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Tom Gallo is an American singer-songwriter and composer. He has been featured in Billboard Magazine , Paper Magazine and on NPR 's popular music show All Songs Considered , where his music was described as "spare and minimal, emotional and atmospheric".
Wolfe's thesis in The Painted Word was that by the 1970s, modern art had moved away from being a visual experience, and more often was an illustration of art critics' theories. Wolfe criticized avant-garde art, Andy Warhol, Willem de Kooning, and Jackson Pollock. The main target of Wolfe's book, however, was not so much the artists, as the critics.
Jon Gnagy (January 13, 1907 – March 7, 1981) was a self-taught artist most remembered for being America's original television art instructor, hosting You Are an Artist, which began on the NBC network and included analysis of paintings from the Museum of Modern Art, and his later syndicated Learn to Draw series.
Tom Scott (1928–2013) [1] was an American Abstract painter, teacher and arts administrator.His career, spanning six decades, included architecture, sculpture, furniture design, photography and video and demonstrated an underlying conviction that painting needed to embrace change to remain vital. [2]
Gilleon's paintings can be found in the permanent collections of the C.M. Russell Museum, [1] the Booth Western Art Museum, [2] and Whitney Western Art Museum.His work is also included in large private collections such as the Tom Petrie collection, the Tim Peterson collection, the Erwin and Helga Haub collection, and the Patrick and Carol Hemingway collection.
Thomas "Tom" Calloway Lea III (July 11, 1907 – January 29, 2001) was an American muralist, illustrator, artist, war correspondent, novelist, and historian. The bulk of his art and literary works were about Texas , north-central Mexico , and his World War II experience in the South Pacific and Asia .
Tom Goldenberg (born 1948) is an American artist, best known for landscape and abstract paintings. [1] [2] He has shown throughout the United States and internationally, and his work has been covered by The New York Times, [3] The New Criterion, [4] Art in America, [5] Arts Magazine, [6] Art & Antiques, [7] and The New York Observer, [8] among other publications.
In the early 1970s, after several years of making large scale paintings Nozkowski reacted to the macho scale of both Abstract Expressionism and Minimalism, and decided to work small, and on the easel — initially painting on 16-by-22-inch pieces of art-store canvas board. By 1979, he had found an audience for his work in New York.