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Harbour or Seascape (Spanish - Marina) is a small 1881 oil-on-canvas painting by the Spanish artist Joaquín Sorolla. He painted it early in his career. He painted it early in his career. It is now in the Sorolla Museum in Madrid.
Seascape (Slightly Cloudy) A Seascape. The Coast of the Island of Rügen in Evening Light; Seaside by Moonlight; The Seducer; The Seine at Argenteuil (Sisley) The Seine at Port-Marly, Piles of Sand; The Seine at Rouen; Shinagawa no Tsuki, Yoshiwara no Hana, and Fukagawa no Yuki; Ship of Fools (painting) Shipping by a Breakwater (J. M. W. Turner)
Northeaster is one of several paintings on marine subjects by the late-19th-century American painter Winslow Homer. Like The Fog Warning and Breezing Up, he created it during his time in Maine. [1] It is on display in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Viewers are presented a struggle of elements between the sea and the rocky shore. [2]
Here he painted The Fog Warning, one of three paintings he completed there in 1885 depicting the lives of the local fishermen. These are considered among his best works representing the subject; the others are Lost on the Grand Banks, and The Herring Net. [1] [2] [3] Many of his late paintings, like The Fog Warning, depict a single figure at ...
Alfred Wallis (18 August 1855 – 29 August 1942) was a British artist and fisherman, known for his port landscapes and shipping scenes painted in a naïve style.Having no artistic training, he began painting at the age of 70, using household paint on scraps of cardboard. [1]
The work is a seascape depicting a lone figure standing at the edge of the misty ocean surf during an overcast day. Whistler uses soft brushstrokes and thin layers of paint to create a dreamy atmosphere. The limited palette makes use of only four pigments: cobalt blue, iron-oxide yellow, vermilion, and bone black.
The sky is awash with pastel purple and blue and large clouds appear throughout the top half of the canvas. The bottom half of the canvas depicts a series of steps leading down to the docks where gondolas are haphazardly tied to posts in the water. The water slowly ebbs in from the wake of the slow-moving gondola in the middle of the painting.
Harry Aiken Vincent (1861 [1] [2]-1931) was a largely self-taught American artist known for his plein air landscape paintings. Many of his oil paintings portrayed marine scenes at the start or end of the day, featuring boats and fishing activity in New England, particularly on Cape Ann , and in France.