphia Museum of Art website or the corresponding Wikimedia Commons category. Of artists listed, only 9 are women.
Henry P. McIlhenny (1910–1986), art and antique connoisseur, philanthropist, curator, and Philadelphia Museum of Art chairman; John Moran (1831–1902), photographer and artist; Alice Neel (1900–1984), painter; Albert Newsam (1809–1864), born deaf and former artist [8] Linda Nochlin (1931–2017), feminist art historian and Bryn Mawr ...
Articles and categories related to notable artists presently or previously from Philadelphia The main article for this category is List of people from Philadelphia . For more information, see Culture of Philadelphia .
Celebrating 50 years of The Philadelphia International Records with a list of essential Philly Soul tracks. 20 Best Philly Sound Songs of All Time Marcus Shorter
2004 – Dreamland Artist Club – Creative Time, New York, NY. ESPO co-curated and participated in a project at Coney Island. [26] 2008 – Waterboard Thrill Ride – part of Creative Time's Democracy In America Exhibition, Coney Island, NY [27] 2009 – A Love Letter For You – A The Mural Arts Program collection of murals in Philadelphia. [28]
In 1960, he recorded "On the Way to Cape May", a song about a man and woman falling in love on their way to Cape May, New Jersey. The song, written by Maurice "Buddy" Nugent, is a summertime anthem for the Philadelphia, Delaware Valley, and South Jersey areas. The song became popular without the push of a major record label.
In November 1967, singer Chris Farlowe was the first to release a version of the song, produced by Mike d'Abo. [3] It became a #33 hit in the United Kingdom for Immediate Records. This arrangement of the song included Dave Greenslade's piano blues-scale riff. The song was included as track 13 (of 14) on Farlowe's 1969 compilation album The Last ...
After years as a gallerist in Philadelphia, the businessman in Milou had him looking to other larger markets where more people would be willing to invest in quality artwork at higher price points. [22] After closing Galleria 1903 and leaving Philadelphia, Milou moved to Miami where he opened his fourth gallery in May 2008. [1]