Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bank of America Plaza (Los Angeles) Steel 63 x 10 ft tall Bank of America Corp. Art Collection [20] Frank Putnam Flint Fountain: Julia Bracken Wendt & Henry S. Makcay: September 13, 1933 Los Angeles City Hall South Lawn
Musée d'Orsay (Paris) Portrait of Madame Brunet: 1860 (ca) 132.4 × 100 cm: J Paul Getty Museum (Los Angeles) The Spanish Singer: 1860: 147.3 × 114.3 cm: Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York) Boy Carrying a Sword: 1861: 131.1 × 93.4 cm: Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York) The Surprised Nymph: 1860 / 1861: 146 × 114 cm: Museo Nacional de ...
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City Parke-Bernet, New York [171] [174] $5-$6 million Ginevra de' Benci: Leonardo da Vinci: c. 1474–1478: February 1967: Franz Joseph II, Prince of Liechtenstein: National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Private sale [171] $5.5 million (£2.3 million) Portrait of Juan de Pareja: Diego Velázquez: c. 1650 ...
Three Quintains, 1964, Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Four Arches, 1973, 333 S. Hope Street, Bunker Hill, Los Angeles; Spinal Column, 1968, San Diego Museum of Art; Le Faucon (The Falcon), 1963, Stanford University, Palo Alto; Button Flower, 1959, University of California, Los Angeles; Big Crinkly, 1969, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Los Angeles got the 2028 games as a consolation prize when Paris was picked for 2024. Back in 1932, LA hosted its first Olympics. The city was the only bidder for the games at a time marred by the ...
The emergence of abstract art coincided with the invention of Cubism in Paris in the first decade of the 20th century. Paris remained the centre of gravity for later art movements like Futurism, Purism, Vorticism, Cubo-Futurism, Dada, Constructivism and Surrealism until the outbreak of World War II and the Nazi persecution of "degenerate art", which precipitated a mass migration of artists and ...
Kim Kardashian attends the 2022 Costume Institute Benefit celebrating In America: An Anthology of Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 02, 2022 in New York City.
It sits atop the 456-foot-long trench which allows people to walk under and around the massive rock. The move started on February 28, 2012, and completed on March 10, 2012. The art piece was opened on June 24, 2012, by Heizer, Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, and Los Angeles City Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. [86]