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Oil paint on card board More images: 1906 to 1907 Riding Couple: Lenbachhaus, Munich 55 x 50.5 Oil paint on canvas More images: 1907 The Colourful Life: Lenbachhaus, Munich 130 x 162.5 Oil paint on canvas More images: 1908 Murnau, Burggrabenstrasse 1: Dallas Museum of Art 50.5 x 63.5 Oil paint on card board More images: 1908 Red Church: Russian ...
The painting depicts a dematerialized soccer player. The athlete's calf is seen in the center of the painting, and portions of other body parts can be seen around it. Due to its use of vibrant hues divided into sections, the painting gives the impression that rays of light are illuminating the subject. [ 1 ]
Abstract art uses visual language of shape, form, color and line to create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world. [1] Abstract art, non-figurative art, non-objective art, and non-representational art are all closely related terms. They have similar, but perhaps not identical, meanings.
Les Joueurs de football is a large oil painting on canvas with dimensions 225.4 x 183 cm (88 3/4 x 72 1/16 in.) signed and dated "Albert Gleizes 1912–13", lower left. After at least one preliminary sketch, [6] Gleizes began working on this painting in 1912 and finished it before exhibiting the work at the Salon des Indépendants, March 1913. [7]
While portraying a common topic in art history - card players while smoking - the treatment was, in the 1910s, very new. Drawing on the new abstract style pioneered by Picasso, Kanindsky and Mondrian, van Doesburg's painting was executed while he and Mondrian were in the early days of the still developing De Stijl philosophy - a reaction to the natural looking paintings that were still common ...
The Card Players, 1890–1892, Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The largest version, painted between the years 1890–1892, is the most complex, with five figures on a 134.6 x 180.3 cm (53 × 71 in) canvas. It features three card players at the forefront, seated in a semi-circle at a table, with two spectators behind.
File information Description Pablo Picasso, 1913-14, L'Homme aux cartes (Card Player), oil on canvas, 108 x 89.5 cm, Museum of Modern Art, New York.. Source trumblr, see here too: MoMA
Joan Miró, 1920, Les cartes espagnoles (The Spanish Playing Cards), oil on canvas, 63.5 x 69.5 cm, Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Source Pinterest. Date 1920 Author Joan Miró. Permission (Reusing this file) See below. Other versions Museum entry