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314 Sentences With "watercolorist"

How to use watercolorist in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "watercolorist" and check conjugation/comparative form for "watercolorist". Mastering all the usages of "watercolorist" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Williams, 31, is a watercolorist, calligrapher and custom stationery designer in Columbus, Ohio.
My father is a watercolorist and paints portraits; my mother makes charcoal and pencil botanicals.
LAMBERTVILLE "The Fleeting and the Eternal," works by the watercolorist Alex McKibbin and the photographer Joseph Zogorski.
Gladys Nilsson, a bold watercolorist rooted in Chicago's surrealist '603s art group, on finally finding solo success.
Anyone can read "Mein Kampf" who has the stomach for the maunderings of a self-pitying, failed Austrian watercolorist.
The full-color game board is illustrated by Holly Exley, an illustrator and watercolorist who works and lives in the United Kingdom.
His father, Warwick, a schoolteacher and watercolorist, died when he was an infant, and he was raised by his schoolteacher mother, the former Alix Maarlin.
Like his father, Mr. Walcott was an accomplished watercolorist; his landscape paintings appear on his book jackets, and in "Tiepolo's Hound" they are interspersed through the book.
In addition to being a watercolorist, Emily Noyes Vanderpoel was also the author of Color Problems, widely overlooked, yet staggering turn-of-the-century book on color theory.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Though her name is virtually unknown today, Emily Noyes Vanderpoel enjoyed a modest reputation as a watercolorist at the turn of the 1483th century.
Jessica Tcherepnine, a British-born watercolorist whose meticulous, naturalistic depictions of flowers, fruits and vegetables established her as one of the world's leading creators of botanical art, died on Dec.
I have about 1,500 books on painting and photography and even wrote an art book one time, published by Rizzoli under my real name, John Camp, on the American watercolorist John Stuart Ingle.
Pence, a watercolorist herself, has been a board member of the art therapy program Tracy's Kids since 2011, and helped raise funds to hire two full-time art therapists for patients at Riley Hospital for Children in her native Indiana.
"I want to get more people aware of art therapy, not only for children who are going through an illness but adults as well who have gone through trauma," Pence, a watercolorist who has illustrated two children's books with her daughter Charlotte, told The New York Times in 2017.
Mountrigi — which borrows its name from Switzerland's Mount Rigi, also known as the Queen of the Mountains and as the muse for a series of paintings by the famed British watercolorist J. M. W. Turner — quietly amassed exclusive broadcast rights to the World Cup in much of the Americas, from Mexico down to Argentina, through 240.
It is a technique he has harnessed and developed for his own purposes, placing him in a league that includes such artists as the late Belgian watercolorist Jean-Michel Folon (1934-2005), whose gently humorous fantasy images are imbued with a deep sense of humanism; David Levine (1926-2009), who was best known for his clever caricatures of literary figures in the New York Review of Books but who also painted exquisite watercolor views of Coney Island, Venice, and Rome; and Gabriel Garbow, a Minnesota-born, California-based contemporary artist whose homoerotic images of men and water revel in watercolor's transparency and its ability to convey emotion evoked by light.
Annie Cooper Boyd (1880–1935) was an American feminist, watercolorist and diarist.
Hermanus Ellen (Herman) Mees (September 19, 1880 in Veendam – November 28, 1964 in Zuidlaren) was a Dutch artist, active as painter, watercolorist, draftsman, pastelist, lithographer, and academy lecturer.Herman Mees ; male / Netherlandish ; painter, watercolorist, draftsman, pastelist, lithographer, academy lecturer. at rkd.nl, 2015.
The watercolorist Lu Tin was another of his pupils, and expressed deep respect for his teachings.
Ebba Tesdorpf (23 January 1851 – 22 February 1920) was an illustrator and watercolorist from Hamburg, Germany.
Clara Augusta Amalie Emma Lobedan (1840-1918) was a German painter, watercolorist, pastelist, ceramicist, and craftsman.
Amelia Montague Watson (1856-1934) was an American watercolorist well known for her work in Martha's Vineyard.
In 1913 Rush returned to Europe with her friend, the watercolorist Alice Schille, visiting Belgium and France.
Emilio Sánchez Perrier (1855-1907) was a Spanish landscape painter and watercolorist who also painted Orientalist subjects.
Robert Kuven (21 August 1901, Strasbourg – 25 April 1983, Strasbourg) was a German/French painter and watercolorist.
The American watercolorist Charles E. Burchfield featured the House in a painting made during his life in Salem.
Carolyn Phinney Sweetser (1863-1952) was an American watercolorist and amateur botanist who lived and worked in Oregon.
Charles Avery Aiken Charles Avery Aiken (29 September 1872 in Georgia, Vermont - 1965) was an American painter, and watercolorist.
Golvin was the father of the architect, archeologist and watercolorist Jean- Claude Golvin and of the artist Jacques Golvin.
Mary Fraser Wesselhoeft (February 15, 1873 – March 23, 1971) was an American graphic artist, watercolorist, and stained-glass artist.
He was an avid watercolorist and oil painter. Seymour was an Episcopalian. He was a member of The Players.
The British watercolorist and lithographer Anthony Raine Barker was an enthusiastic supporter and member of the club's committee in the 1920s.
Elisabeth Andrae (1930s) Louise Elisabeth Andrae (3 August 1876, Leipzig – 1945, Dresden) was a German Post-Impressionist landscape painter and watercolorist.
Władysław Skoczylas (1928) Władysław Skoczylas (4 April 1883, Wieliczka - 8 April 1934, Warsaw) was a Polish watercolorist, woodcutter, sculptor and art teacher.
Eugène Viala (before 1900) Eugène Viala (8 September 1859, Salles-Curan - 5 March 1913, Salles-Curan) was a French watercolorist and engraver.
Stepan Fyodorovich Alexandrovsky (Russian: Степан Фёдорович Александровский; (25 December 1842, Riga - 1 February 1906, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian portrait painter and watercolorist.
Adelia Sarah Gates (October 24, 1825 - September 21, 1912) was an American illustrator of botanical specimens.Adelia Sarah Gates, AskArt Her early work was as an elementary teacher and decorative watercolorist. She was an amateur decorative watercolorist and painter long before she was able to advance further into scientific illustration methods and to travel widely on collecting and documentation expeditions later in her life.
From 1926 to the early 1940s he served as Chair of the University of Washington Department of Architecture. He was also a noted watercolorist.
Eugène Louis Gabriel Isabey (22 July 1803, in Paris - 25 April 1886, in Montévrain) was a French painter, lithographer and watercolorist in the Romantic style.
Jean-Jacques Champin, by David d'Angers (1850) Jean-Jacques Champin (8 September 1796, Sceaux - 25 February 1860, Paris) was a French painter, watercolorist and lithographer.
Yvonne Skargon (1931-2010), was a British wood engraver, watercolorist, and typographer who was best known for her work related to botanical and culinary subjects.
Village Church - Before the Sermon (1890s) Richard Bisschop (21 June 1849 in Leeuwarden - 22 March 1926 in Bergen) was a Dutch painter, graphic artist and watercolorist.
Self-portrait (c.1897) Portrait of the Artists' Mother Andrea Robbi (28 May 1864, Carrara - 25 February 1945, Samedan) was a Swiss landscape painter and watercolorist.
Ralph (Ralf) Christian Henricksen (1907 in Chicago, IL, United States – 1975 in East Lansing, MI, USA) was an American born art educator, watercolorist, painter, and muralist.
His first love was art, which took him to the Pratt Art Institute of New York where he became a watercolorist and an illustrator for various magazines.
The Shipwreck (1775) Hendrik Kobell (13 September 1751 – 3 August 1779) was an 18th-century landscape and marine painter, etcher, draftsman and watercolorist from the Northern Netherlands.
Hobbe Smith (c.1895) Hobbe Smith (7 December 1862, Witmarsum – 1 May 1942, Amsterdam) was a Dutch painter, watercolorist and graphic designer, in the Post-Impressionist style.
Der Kiureghian's main hobby is painting watercolors which he learned from his father, Sumbat, who was a professional artist and watercolorist. He paints landscapes and still life.
Self-portrait (1901) Portrait of his wife, Marie (1902) Emil Dill (15 April 1861, Pratteln - 23 May 1938, Liestal) was a Swiss painter, watercolorist and art teacher.
Weidenaar, Reynold H. “The Forgotten Art of Mezzotint.” American Artist. September 1948. Weidenaar, Reynold H. “Printmaker into Watercolorist.” American Artist 28, no. 9 (November 1964), p. 36+.
Self-portrait (mid-1920s) Émile Laboureur, known as Jean Émile (16 August 1877, Nantes16 June 1943, near Pénestin) was a French painter, designer, engraver, watercolorist, lithographer, and illustrator.
Hector Giacomelli Hector Giacomelli (April 1, 1822 in Paris - December 1, 1904 in Menton), was a French watercolorist, engraver and illustrator, best known for his paintings of birds.
Donald Teague (1897 - December 13, 1991) was an American magazine illustrator and watercolorist. He illustrated many magazines, and he painted in the art colony of Carmel-by-the-Sea.
Self-portrait (1926) Józef Rapacki (19 March 1871, Warsaw - 31 January 1929, Olszanka) was a Polish painter, watercolorist and graphic designer; best known for his nostalgic landscapes of Mazovia.
George Emerick Essig (September 2, 1838 – December 15, 1923) was an American painter, watercolorist, and etcher from Philadelphia. He specialized in marine scenes, particularly of the New Jersey coast.
Joseph-Marius Cabasson (date unknown) Sailboat Leaving the Old Port of Marseille Joseph-Marius Cabasson (20 December 1841, Marseille - 4 August 1920, Marseille) was a French painter and watercolorist.
Sergey Solomko (c.1920) Sergey Sergeyevich Solomko (; 22 August 1867 in Saint Petersburg – 2 February 1928 in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois) was a Russian painter, watercolorist, illustrator and designer.
At the Shoe Shop A Serenade in the Palace Ettore Simonetti (1857, Rome - 1909, Rome) was an Italian painter and watercolorist, who specialized in Orientalist works and historical genre scenes.
Gifford Beal, The Fisherman, 1922, Brooklyn Museum Gifford Beal (January 24, 1879 – February 5, 1956) was an American artist noted for his work as a painter, watercolorist, printmaker and muralist.
Leon R. Pescheret in Gallery Studio Leon Rene Pescheret also known as Léon- René Pescheret (March 15, 1892 - February 23, 1971) was a British-American designer, watercolorist, etcher, and illustrator.
A Reconstruction of the Ancient Port of Rome (Ostia?) Justo Ruiz Luna (1865, Cádiz9 March 1926 Cádiz) was a Spanish painter, watercolorist and pastellist; best known for his maritime scenes.
King Olof Skötkonung being baptized by Bishop Sigfrid The Italian, by Ann Radcliffe Per Emanuel Limnell (24 March 1766, Karlskrona2 March 1861, Stockholm) was a Swedish decorative painter and watercolorist.
First page of the commonplace book of Phebe Folger Coleman, Houghton Library Phebe Folger Coleman (November 10, 1771 - February 5, 1857) was a diarist, poet, and watercolorist from Nantucket, Massachusetts.
Leroy Allen (1951-2007), was an award-winning watercolorist and figurative artist. His realistic style focused on African American life and community, and won him more than 30 art awards nationally.
Bernard Karfiol, (May 6, 1886 - August 16, 1952) was an American painter and watercolorist. His work was indebted to French modernism and wished to synthesize Hellenic classical painting and modernist abstract concerns.
Morra Players The Halt of the Caravan Gustavo Simoni (5 November 1845, Rome - 10 May 1926, Palestrina) was an Italian painter, watercolorist and art teacher. He is best known his Orientalist scenes.
Caesar Augustus at the Tomb of Alexander A Woman with Her Pet Monkey François Schommer (20 November 1850, Paris29 October 1935, Neuilly-sur-Seine) was a French painter, watercolorist and decorative artist.
Lothar von Seebach (1880) Baron Lothar von Seebach (or Lothaire de Seebach; 26 March 1853, Fessenbach, now part of Offenburg - 23 September 1930, Strasbourg) was an Alsatian painter, designer, watercolorist and engraver.
Theodore Criley (1880 - October 5, 1930) was an American hotel manager and artist. He joined the art colony in Carmel-by-the-Sea, where he was a watercolorist, portrait painter, and wood engraver.
Joann Anton Venuto, also styled as Jan Antonín Venuto, (24 May 1746 – 1 April 1833) was a Czech clergyman, watercolorist, draftsman, and cartographer. He specialized in the paintings of Bohemian and Moravian castles.
Carmelo Fernández Páez was a Venezuelan engineer, soldier, cartoonist, lithographer and watercolorist. He was born in the town of Guama, Yaracuy State, on June 30, 1809 and died in Caracas on February 9, 1887.
Judson married the daughter of watercolorist Sydney J. Yard. He died on November 4, 1946 in Carmel-by-the-Sea, at age 82. His work can be seen at the Oakland Museum of California.
He was an accomplished watercolorist, who painted Egyptian landscapes in the outdoors. For example, Christian monasteries standing in the heart of the desert in a pure style reflecting their almost mystical austerity and severity.
Elizabeth Keith (30 April 1887 – 1956) was a Scottish artist and writer. She was a print-maker and watercolorist whose works were significantly influenced by her travels to Japan, China, Korea and the Philippines.
Potter retired in the mid-1960s and she moved to Fort Myers, Florida, with Meyer. Meyer died in 1976. Potter later married Frank Deats, an architectural coordinator and watercolorist. Deats predeceased Potter in 1983.
Gerry Peirce (1900–1968) was an American artist who specialized as a watercolorist and printmaker. He is best known for his dry point plate etchings and ethereal watercolors of Arizona desert landscapes, cactus, mountains.
He was born in Thundersley in Essex to the historical draughtsman and painter Alan Sorrell (1904–1974)"Radio and the Artists: Richard Sorrell" BBC Radio 4 website (accessed May 28, 2012) and watercolorist Elizabeth Sorrell.
The Capuchin's Speech in Wallenstein's Camp Pius Ferdinand Messerschmitt (30 May 1858, Bamberg - 29 October 1915, Munich) was a German painter, illustrator and watercolorist; noted for genre and historical scenes, most of which include horses.
Throughout his life, Thomas was an avid watercolorist, noted for his soft, meticulous technique, particularly appropriate to the many landscapes he painted. Thomas completely retired from practice in 1949. He died in Seattle in 1953.
His father, Gabriel Armand, was also a painter."Dictionnaire des pseudonyms", p. 22, by Georges d'Heylli, 1977. He began his art studies with Thomas CoutureDictionnaire Bénézit and was originally a watercolorist as well as a painter.
Valentina Vasilievna Monakhova (; August 23, 1932, Leningrad, USSR) is a Soviet Russian painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, and art teacher, living and working in Saint Petersburg regarded as one of representatives of the Leningrad school of painting.
As a modern painter and a watercolorist, he created his portraits of ladies named Muses or Albanian virgin beauties and also landscapes of his wondering fantasies and memories from the past in the technique of watercolor.
The with a Ferry (and an atypical factory chimney) The (city gate) Jan Elias Kikkert (24 June 1843, Amsterdam – 11 April 1925, Leiden) was a Dutch lithographer and watercolorist, best known for his street scenes of Leiden.
A picture of Brunet in 1910 Llorenç Brunet i Forroll (1872-1939), also known in Spanish as Lorenzo Brunet, was a Spanish illustrator, caricaturist and watercolorist. He signed his works as L. Bru-Net or Bru-Net.
Pierre-Georges Jeanniot Pierre-Georges Jeanniot (1848-1934) was a Swiss-French Impressionist painter, designer, watercolorist, and engraver who was born in Geneva, Switzerland, and died in France. His work often depicts the modern life in Paris.
Heinrich Ludwig Philippi (1865) "After the Rain, Comes the Sunshine" Heinrich Ludwig Philippi (9 June 1838, Kleve – 16 September 1874, Düsseldorf) was a German history painter; associated with the Düsseldorfer Malerschule. He was primarily known as a watercolorist.
While studying at the SAIC, Norma Bassett met and would later marry Arthur William Hall, a fellow student and artist known today as an etcher and watercolorist. She lived much of her life in Kansas and New Mexico.
Romantic Rhine landscape with ruin at sunset Lonely Fisherman at Twilight, 1841 Peter Ludwig Kühnen (also known as Pieter Lodewyk Kuhnen or Pierre-Louis Kuhnen) (14 February 1812 - 23 November 1877) was a German painter, watercolorist and lithographer.
Presumed Self-portrait (1919) On the Lake Shore Félix Maurice Antony Troncet (23 May 1879, Buzançais - 26 March 1939, Paris) was a French watercolorist, pastelist, engraver and illustrator. He is best remembered for portraits, nudes and genre scenes.
Return of the Herd A Party in the Tavern Rafael Senet Pérez (7 October 1856, Seville - 1926, Seville) was a Spanish painter and watercolorist, known for his costumbrista and Orientalist scenes. He also created numerous vedute of Venice.
Maurice Logan (March 21, 1886 — March 19, 1977) was an American watercolorist, commercial artist and arts educator. He was a member of the Society of Six, and a professor at the California College of the Arts in Oakland, California.
Betsy Repelius (date unknown) Young Woman in Traditional Costume. Johanna Elisabeth Repelius, known as Betsy (31 January 1848 in Amsterdam - 23 January 1921 in Amsterdam) was a Dutch painter and watercolorist who specialized in simple, one-figure, genre scenes.
Self-portrait (date unknown) Stanisław Noakowski (21 March 1867, Nieszawa - 1 October 1928, Warsaw) was a Polish architect, watercolorist and art historian. His work was part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1928 Summer Olympics.
Catherine Tharp Altvater (1907-1984) was an American oil painter and watercolorist. Her watercolor paintings hang in the Museum of Modern Art and several other museums. Altvater was the first woman to hold office in the American Watercolor Society.
Leah Schneider Traugott (16 January 1924, Cincinnati, Ohio – 15 January 2018, Zionsville, Indiana), also known as Leah S. Traugott, was an American award- winning watercolorist and educator. She exhibited in more than eighty oneperson shows and numerous group exhibitions.
The Académie des Beaux-Arts (, Academy of Fine Arts) is a French learned society. It is one of the five academies of the Institut de France. The current President of the Academy (2016) is , a noted engraver and watercolorist.
Alexander Sokolov (1889) Ivan Ivanovich Yendogurov (Russian: Иван Иванович Ендогуров; 23 October 1861, Kronstadt – 17 May 1898, Capri) was a Russian landscape painter and watercolorist; associated with the Peredvizhniki. His younger brother, Sergey was also a well-known artist.
Saya Saung (1898–1952) was an early Burmese watercolorist who adopted the Western style of painting and became famous in Burma for his landscape works. He is less known for his portraits, about seven of which have surfaced in recent years.
During his career, he wrote 12 botanical names for plant species. He married Esther Emily Ogden, in San Bernardino, California, in 1899. She was a niece of Peter Skene Ogden, a Hudson's Bay Company explorer. She was very watercolorist, and painter.
Eventually in 1989, she was able to do some professional level studies with watercolorist Gustavo Alaniz for two years, drawing landscapes in charcoal and then worked in pastels. Later teachers have included Robin Bond, José Hernández Delgadillo and Laura Elenes.
Winter Landscape Sergey Ivanovich Yendogurov (Russian: Сергей Иванович Ендогуров; 11 October 1864, Saint Petersburg - 4 December 1894, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian landscape painter and watercolorist in the Neo- Classical style. His brother, Ivan, was also a well-known landscape painter.
Self-portrait (date unknown) Eduard Gurk (17 November 1801 – 31 March 1841) was an Austrian landscape painter and printmaker, who worked for the Habsburg Court under the Emperors Francis I and Ferdinand I. He was especially well known as a watercolorist.
Dick Stapel, 1979 Dick Simon Stapel (born 10 August 1942) is a Dutch portrait painterDick Stapel; watercolorist, etcher, pen artist, painter, draftsman at rkd.nl, 2015. known for his portraits mounted on large format, painted with a light touch.Elseviers magazine, Vol.
John Frederick Yeackle (1940-2011) a professional watercolorist for over 30 years, and recognized as one of the Nation's top wildlife artists. Known primarily for his watercolor paintings of the American wild turkey."", Fredlund Gallery, Winter Park, Florida. Retrieved 2012-02-12.
Born in East Windsor Hill, Connecticut on March 2, 1856, to Sarah (Bolles) and Reed Watson, she received a private education. Watson became a watercolorist. Her younger sister, Edith, also painted watercolors and exhibited with Amelia, before becoming a successful photographer in Canada.
The youngest brother, Robert Lewellen Kitson, arrived in the United States following his mother's death in 1898. Robert displayed some watercolors in the English Royal Academy of the Arts. He was a watercolorist of whose work very little is known to survive.
Saint Casilda (The Miracle of the Roses) José Valentín Nogales y Sevilla (3 November 1860, Málaga - 28 November 1939, Málaga) was a Spanish painter and watercolorist, associated with the Málaga School of Painting. He specialized in landscapes and scenes that involved flowers.
Kostis Gimossoulis (; born 1960) is a Greek poet and novelist. He read Law at the University of Athens. He is also a draughtsman and watercolorist, and Μαύρος Χρυσός (Golden Black), a book he published in 2001, contains poems, stories and watercolors he produced.
His Mémoires et souvenirs (3 vols., 1888), compiled from his notes by his nieces, the vicomtesse de Bardonnet and the baronne Laurençeau, are of major interest for the Revolution and the Restoration. His wife, the Baroness Hyde de Neuville, was a noted watercolorist.
Gabriel Lory the Younger, Swiss National Library Gabriel Lory the Younger, also known as Mathias Gabriel Lori (21 June 1784, Bern - 25 August 1846, Bern) was a Swiss landscape painter, etcher, watercolorist and illustrator. His father was the painter, Gabriel Lory the Elder.
Rao is married to Monica Rao, a professional watercolorist and graphic designer from Bangalore. They have two sons. His grandmother was from Mangalore. Monica Rao is a graduate of Nirmala Niketan Polytechnic Institute in India with a diploma in commercial art/design.
Richard Gach (October 31, 1930-December 25, 1991) born in Itzling (then the municipality Gnigl-Itzling, today district of Salzburg), died in Horn, was an Austrian architect, sketch artist, and watercolorist.[Bettina Marchart and Markus Holzweber (ref. Ed.): Garser stories. Gars am Kamp.
Saya Saung was of royal blood, perhaps partly accounting for another nickname in Burma “The Prince of Watercolor”, a possible double-entendre which reflected both his family background and his skills as a watercolorist. As an adolescent he attended St. Peter's School in Mandalay and in adulthood served as a clerk in the Forestry Department and later taught as an art teacher at St. Paul's High School. He lived in Rangoon but also spent much of the year in Mandalay, his home. Because he lived in both Mandalay and Rangoon, he passed on his skills as a transparent watercolorist to painters in both communities.
Barse Miller (January 24, 1904 - January 21, 1973) was an American watercolorist, muralist, illustrator, and art educator. He was a professor of Art at Queens College for 26 years. His work is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Alfred Bergström, from the Svenskt Porträttgalleri XX Winter Scene on the Stockholm Waterfront Alfred Maurits Bergström (15 January 1869, Stockholm - 15 November 1930, Tullinge) was a Swedish artist and art professor at the Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts who worked as a painter, watercolorist and etcher.
Lev Feliksovich Lagorio (Russian: Лев Феликсович Лагорио; 9 December 1826, Feodosia - 17 November 1905, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian painter and watercolorist, known primarily for his seascapes and maritime scenes. He was associated with the "Cimmerian" school of painting, composed of artists who worked in Southern Crimea.
Jameson's brush name when painting landscapes is CEDAR. He studied with watercolorist Jeanne Dobie, AWS, NWS, who is the author of Making Color Sing. He has won several national level-awards and honors. In 2009, Jameson was elected to be a member of the National Watercolour Society.
Johannes Bosboom, by Charles Dankmeijer View of the Paris Quay and the Cathedral at Rouen Johannes Bosboom (born The Hague, February 18, 1817 – died there September 14, 1891) was a Dutch painter and watercolorist of the Hague School, known especially for his paintings of church interiors.
Lucien Parent's children. Lucien Parent, born Pierre Ovide Lucien Parent on April 29, 1893, was a prolific architect, designer, illustrator, and watercolorist. He and his wife Florence Courteau had a family of nine children. He was also a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.
Ellen Louise Clacy (1853–1916) was a professional English watercolorist. She participated numerous times with the Royal Academy throughout her career from 1870 to 1916, and her works include landscapes, scenes of rural life, and history painting. She was the daughter of travel writer Ellen Louise Clacy.
The couple bonded over their mutual love of France. The couple had two children: Margo Julia (born in August 1912) and Stuart MacReynolds (born July 1914). Wyeth was described as nervous, and correct to the point of rudeness. He was an avid watercolorist, figure skater, and hiker.
She also furthered her art career on the side, while modeling for her brother. Gesina became a successful watercolorist. During her lifetime, she collected love poetry, and she made illustrations to coincide with it as well. Some albums of her work even included pieces dedicated to songs about love.
The watercolorist Francisco Bonnín Guerín (born 1874) was a native of Santa Cruz, and founded a school to encourage the arts. Óscar Domínguez was born in La Laguna in 1906 and is famed for his versatility. He belonged to the surrealist school, and invented the technique known as decalcomania.
Henry Fukuhara (April 25, 1913 – January 31, 2010) was an American watercolorist teacher. Fukuhara was interned with his parents, who were Japanese immigrants, at the Manzanar internment camp in California's Owens Valley during World War II. He would later reveal that he looked at spots for potential graves at Manzanar in a 1992 interview with the Los Angeles Times, "Seemed like a joke, but that's what we did." A prolific watercolorist during his career, Fukuhara would later use the Manzanar relocation camp to teach workshops on abstract watercolor painting to students beginning in 1998. Henry Fukuhara died of natural causes at a nursing home in Yorba Linda, California, on January 31, 2010, at the age of 96.
Gesina ter Borch (15 November 1633 – 16 April 1690) was a Dutch Golden Age watercolorist and draftswoman, whose work mostly consists of watercolor paintings in albums. Most of her work captured her observations of family life, current events, and fashionable people. In addition to the visual arts, Gesina wrote love poetry.
George Booth Post (September 29, 1906 – March 26, 1997) was an American watercolorist and art educator. He was an important contributor of the California style watercolor movement (also known as the California School of watercolor, part of the California Scene Painting school) of the mid 1920s until the mid 1950s.
Self-portrait (1900s) Francis Prout Mahony, also known as Frank Mahony, (4 December 1862 – 28 June 1916) was an Australian painter, watercolorist and illustrator. Although christened "Francis Mahony", he later added "Prout" and usually signed his work as "Frank P. Mahony". It is apparently unknown why he chose to add "Prout".
With more than a thousand colors to be named, Ridgway devised some of his own imaginative identifiers (such as Dragons-blood Red and Pleroma Blue). He also paid tribute to colleagues, including Rood (with colors like Rood's Lavender), Bradley (Bradley's Blue), field guide pioneer Frank Chapman, watercolorist Samuel Prout, and others.
Prior to IKB, he worked for Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, Robert A. M. Stern Architects, and Diller + Scofidio. Barkley is a watercolorist who has illustrated several gardening books and maintains an organic garden. He notes the influence of both practices on his painterly approach to the composition of houses and gardens.
His father, , was a watercolorist. He began as a pianist, but suffered from hand cramps and switched to composing instead. Gradually, he turned to painting, taking lessons from his father, then studying oil painting with Antoine Vollon, who had a permanent influence on his style. Later, he would write Vollon's biography.
Fuller was also an accomplished watercolorist and a member of the Leonia, New Jersey art colony.Mattingly, Paul H. Suburban Landscapes. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001. He drew Oaky Doaks from his home in Tenafly, New Jersey, where his studio, painted light green and curtained in gold, overlooked his back lawn.
Renina Katz Pedreira (born 1925, Rio de Janeiro), known as Regina Katz, is a Brazilian engraver, printmaker, and watercolorist. Together with Edith Behring and Fayga Ostrower, she is part of the generation of Brazilian women engravers that art historian Geraldo Edson de Andrade calls the "matriarchy of engraving in Brazil".
Daniël Dupré (20 December 1751 – 4 June 1817) was a Dutch engraver, painter, draftsman, and watercolorist. in the RKD Was born in Amsterdam and primarily lived and worked there. He primarily painted and printed depictions of buildings and landscapes. Daniël studied under Jurriaan Andriessen at the Stadstekenacademie (City Drawing School).
Autumn Still Life, a watercolor, is in the collection of right Grace Veronica Kelly (January 31, 1877 – January 10, 1950) was an American painter and art critic. An accomplished watercolorist, she was a member of the Cleveland School of artists, and served as The Plain Dealer's principal art critic from 1926 to 1949.
Emmi Walther (date unknown) Japanese Dolls, oil on canvas, 35.5 x 44 cm, The Jack Daulton Collection, Los Altos Hills, California. Emmi Louise Walther (30 October 1860, Hamburg - 11 September 1936, Dachau) was a German painter, graphic artist and watercolorist. Most of her works are in the Art Nouveau or Symbolist styles.
Teresa Aguilar Suro (1931–2017) was a Mexican watercolorist, painter, and gallery director. Aguilar-Suro was born in 1931 in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico. She studied art at Academy of San Carlos in Mexico City for three years during the 1950s. She was formally the director of Galería del Claustro de Sor Juana.
There he met Agide Noelli. After the war, he met Severino Furletti, also a watercolorist, who became a colleague for the next decade. He began exhibiting in the 1950s and 1960s in Genoa, Asti, and Cremona. In 1973, he exhibited in the Palazzo Civico of Cuneo, and in the Biblioteca Civica of Alba.
Victor Kuzmich Teterin (; October 25, 1922 in Bakharevo, Tver Province, Soviet Russia – October 1, 1991 in Leningrad, USSR) was a Russian painter, watercolorist, and art teacher, who lived and worked in Leningrad is regarded as one of the important representatives of the Leningrad school of painting.Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School.
Wood enrolled at the Art Center in Pasadena, where he studied water color. He became a respected watercolorist and painter. He was hired as a technical artist for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Canada Flintridge, California in 1958. He later served as a spokesperson and public relations officer for the Laboratory as well.
Self-portrait (c.1910) The Sandpit, black chalk and watercolor The Haywagon Carriages with Waiting Coachmen Wilhelmus "Willem" Hendrikus Petrus Johannes de Zwart (16 May 1862 The Hague – 11 December 1931 The Hague) was a Dutch painter, engraver, and watercolorist with many connections to the Hague School and later associated with the Amsterdam Impressionism movement.
Lynch was born on July 3, 1943 in Salt Lake City, Utah. As the second of four children, Lynch was raised in West Texas. Lynch's father was a lawyer; Lynch's mother was a noted watercolorist and an amateur pianist who influenced him to create music as a child. Other early influences included hymns and soundtracks.
Elena Petrovna Skuin (, April 2, 1908, Ekaterinodar, Russian Empire – 1986, Leningrad, USSR) was a Soviet, Russian – Latvian painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, and art teacher, lived and worked in Leningrad, a member of the Leningrad Union of Artists,Directory of Members of the Union of Artists of USSR. Volume 2.- Moscow: Soviet artist, 1979. - p.356.
Self-portrait (date unknown) Vicente Cutanda y Toraya (1850, Cella or Madrid - 1925, Toledo) was a Spanish painter and watercolorist. He is best known for historical scenes and social realist depictions of the lives of working people. One of his favorite places to find subjects for those works was in the Basque country of Biscay.
His father was the artist, . His first lessons were with a watercolorist named Fritz Zeiss. From 1855 to 1858, he studied with Albert Zimmermann in Munich, then accompanied him on a study trip to Milan. The following year, he was commissioned by Prince Georg to create frescoes at the Villa Carlotta on Lake Como.
Kryvbas Theatre began its activities in 1931, and three years later was incorporated with the Shevchenko Theater. There are also the Doll Theatre and Movement Theatre. Kryvyi Rih is noted as the birthplace Eugenie Gershoy. She emigrated to the United States with her family in 1903, and there became an American sculptor and watercolorist.
She became a watercolorist and an oil painter, and she was also a woodblock printer. Frandsen married H. Edward Neslen, and became known as Florence Neslen. She died on July 20, 2000, and she was buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Salt Lake City. Two of her paintings are at the Springville Museum of Art.
Don O'Neill (1924–2007) was a United States watercolor artist most noted for his depictions of historic downtown Riverside, California. An architect by trade, he began painting in the 1960s, and eventually became Riverside's premier watercolorist. O'Neill became the first resident of Southern California's Inland Empire to be accepted into the American Watercolor Society. Don O'Neill, Mission Inn Towers.
He was also deployed to cipher offices in Jamaica and British Ceylon. Gibbons married his wife, the former Ida Gibson, a painter and watercolorist, in 1949. The couple had two children - daughter, Tracy Gibbons, and a son, Grant Gibbons, a politician and government minister. Graham and Ida Gibbons remained married until her death from cancer in 1988.
She learned to paint alongside her father, who was an accomplished watercolorist, and in his retirement, a violin-maker.Dowling, Lynn. "Louise Stanley: Portrait of the Artist," The Santa Clara, October 15, 1981 p. 17–8. Stanley attended the conservative, Brethren La Verne College (BA, 1964), supplementing her studies by motor-scootering to Scripps College for life drawing classes.
Samuil Grigorievich Nevelshtein (; March 22, 1903, city Herson, Ukraine, Russian Empire - November 16, 1983, Leningrad, USSR) - Soviet, Russian painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, and art teacher, lived and worked in Leningrad, regarded as one of the representatives of the Leningrad school of painting,Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School.- Saint Petersburg: NP-Print Edition, 2007.
Edward Hopper (July 22, 1882 – May 15, 1967) was an American realist painter and printmaker. While he is widely known for his oil paintings, he was equally proficient as a watercolorist and printmaker in etching. Both in his urban and rural scenes, his spare and finely calculated renderings reflected his personal vision of modern American life.
By the Piano He was born in Coucouron, Ardèche, son of Casimir Enjolras and Delphine Laurens. Enjolras studied under watercolorist Gaston Gérard at the "Ecole de Dessin de la Ville de Paris",18/19th C. Paintings at www.alhambraantiques.com as well as Jean- Léon Gérôme at the Beaux-Arts, and Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret.Delphin Enjolras Biography at burlington.co.
Beal painted the beaches in Provincetown, Key West, Rockport, Atlantic City and Wellfleet, circus scenes and carnivals. He used a variety of styles including Impressionism and Tonalism. As he got older, his work became more complex and vibrant. In addition to oils, he was admired as a watercolorist, and he and Gifford made Rockport, Massachusetts their home.
His father was John Laporte, a noted watercolorist and etcher of Huguenot descent, who was also his teacher. His first exhibit came in 1818 at the British Institution. Later, he was one of the founding members of the Royal Society of British Artists and was a regular contributor to their exhibitions at the Suffolk Street Gallery.Lane Fine Art.
Paola Mangiacapra (born 1939) is a watercolorist working and living in West Kingston, Rhode Island. Mangiacapra grew up in Tarrytown, New York, the daughter of Italian immigrants. Mangiacapra attended Bates College and graduated in 1961 with a bachelor's degree in chemistry. Mangiacapra's career and study in watercolor began in 1993, and she was mentored by Nancy Gaucher- Thomas.
Maria Abramovna (Avraamovna) Zubreeva (; August 21, 1900, village Korukovka, the Chernigov Governorate, Ukraine, Russian Empire - October 8, 1991, Saint Petersburg, USSR) was a Russian Soviet realist painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, and designer, who lived and worked in Leningrad. She was regarded as one of the representatives of the Leningrad school of painting.Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism.
Edward Hopper, New York Interior, c. 1921, Whitney Museum of American Art Edward Hopper (1882-1967) was a prominent American realist painter and printmaker. Hopper is the most modern of the American realists, and the most contemporary. While most popularly known for his oil paintings, he was equally proficient as a watercolorist and printmaker in etching.
A Couple Embracing - 1881 Eugène Louis Lami (12 January 1800 – 19 December 1890) was a French painter, watercolorist, lithographer, illustrator and designer. He was a painter of fashionable Paris during the period of the July Monarchy and the Second French Empire and also made history paintings and illustrations for books such as Gil Blas and Manon Lescaut.
Hartley spent the summer of 1916 with watercolorist Charles Demith and playwright Eugene O'Neill in Provincetown, Massachusetts, following time spent in Berlin focusing on portraits of German officers. His return to America was marked by an embrace of representational painting and landscape. Hartley engaged in the art movement Regionalism, which championed realism and straightforward depictions of everyday life.
Jan Apeldoorn (27 January 1765, Amersfoort – 10 February 1838, Amersfoort) was a Dutch landscape painter, watercolorist, draftsman, art teacher, and miniaturist painter. Apeldoorn was a pupil of Jordan Hoorn in Amersfoort. He painted only few pictures in oil. He lived in Utrecht for fifty years (from 1788 to 1838), but died in his native town in 1838.
In London, they visited art galleries, museums and artists. Upon seeing Sumbat's watercolors, British watercolorist Sir W. Russell Flint declared him "brother in brush." In 1950, Sumbat held an exhibition of his watercolors from his travels in Europe and England at the Art Centre in London. After his European travels, Sumbat used his newspaper palette as his canvas.
The plating of the bull's head had collapsed and torn once the wooden core had deteriorated. The bitumen of the front panel had been pulverized, dislodging the shell inlay. Both were originally restored at the British Museum. When they arrived at the Penn Museum a new sound box was created, and painted by watercolorist Mary Louise Baker.
Anders Osterlind, a French painter, was born in Lépaud (Creuse) on June 12, 1887. He died in Paris on January 5, 1960. He was the son of the painter Allan Österlind and the father of watercolorist Nanic Osterlind. During his youth, Osterlind was close to the impressionist movement, through Armand Guillaume and the aging Auguste Renoir, whom he assisted.
Criley grew up in Kansas City, Missouri, and he attended the Chicago Fine Arts Institute. He began his career as the manager of the Coates House Hotel in Kansas City, Missouri and the Lexington Hotel in Chicago. Criley moved to California in 1919, where he joined the art colony in Carmel-by-the-Sea. He became a watercolorist, portrait painter, and wood engraver.
Vitaly Ivanovich Tulenev (; February 28, 1937 in Leningrad, USSR – August 25, 1998 in Saint Petersburg, Russia) was a Soviet Russian painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, art teacher, Honored Artist of the Russian Federation, lived and worked in Saint Petersburg, regarded as one of the leading representatives of the "left" wing of the Leningrad school of painting.Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School.
142, 144.Newton, Eckert, Eckert, and Gerdts, p. 148. The middle Gruelle child, a daughter named Prudence (1884–1966), trained as a vocal musician in New York City at the Grand Conservatory of Music and the Metropolitan Opera School. She later performed in vaudeville theaters under the stage name of Prudence Gru, and married Albert Matzke, an illustrator and watercolorist.
On 12 April 1817 at St Paul's Church, Hammersmith, London, he married Caroline Elizabeth Johnson, daughter of James Johnson of Baker Street, London. They had ten children. Samuel Augustus Perry was a watercolorist, surveyor and soldier. He also owned 100 acres of land and developed a neighborhood that he called Broughton, in what is now called the Leichardt area of Sydney.
Her second marriage was to Adalbert Fényes in 1896. Between marriages Fényes moved to New Mexico and then traveled in Europe, Egypt, and the Middle East. Though never a professional artist, Fényes was an accomplished watercolorist. With the urging of Charles Fletcher Lummis she created over 300 landscapes which often included Southwest architecture features such as missions and adobe structures.
Alfvén's contributions were multi-dimensional and also included painting and writing. He was a talented watercolorist and once thought to devote himself entirely to painting. He also was a gifted writer. His four-volume autobiography has been called "captivating" and provides significant insight into the musical life of Sweden in which Alfvén was a central figure for well over half a century.
While studying at Chouinard Art Institute, Reitherman's paintings had attracted the attention of Philip L. Dyke, a drawing and painting instructor. Impressed at his artwork, Dyke showed them to Disney, in which Reitherman was invited to the studio. Reitherman initially wanted to work as a watercolorist, but Walt Disney suggested he should be an animator.Champlin Jr, Charles (August 10, 1981).
Portrait of the General's Wife painted by American watercolorist Winslow Homer. Painting currently in the permanent collection of the Rhode Island Institute of Art.Rhode Island Institute of Art: Winslow Homer Collection In 1885, the general married a French lady named Cecilia Armand-Roche and had one son, Francisco de Pando y Armand, who later became the most influential leader in Cuba's sugar industry.
Giovanni Colmo (1867-1947) was an Italian painter, active mainly as a landscape painter. Giovanni was born in Turin; he first studied engineering but gravitated to painting without a formal education.Ottocento italiano: pittori e scultori : opere e mercato 1998-1999, by Maurizio Agnellini (1998). He was an older brother of Eugenio Colmo, known as Golia, a noted cartoonist, caricaturist and watercolorist.
Since 1983, Frazelle has lived in Winston-Salem with his life partner Rick Mashburn, who is a writer. The couple have a small farm in the nearby Blue Ridge Mountains, which continues to be a source of great inspiration. Kenneth Frazelle is an amateur watercolorist, an avid reader, a gardener, and dog lover. He has two siblings, a sister and a brother.
Blas Olleros y Quintana (1851 Avila, Spain -1919 Florence, Italy) (alternative names: Olleros Quintana, Quintana Olleros, Bias Olleros y Quintana)Spanish Artists from the Fourth to the Twentieth Century: A Critical Dictionary, Volume 4, Hall, 1996 was a Spanish figure painter and landscape painter who worked primarily in Italy as a watercolorist. He is best known for his Neapolitan scenes and Orientalist works.
Alan Shuptrine Painting Angel TreeAlan Shuptrine (born March 31, 1963) A painter known for his Southern and Appalachian Mountains genre, Alan Shuptrine has extended his reputation from a renowned framemaker and water gilder to a nationally acclaimed watercolorist. Born the son of recognized painter, Hubert Shuptrine (1936-2006), Alan has continued the legacy of realism that both Andrew Wyeth and his father Hubert established.
Hale was one of eight children, and she helped her mother and father take care of her younger siblings. From a young age, Hale was raised within an artistic atmosphere, as her mother encouraged her interest in art, and her aunt, watercolorist Susan Hale, most likely provided her first artistic instruction.Angelilli, Claire. Inked Impressions: Ellen Day Hale and the Painter-etcher Movement: January 26 - April 14, 2007.
Gavriil Kondratievich Malish (; March 25, 1907, in Kitaygorodka, Ekaterinoslav Province, Ukraine, Russian Empire - October 25, 1998, in Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation) was a Soviet, Russian painter, watercolorist, and graphic artist, lived and worked in Saint Petersburg, regarded as one of the brightest representatives of the Leningrad school of painting,Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School.- Saint Petersburg: NP-Print Edition, 2007.
Loran Creech, a nationally renowned watercolorist and Best of Missouri Hands juried artist, calls California home. His historic two-story home in California serves as his gallery and guests are welcome. Creech's work has been featured in galleries all across the U.S.Best of Missouri Hands - Loran Creech The Finke Theatre hosts regular performances throughout the year. The Cultural Heritage Center houses several wall murals depicting area history.
Louis Atthalin Louis Marie Baptiste Atthalin, Baron Atthalin (born 22 June 1784 at Colmar, Haut-Rhin - 3 September 1856) was a French Army officer, politician, painter, watercolorist, and lithographer. He died in Colmar on 3 September 1856. Louis-Philippe I sent Atthalin to Nicholas I of Russia to inform him of the former's accession. He was also present at the reburial of Napoleon's remains in 1840.
John Dawson Watson John Dawson Watson (20 May 1832 - 3 January 1892) was a British painter, watercolorist, and illustrator. He was educated King Edward VI Grammar School, Sedbergh School and Manchester School of Design.‘Watson, John Dawson (1832–1892)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 His son was the Impressionist painter Dawson Dawson- Watson. His daughter, Francis, married Myles Birkett Foster in 1864.
He taught for 10 years at the correspondence school, and he spent each day at the easel. This work served as the basis for his first book Figure Painting in Watercolor. Its publication in 1973 put him in the forefront of people’s mind as a watercolorist. Charles Reid found inspiration in the fashion illustrations of Dorothy Hood, which he admired for her direct and simple style.
The cooperative of Pulchri Studio was open to new technics in painting in the fine art. This resulted in the panel painting to another movement within the Dutch Impressionism, the Hague School. In Brussels in the year 1855 the Society for watercolour-painting, the "Société Belge des watercolorist" was founded.RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts de Bruxelles She was quite successful.
Mending Nets in Nazare, an original watercolor painted by Nicholas Reale. This painting received the New Jersey Watercolor Society Silver Medal of Honor in 1971. Nicholas Albert Reale (20 March 1922 - 18 November 1984) was a prominent American watercolorist with a lengthy career in art and teaching. Reale’s works have been exhibited throughout the United States and Canada, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Released too late from his military service, he competed at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. He was accepted at the Galeries des Beaux-Arts and admitted to the Ecole Normale Superieure des Arts Decoratifs in Paris. In Paris he met Emmanuel Cavaille-Coll (1860–1922), brother of Cecilia, renowned designer and watercolorist. In 1924 he married Odile Ginioux with whom he had seven children.
He authored a textbook, and he was an art critic for The Salt Lake Tribune for four nearly forty years. Dibble was also a painter in his own right, and he won a prize at the Utah State Fair as early as 1935. He became known as a Cubist watercolorist. Dibble died of cancer on June 2, 1992 in Salt Lake City, at age 88.
Frances Gearhart (January 4, 1869 – April 4, 1959) was an American printmaker and watercolorist known for her boldly drawn and colored woodcut and linocut prints of American landscapes. Focused especially on California's coasts and mountains, this body of work has been called "a vibrant celebration of the western landscape." She is one of the most important American color block print artists of the early 20th century.
Robert E. L. Rainey (1914–2002) was an American artist, art educator and advertising executive. Born in Jackson, MS, he grew up in Chicago, and attended the Chicago Art Institute, studying under Francis Chapin and Boris Anisfeld and receiving B.F.A. and M.F.A. degrees. Initially a watercolorist, Rainey specialized in rural and urban scenes in the Midwest characterized by very strong color. His early work also included lithography.
His painting "The Five Senses" was purchased by Empress Eugénie in 1865. The following year, he was named a Chevalier in the Legion of HonorDossier @ the Base Leonore and became a French citizen in 1870, just before the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War. During the war and the subsequent Commune, he lived in London. In addition to oil paintings, he was a watercolorist and painted miniatures on ivory.
Leloir was the son, and pupil, of painter and watercolorist Héloïse Suzanne Colin, daughter of painter Alexandre-Marie Colin. His brother, Alexandre-Louis Leloir was also a well known painter and illustrator. Leloir married Céline Bourdier, with whom he had a daughter, Suzanne Leloir, who married Philippe, the son of Pauline Savari in 1912. Leloir first exhibited his work at the Salon des artistes français, of which he became the secretary.
His initial studio was on Piazza Sciarra on the Corso. His son, Achille Pinelli, was a famous watercolorist in his own right. An extremely prolific engraver, his illustrations depicted the costumes of the Italian people, the great epic poems and numerous other subjects, including popular customs. In general, the most recurring subject is Rome, the ancient city as well as the modern one: its inhabitants and its monuments.
Andrew Zega (born 1961) is an American-born artist, architectural historian and writer residing in Paris, France. He was educated at Princeton University and began his career as an architectural designer and watercolorist for Robert A.M. Stern Architects in Manhattan. Andrew Zega and Bernd H. Dams both create watercolors of historic American and European buildings and garden ornament. Their work is noted for its realist technique and historical accuracy.
In addition to its arts and educational programming, 'T' Space maintains a publication program and a 30-acre nature reserve with outdoor installations of art and architecture. In 2019, construction was completed on 'T' Space's architectural archive and research library, which will come to house Holl's work as a watercolorist, as well as models, drawings and other architectural materials developed in Holl's 40-plus years as principal of Steven Holl Architects.
Danish silversmith Georg Jensen,Antony Anderson, "Of Art and Artists: The Pier," Los Angeles Times(March 22, 1925): 34. William Victor Higgins,Antony Anderson, "Three Exhibits at Grace Nicholson's," Los Angeles Times (March 14, 1926): C19. watercolorist Pop Hart,Arthur Millier, "Art and Artists: Of Interest to Artists," Los Angeles Times (October 9, 1927): 30. Emil Fuchs,"Art Exhibitions in the Southland," Los Angeles Times (December 11, 1927): C32.
His father was a glazier. At the age of six, he became a drum major in the "Régiment Royal-Bonbons", a children's branch of the French Guards which was intended to provide "manly, patriotic training", but also served as a form of amusement for the Dauphin. Two years later, his father made the acquaintance of Angélique Briceau (fl.1780-1800), a watercolorist who gave lessons to both of them.
William Buckler (13 September 1814 in Newport, Isle of Wight9 January 1884 in Lumley near Emsworth) was an English painter and entomologist who specialized in Lepidoptera. He started his career as a portraitist and watercolorist, practising first in London, and then from the 1860s in Emsworth. When the spread of photography made portraiture unprofitable, he turned to natural history illustration.Salmon M.A. The Aurelian legacy: British butterflies and their collectors.
Sergei Yefimovich Zakharov (; November 26, 1900, town Alexandrovsk- Sakhalinsky, Sakalin Province of Russian Empire - January 24, 1993, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation) was a Russian Soviet painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, and interior designer, who lived and worked in Leningrad (current Saint Petersburg). He was a member of the Leningrad Union of Artists,Directory of Members of the Union of Artists of USSR. Volume 1.- Moscow: Soviet artist, 1979. - p. 399.
In 1919 Meldrum joined the AA, where he met and taught Arthur Stephenson and Donald Turner. A fine draftsman and watercolorist, Meldrum was the artistic director and collaborated with some of Melbourne’s prominent artists, including Napier Waller, whose mosaic featured on the façade of the Newspaper House in Melbourne (1933). Stephenson and Meldrum’s partnership ended in 1937, with Meldrum moving on to practice with Arthur Noad, to form Meldrum and Noad.
Anne Russell (1781–1857) was an English pastellist. Russell was born in London, and was the daughter of painter John Russell. She produced copies of her father's pastels as well as those of Rosalba Carriera, and was said to assist her father not only in his painting but also in making his pastels. Her siblings were also artists; William and Jane produced pastels, while Maria was a watercolorist.
J. Jay McVicker (born Jesse Jay McVicker; October 18, 1911 – August 31, 2004) was an American artist. He is known for his printmaking, particularly his early aquatints and his experimental use of intaglio techniques. McVicker was also active as a painter and sculptor throughout his career. A student of Ella Jack and Doel Reed at Oklahoma State University, McVicker showed early promise as a Regionalist watercolorist and printmaker.
Lower down the Angas was the "Angas survey", which incorporated the town of Strathalbyn. Davenport lived on his original holding at "Battunga" for more than half a century. He was a capable watercolorist, and produced many studies of South Australian landscapes, some of which are held by the Art Gallery of South Australia. His family photograph album has been digitised by the State Library of South Australia and is available online.
Thecla was primarily a watercolorist, and made extensive use of fantasy imagery; her work was often described as "jewel-like" or "enchanted". She worked almost exclusively with the female form, frequently using herself as a model. Thecla's work was exhibited for the first time in 1931, at the annual International Watercolor Exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago. Her works were subsequently exhibited there every year until 1936, and again from 1940 to 1944.
The Sons of Marshal Ney Marie-Éléonore Godefroid (20 June 1778 in Paris - June 1849), was a French painter, watercolorist, pastellist, and draughtswoman. Some of her major works include Portraits of the Children of Marshall Duke d'Enghien (1810), Portrait of Queen Hortense with her Children (1812), the Royal Princes, Portrait of the Princesses Louise and Marie d'Orléans, and Portrait of the Prince de Joinville. Godefroid is best known as a portrait painter.
Nita Engle (September 30, 1925 – August 29, 2019) was an American watercolorist. She worked as an art director and magazine illustrator and exhibited in and out of the United States. Engle received several awards, including an honorary doctorate from Northern Michigan University. A documentary was made about her entitled Wilderness Palette - Nita Engle in Michigan and she wrote the book How to Make a Watercolor Paint Itself: Experimental Techniques for Achieving Realistic Effects.
Carel Jacobus Behr Carel Jacobus Behr (9 July 1812 in The Hague - 11 November 1895) was a Dutch painter, watercolorist and draftsman. He was a pupil of Bartholomeus Johannes van Hove and mainly painted cityscapes, genre scenes and portraits. In 1836 he produced, commissioned by The Hague municipal government, an image of the town hall there, which carried off the approval of connoisseurs. In 1837 he became a member of the Royal Academy in Amsterdam.
Bellows’ father was a commercial artist and watercolorist. He recognized his son's natural inclination towards art and taught him what he knew from his own training and experience. In later years, Bellows referred to his father as his “best critic” and “a great influence.”Article by Robert McMorris, Omaha World- Herald, November 8, 1986 In 1965, Bellows, his parents, and his two younger sisters moved to Omaha, Nebraska, where he attended high school.
He decided to specialize in landscapes and was one of the first artists to work in Bourron-Marlotte, where he settled in 1849.Apophtegme.com His first exhibit at the Salon came in 1851. The following year, his painting of the banks of the Loing was awarded a second-class medal. He was also a watercolorist and published albums of lithographs based on photographs; breaking with his Romantic predecessors to present scenes realistically.
Hilda Goldblatt Gorenstein (1905-1998) was an American oil painter and watercolorist. A native of Montreal, Canada, who grew up in Portland, Oregon, U.S. Gorenstein started painting as a teenager at a time when women artists weren't very well received. A reflection of the times in which she lived, she signed her work "Hilgos", an androgynous professional working name. She was later the inspiration for the documentary film, I Remember Better When I Paint.
Nicolaas van der Waay (1855–1936) was a Dutch decorative artist, watercolorist and lithographer. He worked in many genres, including stamp, coin and banknote designs. He is perhaps best known for the allegorical illustrations he created for the Golden Coach and a series of paintings depicting the lives of girls from the Amsterdam Orphanage. His work was also part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1928 Summer Olympics.
May Gearhart was born in Sagetown, Illinois, in 1872. Her older sister Frances became a noted printmaker and watercolorist; another sister, Edna, was also an artist. The family moved to California in the 1880s, and Gearhart was educated at the State Normal School at Los Angeles and then at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where one of her teachers was Rudolph Schaeffer. May gained further art training intermittently throughout her life.
Morrison, a watercolorist from New Haven, studied at the British Academy in Rome. They spent the next three years in Europe, where Mattison was a fellow at the American Academy in Rome. The couple had one daughter, Georgia, during their last year in Europe. After his fellowship ended, Mattison moved his young family back to the United States where he found it necessary to take up three jobs to support their growing needs.
Alexander Nikolayevich Samokhvalov (; 21 August 1894 – 20 August 1971) was a Soviet Russian painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, illustrator, art teacher and Honored Arts Worker of the RSFSR, who lived and worked in Leningrad. He was a member of the Leningrad branch of Union of Artists of Russian Federation, and was regarded as one of the founders and brightest representatives of the Leningrad school of painting,Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School.
The campus's Burchfield Penney Art Center, founded in 1966, moved to its new $33 million facility in 2008. The Burchfield Penney features the work of Western New York artists and houses one of the world's largest collections of work by watercolorist Charles E. Burchfield (1893–1967). The historic Albright-Knox Art Gallery, which showcases modern and contemporary art, is located across the street from the campus. Students can purchase discount passes in the Student Union.
A self-taught artist, she started by drawing on the walls of their home. She started studying privately with watercolorist and family friend Theo Verwilghen, who discouraged her from pursuing more formal training at the capital's art academy for fear that this would impede her natural talent. She later moved to Brussels with her family. Moseka had her first exhibition in Kinshasa in 1986 at the private gallery of Louis van Bever.
Luigi Bazzani, also called Il Bazzanetto, was an Italian painter, illustrator, and watercolorist. He was born November 8, 1836 in Bologna, Italy. Bazzani studied at Bologna's Accademia di Belle Arti then traveled to France, Germany and, eventually, Rome where he settled down in 1861 and began to specialize in genre and landscape subjects as well as set designs for theaters.Luigi Bazzani, A Pompeian Interior, 1882 Dahesh Museum of Art, retrieved 8/22/2019.
Pat Straub also served on the Oregon Forestry Council. She became a watercolorist and painter later in her life. Pat Straub died from complications of old age at the Gateway Living Residential Center in Springfield, Oregon, on September 24, 2017, at the age of 92. She was survived by five of her children - Jane Straub, Patty Straub Thomas, Peg Straub, Jeff Straub, and Mike Straub; 14 grandchildren, 31 grandchildren and three great- grandchildren.
At first, he also worked as a watercolorist and etcher; having been a student of Axel Tallberg and . He designed factory and office buildings, as well as worker housing, for several large Swedish companies; notably in Hallstahammar, Fagersta, Stråssa, Köping and Nacka. He also designed, retirement homes, manors, villas and spas, throughout the country. Notable examples are the Teachers' Rest Home, outside Stockholm and in Lärkstaden, an area inspired by the English garden city movement.
Charles Hopkinson Charles Sydney Hopkinson (July 27, 1869 - October 16, 1962) was an American portrait painter and landscape watercolorist. He maintained a studio in the Fenway Studios building in Boston from 1906 to 1962. He painted over 800 portraits in a direct style with a palette gradually lightening through his career. Many of his paintings were commissioned by U. S. East Coast institutions, especially Harvard University, where he acted as house portraitist.
Charles Verlat or Karel VerlatAlso called: Michel Marie Charles Verlat and Michiel-Karel Verlat (25 November 182423 October 1890) was a Belgian painter, watercolorist, engraver (printmaker), art educator and director of the Antwerp Academy. He painted many subjects and was particularly known as an animalier and portrait painter.Max Rooses, Oude en nieuwe kunst, pp. 45-99 He also created Orientalist works, genre scenes, including a number of singeries, religious compositions and still lifes.
Miller was born circa 1905 in New York City. His father, Warren Hastings Miller, was an editor and author, and his mother, Susan Barse Miller, was an artist. Miller was educated at the National Academy of Design, where he was trained by Hugh Henry Breckenridge, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where he was trained by Arthur Beecher Carles. Miller was a watercolorist, and he exhibited his paintings as early as 1928 in Los Angeles.
Cecile Jospé (née Weiner; August 15, 1928 – May 17, 2004) was an American photographer and watercolorist. A bachelor of arts graduate in art history and the theory and practice and drawing and painting from Harvard University's Radcliffe College, she exhibited her work in photography at The Photographers' Gallery. Jospé was elected a member of the Chelsea Art Club, the Royal Watercolour Society, the New English Art Club and exhibited her art work at the latter two societies.
Two of his watercolors from his work there were selected for inclusion in the 1896 Paris Salon.Chambers, 2007, p. 165. By the time he and his wife returned to Boston in 1896, his reputation as a watercolorist and his success in Europe established him as an important young artist. Gallagher purchased a house in West Roxbury, MA, close to Boston, in 1897 and settled into a life of middle- class ease, remaining in the same house until his death.
A student of the French landscape painter Eugène Cicéri and Edmond Yon, Thornley became a successful artist remembered for his seascapes from Normandy and his landscapes from the French and Italian Rivieras. He was the son of a Welsh immigrant Morgan Thornley. He also was a talented watercolorist, engraver, and lithographer. His lithographs after the works of Corot, Pissarro, Degas and Puvis de Chavannes were acclaimed by his peers and awarded at the Salon de Paris.
Joseph Santos (born 1965)Artists Biography is a contemporary American (European and Filipino descent) artist/watercolorist. He is known for his watercolor paintings of urban and industrial objects. His work has garnered many awards nationally, including the Paul B. Remmey award at the prestigious American Watercolor Society 138th international exhibition in New York City. His paintings have been exhibited in museums throughout the United States, including the Elmhurst Art Museum in Illinois and the Springfield Art Museum in Missouri.
Martha Neill Upton (September30, 1953, Pittsfield, MassachusettsMarch30, 1977, San Francisco, California) was a watercolorist, sculptor and studio quilt artist. Her quilted tapestries helped quilts become seen as fine art, rather than craft work, during the early 1970s. Her quilts were shown in the first major museum exhibition of non-traditional quilts, The New American Quilt at New York's Museum of Arts and Design, then called the Museum of Contemporary Craft, in 1976.The Modern Quilt Guild. (2016).
Sergei Kuzmich Frolov (; September 26, 1924 in Baklanka, Vologda Governorate of the USSR - 1998 in Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation) was a Soviet, Russian realist painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, and art teacher, who lived and worked in Saint Petersburg (former Leningrad), a member of the Saint Petersburg Union of Artists (before 1992: the Leningrad branch of Union of Artists of Russian Federation).Directory of Members of the Union of Artists of USSR. Volume 2.- Moscow: Soviet artist, 1979.
Piotr Dmitrievich Buchkin (; 22 January 1886 – 21 June 1965) was a Soviet and Russian painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, illustrator, and art teacher, Honored Arts Worker of the RSFSR. Buchkin lived and worked in Leningrad and was a member and one of the founders of the Leningrad branch of Union of Artists of Russian Federation and representatives of the Leningrad school of painting,Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School.- Saint Petersburg: NP-Print Edition, 2007.
Several of his works were unusually large for a watercolorist, 10 by 10 feet or larger. His work defies the fact that watercolor paintings should be small, charming renderings of landscapes or flowers. Yarde's paintings are monumental in scale that express poignant personal themes, he expressed these themes using a medium that has traditionally been described as translucent and temporal. Yarde was also inspired by elements based on different cultures, which shapes his work into how he perceives the world.
276, 1998. Evan Charteris wrote in 1927: > To live with Sargent's water-colours is to live with sunshine captured and > held, with the luster of a bright and legible world, 'the refluent shade' > and 'the Ambient ardours of the noon.'Little, p. 110. Although not generally accorded the critical respect given Winslow Homer, perhaps America's greatest watercolorist, scholarship has revealed that Sargent was fluent in the entire range of opaque and transparent watercolor technique, including the methods used by Homer.
Betty Waldo Parish (1910-1986) was an American printmaker and painter who exhibited with nonprofit organizations, including the Fine Arts Guild, the Pen and Brush Club, and the National Association of Women Artists, as well as commercial galleries. Best known for her etchings and woodcuts in a modernist representational style, she was also a watercolorist and oil painter and it was an oil painting of hers, "The Lower Lot," that won her the first of quite a few prizes during her career.
In 1806 Hunt persuaded his father to allow him to train as an artist,Witt p.32 becoming apprenticed for a term of seven years to John Varley, the watercolorist, drawing master, astrologer, and a close friend of William Blake. Apparently Hunt made good progress under Varley's tutelage, as he exhibited three oil paintings at the Royal Academy in 1807 and continued to exhibit there for several years following. In 1808 he was admitted as a student to the Royal Academy Schools.
Kirkland, Washington public art installation Several art projects arose from fascination with Kalakala, including a full-length album of solo cello compositions recorded on board the vessel in November 2003, called Songs from a Parallel Universe. There is an as-yet unreleased film about the "Ghost Dance" that was filmed on Kalakala. There was also a live concert featuring the Icelandic band múm, Serena Tideman and Eyvind Kang, on board the Kalakala. The watercolorist Robert Tandecki painted her among her later days.
He knew some of the city's wealthy matrons, and as his reputation grew, his clientele included Nance O'Neil, Sarah Bernhardt, Nora May French, and Jack London. In 1904 he traveled to Western Europe and Tangier with the famous watercolorist, Francis McComas.The Argonaut (San Francisco), 22 August 1904, p. 126. In 1906, the San Francisco earthquake and fire destroyed Genthe's studio, but he rebuilt. His photograph of the earthquake's aftermath, Looking Down Sacramento Street, San Francisco, April 18, 1906, is his most famous photograph.
Fuller was born in New York City and raised on Long Island. Her sensitivity to color, texture and composition was formed early in life by exposure to her parents' extensive gardens. She was also influenced by the work of her grandmother, Lucy Washington Hurry (1880–1950), a still-life watercolorist who studied at the Art Students League of New York with Kenyon Cox and Fayette Barnum,Entry on Lucy W. Hurry, "American Art Directory, Volume 16," p.519, R.R. Bowker, 1919.
Arthur Maybee Chanter was an Australian composer, conductor, music teacher, choir master and musician. An accomplished pianist and watercolorist, Chanter was among the earliest music graduates of the University of Melbourne where he was instructed by George Marshall-Hall In 1910 Chanter was the adjudicator of a musical Eistedfodd and band competition of an association of native-born Australians in Western Australia. He married Sara Kate Campbell in 1915. He live mostly in Brighton, Victoria and Elsternwick, but was well travelled.
Paul Herman Rohland (March 11, 1884 – September 29, 1949) was an American artist, printmaker, watercolorist, and muralist. He exhibited in the Armory Show of 1913 in New York City. Among others, his work is in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Barnes Foundation, National Museum of American Art-Smithsonian, the New Mexico Museum of Fine Arts, and the Woodstock Artists Association and Museum. He painted three post office murals for the Treasury Section of Fine Arts.
Reviewing the first exhibition of Charles Demuth, he marked the watercolorist as someone to watch, though he was knowledgeable enough about contemporary art to hope that Demuth would not fall too much under the influence of the equally talented John Marin.New York Sun, November 1, 1914, p. 5. Originality was everything to McBride. He felt he saw a great deal of originality at 291, the advanced gallery run by Alfred Stieglitz which often exhibited work that left other critics puzzled or indignant.
A panoramic landscape, with Ernest Slingeneyer Nicolaas Johannes Roosenboom (23 August 1805 - 1 March 1880), was a Dutch painter, etcher, lithographer, watercolorist, and illustrator who was specialised in landscape art.Nicolaas Johannes Roosenboom at the Netherlands Institute for Art History He painted various types of landscapes but was mainly known for his winter landscapes.Nicolaas Johannes Roosenboom , Skaters on a frozen waterway at Master Art Roosenboom's work is situated in the Dutch Romantic movement. He collaborated with various artists who painted the staffage in his landscapes.
Anne Eisner Putnam (1911-1967) was an abstract and landscape painter, watercolorist, and collector of African art, originally from New York where she also died. She became a writer, best known for her book Madami: My Eight Years of Adventure with the Congo Pygmies. This was an account of her time and experiences in the Belgian Congo. She and her husband, Patrick Tracy Lowell Putnam (1904-1953) met in the USA in 1945 and lived together on Martha's Vineyard and in New York City.
Alexander Samokhvalov (1894-1971) Alexander Samokhvalov was a well-known Russian painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, illustrator, and art teacher. He was an Honored Arts Worker of the RSFSR, who lived and worked in Leningrad, and was regarded as one of the founders and brightest representatives of the Socialist realism art movement.Irina Barshova, Kira Sazonova. Alexander Samokhvalov. Leningrad, Khudozhnik RSFSR, 1963. The portrait In the Sun was painted in Gurzuf, Crimea, where in 1950–60 Samokhvalov repeatedly vacationed with his wife Maria Alekseyevna Kleshchar-Samokhvalova.
Her daughter, Jelena Zrinski, is considered a national heroine. Another notable woman in Croatian political history was Savka Dabčević-Kučar, who became one of the most influential Croatian female politicians during the communist period, and became the 5th Prime Minister of Croatia, and the 1st female Prime Minister of Croatia. In art, Ivana Brlić- Mažuranić is remembered as the best Croatian writer for children. Slava Raškaj was a painter considered to be the greatest Croatian watercolorist of the late 19th and early 20th century.
Steinhoff also became a watercolorist, and chairman of Germany's Dornier Aviation. Steinhoff received numerous honours for his work on the structure of the post war German Air Force and the integration of the German Federal Armed Forces into NATO, including: The Order of Merit with Star, the American Legion of Merit and the French Légion d'honneur. A former Luftwaffe F-104 Starfighter at Le Bourget.One of Steinhoff's contributions was dealing with the high accident rate the air force was having with its F-104 Starfighters.
Firstborn son of Ecuadorian artist Enrique Gomezjurado and Rosario Solórzano Freire. Marco Ernesto born in Panama City on October 17, 1923, baptized as Ernesto Marco Aníbal, reversed the order of his first two names to form his stage name "Marco Ernesto" with which he is known. He traveled and exhibited in several Latin American countries, achieving popularity, he developed with great skill the pallete knife technique post-impressionist, so he became known as a painter master in that technique. He was also a skilled watercolorist.
Taisia Kirillovna Afonina (; May 13, 1913 in Nikolaev, Russian Empire - April 19, 1994 in Saint Petersburg, Russia) was a Soviet, Russian painter and watercolorist. She lived and worked in Leningrad, was a member of the Saint Petersburg Union of Artists (before 1992 - the Leningrad branch of Union of Artists of Russian Federation),Directory of Members of the Union of Artists of USSR. Vol.1. Moscow, Soviet artist, 1979. P.71. and is regarded as one of the representatives of the Leningrad school of painting.
Two years later, he married Élisa Honorine Petiet, a watercolorist and lithographer who specialized in floral still- lifes,Dictionnaire Benézit and they had a daughter in 1840. Much of their time was spent visiting the estate of in Sceaux, where she worked on her paintings and he developed an interest in depicting the railroad that was being constructed through that area. Musée du Domaine départemental de Sceaux, Jean- Jacques Champin dans les collections Online. He also provided illustrations for publications such as ' and L'Illustration.
Maud Briggs Knowlton (March 17, 1870 – July 15, 1956) was an American watercolorist, still-life painter, art instructor, craftsperson, printmaker, and museum administrator. She and her friend Alice Swett were the first two women artists in the famous Monhegan Island artists' colony. She was the first director of the Currier Museum of Art and one of the first women to be a museum administrator in the United States. Knowlton was a pupil of Rhoda Holmes Nicholls in New York, and she studied in Holland and Paris.
Rudolf Rudolfovich Frentz (; 23 July 1888 - 27 December 1956) was a Soviet and Russian painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, illustrator and art teacher who lived and worked in Leningrad. He was a member of the Leningrad Union of Artists and one of the founders of the Leningrad school of painting,Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School. Saint Petersburg, NP- Print Edition, 2007. P.10, 12-14, 19, 20, 357, 359, 361, 363-367, 369, 372, 380-385, 387-389, 392, 399, 405, 407, 439, 440.
Kautzky submitted three drawings and won the first prize. The editor of the magazine, Ken Reid, invited him to be the subject of a feature article for the November 1936 issue. The article covered his story, displayed a number of his drawings and renderings, and closed with the following line: "But watch his career as a watercolorist." Kautzky had not begun to seriously work on watercolor painting at this point, but he had submitted a few of his initial artworks for the magazine article.
This education delayed her artistic and academic career. She tried to continue her piano studies but by the end of her adolescence and she decided to prepare herself for the School of Arts. Meanwhile, she attended the atelier of Raquel Roque Gameiro, the daughter of the watercolorist Alfredo Roque Gameiro, who advised her to leave as what was taught and painted there did not satisfy Tereza at all. She attended the night school in the Sociedade Nacional de Belas-Artes (SNBA), where she was the only woman.
He studied art in London during the early 1860s, although the details are unknown. The watercolorist, Myles Birket Foster, was a good friend of his and had a noticeable influence on his style, so it is possible that Foster was also his teacher.Biography @ AskArt For some years, he lived in Aix-en-Provence and, hearing about the opportunities available for aspiring artists, made his first trip to North Africa (Algeria) in 1862.Biography @ Christie's The following year, he had his professional debut at the Royal Academy.
Frederic married Euphemia Fenno (April 6, 1814, Mount Upton, New York– March 9, 1884, Newbury, Vermont). His oldest son, Frederic (February 11, 1845 – Boston 1902), was an 1867 graduate of Harvard College and a member of one of the first graduating classes at St. Paul's School (Concord, New Hampshire). The Ice King's second son, William, was also a graduate of St. Paul's School. The younger Frederic was the grandfather of the 20th-century watercolorist and book illustrator Tasha Tudor (Frederic's daughter Rosamond married William Starling Burgess).
Ba Zaw came in contact with the work of the Australian painter Jesee Jewhurst Hilder (18811916) some time after Hilder's death in 1916. After Hilder's death, two books containing images of his watercolor paintings appeared, J.J. Hilder, Watercolorist, a catalog in 1916, and The Art of J.J. Hilder in 1918. One of these books fell into Ba Zaw's hands, probably the latter, and left a deep impact on him. The book also came into the possession of Saya Saung (18981952), Ba Zaw's Mandalay student, and richly influenced Saya Saung as well.
He worked on oil paintings, then switched to watercolors in 1977 and received almost immediate critical acclaim for his works that drew upon themes of African-American history, Yarde's own family history, and his struggle with kidney failure and strokes.Obituary: Richard Yarde, Art professor, acclaimed watercolorist, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, web site. January 18, 2012 Yarde taught art at Boston University, Wellesley College, Amherst College, the Massachusetts College of Art, Mount Holyoke College, the University of Massachusetts at Boston. From 1999–2011, he was a professor of art at University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
Thackrey studied art history at Reed College in Portland, OR, and the University of Vienna, but without graduating. He moved to Bolinas in 1964 and for a while worked as a book editor for the Sierra Club. In 1970, Thackrey, with Susan Thackrey and Cynthia Pritzker, opened the art gallery in San Francisco that became Thackrey & Robertson, by then in partnership with watercolorist Sally Robertson; the gallery remained operational until it closed in 1995. Thackrey's particular expertise was in early photography, in exhibiting which the gallery was an internationally renowned pioneer.
Jenny Dalenoord receives the Jacob Maris Award (1955) Jenny Johanna Dalenoord (June 17, 1918 – October 25, 2013) was a Dutch illustrator, graphic designer, watercolorist and cartoon artist. Dalenoord illustrated more than 180 children's books throughout her career. Some of her most notable works include the illustrations for "Wiplala" by Annie M. G. Schmidt in 1957, "Padu is gek" by Miep Diekmann in 1957, and "Gideons reizen" by Anna Rutgers van der Loeff in 1960. Dalenoord and Schmidt shared the prize for "Best Children's Book" in 1957 for their work on "Wiplala".
Portrait of Albrecht de Vriendt by Ramon Casas Albrecht Frans Lieven De Vriendt or Albrecht De Vriendt (In French-language publications referred to as Albert De Vriendt or Albert François Lieven De Vriendt)In memoriam. Albrecht De Vriendt, Antwerp, J.-E. Buschmann, 1901 (Ghent, 8 December 1843 – Antwerp, 14 October 1900) was a Belgian painter known for his genre scenes, history paintings, interiors and figure paintings.Albert De Vriendt at the Netherlands Institute for Art History He was also active as an author, publisher and copyist He was also a watercolorist and an etcher.
Pope Paul III for the portrait of Luther Albrecht De Vriendt was a painter of genre scenes, religious subjects, history paintings, interiors and figure paintings. He was also a watercolorist and an etcher. Albrecht De Vriendt principal subject matter was the glorious Belgian and Flemish history from the 15th to 17th centuries. He thus continued the tradition of the Belgian Romantic- historical school who chose as the subject matter of their work important historical events in Belgium’s history which were regarded as key to the country’s national identity.
She received a Canadian Centennial Commission grant to research and write Samuel Cunard, Pioneer of the Atlantic Steamship, and was a Canada Council Award recipient. She also published short stories and poetry in such magazines as Maclean's, Chatelaine and Canadian Poetry. A lifelong gardener, even when limited to a balcony in her later years, she co-authored Small City Gardens with William S. Brett in 1967. She soon left writing forever, returning to her first artistic interest of painting, and in her later years was recognized as an accomplished watercolorist.
Evgenia Petrovna Antipova (; October 19, 1917 in Toropets, Tver Governorate, Russia – January 27, 2009, in Saint Petersburg, Russia) was a Russian Soviet painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, and Art teacher, a member of the Saint Petersburg Union of Artists (before 1992 the Leningrad branch of Union of Artists of Russian Federation),Directory of members of the Leningrad branch of Union of Artists of Russian Federation. Leningrad, Khudozhnik RSFSR, 1987. P.7. lived and worked in Leningrad – Saint Petersburg and regarded as one of representatives of the Leningrad School of Painting.Sergei V. Ivanov.
He was a fluent speaker of Arabic and spent much time hunting with Ibn Sa'ud during his wartime assignment to the Nejd and Asir. During that time, he became a foremost authority on the region and wrote a number of books on the subject in later life. An enthusiastic and skilled photographer, de Gaury is responsible for a large proportion of the photographs of the Arabian Peninsula from this period. He was also an accomplished watercolorist and sketch artist, frequently drawing or painting scenes from memory only hours after they had occurred.
Slava Raškaj (; 2 January 1877 – 29 March 1906) was a Croatian painter, considered to be the greatest Croatian watercolorist of the late 19th and early 20th century. Deaf since birth, Raškaj was schooled in Vienna and Zagreb, where her mentor was the renowned Croatian painter Bela Čikoš Sesija. In the 1890s her works were exhibited around Europe, including at the 1900 Expo in Paris. In her twenties Raškaj was diagnosed with acute depression and was institutionalised for the last three years of her life before dying in 1906 from tuberculosis in Zagreb.
At some point after moving to Bournemouth, Shadwell met Mary Longbottom (1891–1969), the eldest daughter of William Henry Lister Longbottom (1867–1918), a wealthy Yorkshire wool merchant. Mary, or "Molly" as she was known to friends, was a self-taught painter and watercolorist who had lived in Bournemouth with her family since at least the first decade of the century. In 1926, Shadwell and Longbottom established a small pottery studio in Bournemouth. Thanks to Longbottom's innovative designs and the growing appeal of studio ceramics generally, the business quickly grew.
Puerto Rican music became an important part of his life and is reflected in his art. A large amount of his collection is made up of musical themes interpreted through the plastic arts. Professor Judy Betts (a renowned writer and Watercolorist from Louisiana, U.S.) served as a great influence his use of blends and transparencies in watercolour paintings, for which he is well known. Broccoli Porto eventually decided to use his maternal surname, Porto, as his artist signature because of its ties to the island of Puerto Rico.
He studied drawing, perspective and anatomy under the direction of the British watercolorist and drawing-master, John Rubens Smith. He also studied the human figure in anatomy classes at the Crosby Street Medical college and took drawing classes at the National Academy of Design. By 1847 he was sufficiently skilled at painting to exhibit his first landscape at the National Academy and was elected an associate in 1851, an academician in 1854. Thereafter Gifford devoted himself to landscape painting, becoming one of the finest artists of the early Hudson River School.
Gerardus Hubertus Galenus von Brucken Fock (28 December 1859 – 15 August 1935) was a nineteenth-century classical Dutch pianist who gave up his career as a performer to compose and paint. Constantly torn between art and church, he traveled much in Europe, later establishing himself in Amsterdam. Married to the daughter of a member of the Zeeland parliament, he joined the Salvation Army and traveled from place to place in France, preaching and playing organ. He was also considered a very good draftsman and watercolorist whose works often inspired his own musical pieces.
Le Centre d’Art is an art center, school and gallery located in Port-au- Prince, Haiti. It was founded in 1944 by American watercolorist DeWitt Peters and several prominent Haitians from intellectual and cultural circles. The institution was at the center of what became known as the Haitian Art Movement, educating and exhibiting founding artists including Albert Mangones, Gerald Bloncourt, Maurice Borno, Rigaud Benoit, Hector Hyppolite, Daniel Lafontant, Marie-Josée Nadal, Rose-Marie Desruisseaux, and Luce Turnier. Le Centre d’Art was destroyed in the 2010 earthquake and many artworks from its collection was damaged.
Likewise, he also painted many of the most representative places of the island of Tenerife, as well as some of Fuerteventura. The style of the watercolorist is completely identifiable, from the colour to the atmosphere, -that extraordinary use, but without exceeding, of the sfumato- everything has an emphasis in the area of the card: line and perspective, differentiation of plans, wash fluency, etc.Agustín Quevedo Pérez (art critic). Catalogue from the exhibition held in "El Corte Inglés", from 24 November to 12 December 1989, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
Heidenreich settled in New York, where he was welcomed by the community of German and German Jewish refugee intellectuals, including Hannah Arendt and her husband Heinrich Blucher. In 1949, Heidenreich became an American citizen and had a first major exhibition at Harry Salpeter Gallery. Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, Heidenreich exhibited regularly, his work was widely collected, and he made significant contributions to Abstract Expressionism, both as a painter and watercolorist. His works are included in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum, and Brooklyn Museum.
Mary states that visitors to her studio often mistake her watercolors for acrylics. In 1994 Mary purposely set aside looking at the work of others in order to develop the haute conduite style. At that time she had been working as a full-time professional watercolorist for 17 years and wanted to expand the medium by using the oil techniques she had studied as a Fine Art undergraduate student at Boston University, techniques such as scumbling, dragging, and rubbing. She set aside looking at the work of others in order to avoid diluting her process.
Born Eudoxia M. Muller in Flushing, New York to Olga Popoff Muller, a sculptor, and John Muller an architect, she grew up in New York City.Marquard, Bryan (2008) "Eudoxia Woodward, 88; painter merged science, art" The Boston Globe January 22, 2008 accessed October 18, 2008 She attended St. Agatha’s School for high school and went on to receive her bachelor's degree from Smith College. She then settled in Boston, Massachusetts.Staff (2008) "Eudoxia M. Woodward, Watercolorist, lecturer and teacher" The Cambridge Chronicle January 22, 2008 accessed October 18, 2008 While at Polaroid, she met Robert Burns Woodward, who had been hired as a consultant.
Sunrise Koolau, oil painting by Hon Chew Hee, 1971, Hawaii State Art Museum Signatures of Hon Chew Hee Hon Chew Hee (1906 - 1993) was an American muralist, watercolorist and printmaker who was born in Kahului, on the Hawaiian island of Maui in 1906. He grew up in China, where he received his early training in Chinese brush painting. He returned to the United States in 1920 at age 14 in order to further his training at the San Francisco Art Institute, receiving that school's highest academic honor. He then taught in China until moving to Hawaii in 1935.
Shrimpers Research and investigation identified J Harding as James Duffield Harding, (1797–1863), eminent watercolorist and draughtsman, and friend of Turner's. Comparing the handwriting on the inscription with Harding's manuscripts at the Royal Watercolour Society proved a match. The title is in a different hand and a different medium, which fits the idea that Turner made the gift to Harding in 1832, and that the title was added later, by another. Further evidence was found in the similarity between this picture and Turner's watercolour of 1811, held in Glasgow's art gallery – Lyme Regis, Dosetshire: A Squall, [sic].
Tools and vessels often make their way into his still lifes, as do nudes, who are often slyly incorporated into landscapes and still lifes. Randall saw in manual labor the affirmative potential of a non-industrialized life. This led him to unsentimental, international portraits, in paint and print, of working people, as hewers of coal and wood, house painters, diggers, laundry women, cooks, carpenters, farmhands, stevedores, sellers of bread, balloons, and chickens. The landscapes of rural Oregon, California, Hawaii, Canada, Mexico and Scotland stimulated Randall, as a watercolorist, to the use of intensely vivid colors and energetic brushstroke.
When a Sunday edition was initiated in 1977, he was appointed its art section editor. Reflecting Buffalo’s long-standing tradition of civic commitment to culture, the News encouraged Bannon to teach, to make films, to serve as a dramaturg for theater productions, and to organize exhibitions in the visual arts. For the next decade, from 1985 to 1996, Bannon was with the State University of New York College at Buffalo. He served as director of the Burchfield-Penney Art Center, which is dedicated to the work and archives of Charles Burchfield (1893–1967), an American watercolorist.
He maintains a residence in Stonington, Maine, a location that has served as subject of much of his work as well including Mansard, Shadows, Red Victorian, Grand Night and Through Houses. Rickert became attracted to Maine after reading Eliot Porter's book, Summer Island, that included photographs of coastal Stonington and Penobscot Bay. In the 1970s, Rickert began spending summers in Stonington and nearby Brooksville, eventually buying a vacation home there. His renderings of nocturnal scenes with soft illuminations and moonlit reflections have generated comparisons of his work with that of English Romantic landscape artist, watercolorist and printmaker, Joseph Mallord William Turner.
Logan was born on March 21, 1886 in San Francisco to an English mother, who died when he was six months old, and an American father, who remarried shortly after. He grew up in Oakland, California, and he was trained at the San Francisco Art Institute, the California College of the Arts, and the Chicago Art Institute. Logan established a studio as a watercolorist and commercial artist in Oakland in 1915. He was a member of the Society of Six alongside Selden Connor Gile, August Gay, Louis Bassi Siegriest, Bernard von Eichman, and William H. Clapp.
Ella Mary Du Cane was the third and youngest daughter of politician and colonial administrator Sir Charles Du Cane and his wife, Georgiana Susan Copley. Through her mother, she was the great-granddaughter of the artist, John Singleton Copley. She was born in Hobart, Tasmania in the last year of her father's five-year term as Governor of Tasmania, shortly before the family returned to their country house at Braxted Park, Essex.Alison Redfoot, Victorian Watercolorist Ella Mary Du Cane: A study in resistance and compliance of gender stereotypes, the professional art world, Orientalism, and the interpretation of Japanese gardens for British society.
His travels abroad included trips to New York and Cuba. Although he later claimed those years had been spent in Africa, such as Dahomey and Ethiopia, scholars regard that as more likely an instance of promotional myth-making than factual. Hyppolite's talent as an artist was noticed by Philippe Thoby-Marcelin, who brought him to Haiti's capital Port- au-Prince in 1946. There Hyppolite worked in the studio run by Dewitt Peters, a watercolorist and schoolteacher from the United States who had come to Haiti to teach the English language as part of the Good Neighbor Policy.
Shortly after gaining his doctorate, he married Carol Joy Campbell (September 19, 1913 - January 12, 2010), on June 26, 1938. A member of Kappa Alpha Theta, she was a 1935 B.S. economics graduate of the University of Idaho from Rosalia, Washington. Born on a farm near Fairfield, at the time of her death at age 96, they had been married for over 71 years.Journal of the University of Idaho 1 Dec 2006Moscow-Pullman Daily News online Jan 16, 2010, Obituary: Carol J. Campbell Renfrew Renfrew was an Elder of the Presbyterian Church, a gifted watercolorist, and played the trombone.
After Flodden, peace came to the area and by the 19th century, Ford was a thriving agricultural and forestry community. Ford Castle had been rebuilt in the 1760s and, in 1859, Louisa, Marchioness of Beresford inherited Ford Estate on the death of her husband, the 3rd Marquess (who in turn, had inherited it from his mother, Susanna, Marchioness of Waterford). Lady Louisa Waterford, a gifted amateur watercolorist with an interest in the welfare of the tenants on the estate, rebuilt the village. A new school was built which today is the Lady Waterford Hall, decorated with wall paintings by Lady Waterford (opens daily at 10.30 am).
Westerik in 1955 Born in The Hague on 2 March 1924, Westerik received his education at the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague from 1942 to 1947. After his graduation he made a study trip to the United States in 1948. After his return to the Netherlands, he settled as an independent artist in The Hague. With the artists Herman Berserik, Jan van Heel, Willem Hussem and Jaap Nanninga he participated in the Verve group,Co Westerik ; male / Netherlandish ; watercolorist, etcher, photographer, gouache painter, ceramicist, lithographer, painter, draftsman, wall painter, serigrapher, academy lecturer at rkd.nl, 2015. which they founded in 1951 and dissolved in 1957.
In 1976 he took a one-year Foundation course at Gloucestershire College of Art and Design and went on to graduate in 1980 from Leeds Polytechnic with a BA (Hons) degree in Fine Art. He studied printmaking and Fine Art under Norman Webster and Norman Ackroyd RA. His time at Leeds was marked by his interest in and study of the masters, such as Henri Fantin-Latour, Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin, and Rembrandt; he wrote his dissertation on watercolorist John Sell Cotman. In his graduating year he exhibited his etching “Jackie” at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition and his works were acquired by Leeds City Art Gallery.
His father died before he had finished his schooling, and his mother sent him to Saya Nyan (not to be confused with Ba Nyan) to study pavilion decoration. By the age of 16, he had fair mastery of this art. He later studied under the professional painter M.T. Hla (U Tun Hla) (1874–1946), who had a background in Traditional art, but who became a pioneer watercolorist of Burma, mastering Western techniques of painting. M.T. Hla picked up these skills through exposure to paintings by Robert Talbot Kelly in his book Burma Painted and Described, or postcards of the paintings from this book which were sold in stores.
Philip Pavia (1911-2005), the pioneering first-generation son of an Italian stone carver, "turned rocks into art." The Times of London called Pavia "arguably more of an original than some of his better-known contemporaries." He was rare among his peers for sculpting abstract and figurative art, and he took full advantage of a lengthy 74-year career to develop his reach. Although he started his career as a draftsman and watercolorist, Pavia ultimately made his mark with a body of work that spanned all-abstract bronzes, black-and- white abstractions in Carrara marble and, just prior to his death in 2005, at aged 94, a dozen monumental terracotta heads.
Watercolorist Tom Nicholas painting at an American Watercolor Society demonstration The American Watercolor Society, founded in 1866, is a nonprofit membership organization devoted to the advancement of watercolor painting in the United States. Watercolor technique requires discipline, forethought, and planning of the composition, as the paintings can not be revised if mistakes occur (as one could with oil technique, for instance). AWS judges the work of a painter before granting admission to the society as an "active" (now "signature") member. Such membership in the society now is considered an indication of the painter having established a consistent style and to have demonstrated considerable skill in the medium.
Founded in 1921, the school began as a profit-based independent school of art and illustration, producing a number of notable artists including watercolorist Frank Webb, animation producer and director Rick Schneider-Calabash, and the late science fiction illustrator Frank Kelly Freas. The Institute now specializes primarily in design disciplines and culinary arts. In 1968, Education Management Corporation (EDMC) acquired The Art Institute of Pittsburgh, and created additional schools the Art Institute system. In 2008, it briefly became one of the largest arts colleges in the United States (factoring online enrollment). However, in 2010 enrollment began to drop, in part due to the falsification of records.
She was also considered a talented watercolorist, capable of painting dramatic, convincing scenes. Nevertheless, she took personal criticism to heart, recalling that her mother in childhood likened her to "a pretty vase without handles"; another critic told her (at age nine) that her character "had not enough nourishment in it to sustain a dog", and compared her to "a field mouse, a topaz, a roe deer, a blue fairy and a spark". According to this same person, her heraldic emblem should have been a runaway horse. In October 1836 at age 18, she married the future French National Assembly member and historian Joseph d'Haussonville (1809–1884).
By the time he graduated from college, Sumbat had greatly improved his skills as a watercolorist with light and easy brushwork, pure and translucent colors.Materials and Techniques of Sumbat Der Kiureghian: Iranian-American Watercolors Sumbat preferred exhibiting his paintings in his studio. He first participated in a formal exhibition of paintings in April 1944 at the Anglo- Persian Institute in Isfahan. His next exhibition was in February 1948 in Abadan, where all exhibited paintings were sold and Sumbat received many commissions. Stanley Foster, an English consulting engineer for the AIOC and an amateur artist,Armen Der Kiureghian (2009), The Life and Art of Sumbat, p. 172.
Stanley married Alice C. English in 1854, when he was 40 and essentially finished with his western travels. They had five children together, two of whom died as infants. Their son L. C. Stanley published a biographical account of his father, entitled "John Mix Stanley, Artist-Explorer," in the 1924 Annual Report Smithsonian Institution, edited by David I. Bushnell, Jr. Another son, Louis Stanley, was a railroad lawyer who married Jane C. Stanley, a watercolorist. Their daughter, Stanley's granddaughter, was fellow artist and painter Alice Caroline Stanley (1895–1996), the wife of former Secretary of State Dean Acheson (1893–1971) and mother to David Campion Acheson (born 1921).
She was a photographer, a prolific painter and a watercolorist; her published works included her own sketches and paintings, many made during challenging and dangerous travels. Only a few months after the Armistice of 11 November 1918, she began an extended tour of the Near East in 1919 (described in ). She visited a number of countries, including Greece, Turkey, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, India, and Southern Sudan in central Africa. Returning from that two-year journey she exhibited three hundred watercolor sketches in June 1921 at the Alpine Gallery on Bond Street in London, and continued with other exhibitions and one-woman shows over following years.
His artistic education was provided by his father, the painter-etcher- watercolorist :sv:Allan Österlind, of post romantic and naturalist inclination, and by his French friends Maurice Rollinat, Maxime Maufra, Jean- François Raffaëlli, as well as by the Nordic community he used to get with, and in particular the swede Per Ekström who taught him the art of painting knife which shall become a feature of his work. In 1905, at the SNBA Paint Fair, Anders Osterlind hung a pastel "L'Aurore" (The Dawn) and an oil painting "Effet de neige" (Snow effect), his first painting which he presented to his master Per Ekström as a gesture of recognition.
Both Ba Nyan and Ba Zaw returned to Burma in 1930 (Ba Nyan from approximately eight years of study in London and Ba Zaw from three). It was Ba Nyan, not Ba Zaw, however, who received triumphant accolades in Burma, holding a famous exhibition at the Governor's House only months after his return. In London Ba Nyan had mastered the arts of oil painting and gouache, while Ba Zaw, who had remained at the Royal College of Art, refined his techniques in watercolor. Ba Nyan began to surprise Burmese painters with his techniques in thick, impasto oil and in gouache; Ba Zaw, on the other hand, left as a watercolorist and returned as one.
Jerrems was born on 14 March 1949 at Ivanhoe, Melbourne the third child of Victorian-born parents Eric Alfred Jerrems (1917–1970), an accountant with Edward Trenchard and Co., Stock and Station Agents in Collins Street, Melbourne, and Joyce Mary (a.k.a. Joy) née Jacobs, (1922–1993), commercial seamstress and hobby watercolorist. Jerrems attended (1955–60) Ivanhoe Primary School and Heidelberg High School (1961–66) and went on to complete a Diploma of Art and Design, majoring in Photography (1967–70), in the newly established photography course at Prahran Technical School, where she was taught by cinematographer Paul Cox and acted in his film Skin Deep.Cox, Paul, 1940– & Illumination Films (Australia) & Contemporary Arts Media (Firm) (2011).
Acheson's paternal grandfather was Edward Campion Acheson (1858–1934), an English-born Church of England priest who, after several years in Canada, moved to the U.S. to become Episcopal Bishop of Connecticut. Acheson's paternal grandmother was Eleanor Gertrude Gooderham, the Canadian-born granddaughter of prominent Canadian distiller William Gooderham (1790–1881), who was a founder of the Gooderham and Worts Distillery.David S. McClellan, Dean Acheson: The State Department Years (1976) pp 8–12 Acheson's mother Alice was a painter, and his maternal grandparents were Louis Stanley, a railroad lawyer and Jane C. Stanley, was a watercolorist. His great-grandfather was John Mix Stanley (1814–1872), a renowned painter of American Indian life in the Wild West.
Kuznetsova's first husband was Nikolai Albertovich Benois, the son of watercolorist Albert Nikolayevich Benois (1852–1936). After the death of Benois, Kuznetsova wed Jules Massenet's nephew, the banker and industrialist Alfred Massenet. Alfred had worked for a time in the Russian Empire, prior to the Revolution, as the president of the Société d'Industrie Minière de Chagali-Heliar, a French copper mining company headquartered in Tbilisi, Georgia.Stevens, Horace J. The Copper Handbook: A Manual of the Copper Industry of the World, Vol X. Published by the Author:Houghton, Michigan, 1911 Kuznetsova's last years were spent in poverty; she lived in one room in a small hotel off the Champs Elysees, abandoned by her son Mikhael and her former colleagues and friends.
Most of New Belgium's beer labels were initially designed by Anne Fitch, a watercolorist whose work appeared on all New Belgium beers for 19 years. In 2006, Fitch artwork appeared on each of the over 125 million bottles sold by New Belgium,Living on Earth: Green Brewery Accessed March 21, 2008 In 2010, however, New Belgium unveiled its four-beer Explore Series, whose labels featured a different design. Kim Jordan, the president of New Belgium Brewery, credits the success of New Belgium Brewery in part on Fitch's artwork: "Our beers were good, our labels were interesting to people, and we pretty quickly had a fairly robust following."Interview with Kim Jordan Beerscribe.
A well-known painter in Australia, Jesse Jewhurst Hilder (1881–1916), who never traveled to Burma or met its artists, had a large influence on the painting of both Ba Zaw and Saya Saung, and through them, many other Burmese painters. Hilder was a classic painter of the British Watercolor School Style in which the color white was not mixed with watercolor and thus the medium remained watery (“pure”) and difficult to handle. In addition, Hilder borrowed other aspects of traditional British watercolor, especially in his use of subdued colors. J.J. Hilder was a virtuoso watercolorist (deserving more credit than he has yet received) applying the British style to capture the sandy-brown landscapes of Australia.
300pxIn absence of violent contrast and supported by the Mediterranean conception of light and colour it is remarkable in his career the constant maturation of an almost gestual modulation techniques of form and volume based upon brush strokes full of impasto. Pagans i Monsalvatje sees painting as a personal interpretation of the artist but capable of arriving to the onlooker through a never-ending state of crisis between knowledge and the feeling of reality. Through his career, Jordi Pagans has worked and investigated with different materials to paint his urban and Mediterranean landscapes and still lives. He has arisen not only as an oil painter but also as a drawer, watercolorist, pastel and gouache painter.
Regarding the first, the watercolorist recovered again the subject Las Palmas old quarter, but dealt with a renewed technique with an agile and vigorous brushwork, more decision in drawing and a greater chromaticism in his palette,Carlos Platero Fernández, Comas Quesada en el CICCA. Magazine Aguayro nº 194, July/October 1991, p. 32. highlighting he was a painter whose artistic expression was always in constant evolution and searching new ways of expression. What characterizes and defines the pictorial production of Comas is a constant interest in both the traditional architecture and natural landscapes of the coasts, midlands and highlands of Gran Canaria, seascapes, houses with tile roof, patios and balconies, and so on.
On June 18, 1949, Sumbat and Stanley began their journey from Abadan, and traveling through Iraq and Syria to Lebanon they arrived in Naples, Italy by boat, then went on to Rome, Florence, Venice and Paris, arriving in London on August 13. During their travels they visited museums and historical sites and made numerous sketches and paintings. Sumbat was able to observe the works of great impressionists such as Monet, Degas and Pissarro, postimpressionists such as Cézanne, Toulouse-Lautrec and Van Gogh, and renowned British watercolorist J.M.W. Turner, who remained his favorites all his life. Sumbat and Stanley enrolled in the Anglo-French Art Centre in London, where Sumbat received his first formal training.
Rickert's scenes of industrial sites reflect the bustle of his native Pennsylvania, where he spends the other half of his time. Rickert's influences include Edward Hopper, Mark Rothko, Caspar David Friedrich, Nicholas Poussin and Richard Diebenkorn.A Conversation with Paul Rickert, Paul Rickert: Industrial Visions, Rider University Art Gallery exhibit catalog, Jan 28 – February 28, 2010 In February 2010, a selection of Rickert's industrial landscapes were featured at the exhibit, Industrial Visions at the Rider University Art Gallery. In an interview with Professor Harry I Naar, gallery directory, Rickert explained that he was influenced by the drama captured in the landscapes of 19th-century artist Joseph Mallord William Turner (April 23, 1775 – December 19, 1851), an English Romantic landscape painter, watercolorist and printmaker.
This miniature is probably the portrait listed in the inventory of the estate of Rubens in 1641 and on which at that time the price of the frame and glass was still outstanding.Philip Fruytiers, Four children of Rubens and Helena Fourment with maids in the Royal Collection Fruytiers also painted large portraits like that of David Teniers the Younger and group or family portraits such as that of the three children of Rubens.Philip Fruytiers, Portrait of David Teniers at Sotheby's Portrait of Govaert Wendelen, etching The accepted view of Philip Fruytiers as principally a miniaturist and watercolorist was based partially on the descriptions in the early biographical works by Cornelis de Bie and Arnold Houbraken.Philip Fruytiers in: Cornelis de Bie, ‘'Het Gulden Cabinet'’, 1661, p.
Later he lived in a sheltered cabin called Stag's Retreat in the beachside Asilomar woods, across from the last remaining sand dunes in the area. Something of a local legend on the Peninsula for his acerbic wit and eccentric character, Colburn was an active member of the artistic community, teaching, writing art criticism for the Carmel Pine Cone, executing public murals, and exhibiting in galleries and museums throughout California, and in Colorado, New York, and London. Colburn gained his substantial reputation as a watercolorist and for his early paintings of the Monterey Peninsula in Northern California. He depicted the fisherman and activities around the wharf and in the canneries, and the hills and farm buildings around Salinas and Carmel Valley.
Gallagher enjoyed early success, both financially and in popular response, and through the 1920s and 1930s he occupied a prominent position in the American art world, being favorably compared to artists like Woodbury, Benson, and even Winslow Homer (1836–1910). His work was reviewed, for example, by the influential art critic Loring Holmes Dodd and included in a 1960 publication in which Dodd collected articles he had published over the years in the Worcester Evening Gazette. The collection presented Gallagher in the company of such other prominent illustrators and etchers as N.C. Wyeth, Norman Rockwell, Maxfield Parrish, and Howard Pyle. A 2012 exhibit catalog noted Gallagher's strength as a watercolorist: “Gallagher had a proclivity for calm and peaceful places, and he rendered images that elicit the feelings evoked by his sites in the viewer.
She and her sister received art instruction from local watercolorist Sara Mann, who taught her to copy images from Text Books for Art Education by Louis Prang. The books showed how to create simple shapes and up to complex compositions. Although she appreciated learning how to create two-dimensional images of nature, she knew at that time that she did not want to be an artist that created traditional works of art or and had little interest in painting portraits. Georgia O'Keefe, Untitled (Seated Figure), 1901-1902, graphite on paper O'Keeffe attended high school at Sacred Heart Academy in Madison, Wisconsin as a boarder between 1901 and 1902, and her parents provided extra tuition for art classes—using crayon, charcoal or oil paints—that were taught by a nun with high expectations, Sister Angelique.
Hayward was born as Alfred Mark Hayward on February 14, 1884, in Camden, New Jersey, to English immigrants. His father and grandfather were painters, and he became an accomplished watercolorist himself, exhibiting his impressionist landscapes (usually of mountains, and some quite abstract) to critical praise at New York's Fifteen Gallery, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (where he studied), and many cities of the United States and beyond. In addition to his painting, Hayward worked as a newspaper writer of humorous human interest fare, wrote poetry, and lectured at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, but found his greatest fame when he turned to cartooning. He created the strip Some Day, Maybe for the New York World in 1912 and Great Ceasar's Ghost, later named Great Ceasar's Goat and later still Pinheads (1913–1915) also for the World.
Thaxter's cottage on Appledore Island Karl, who had mental illness since childhood, traveled with Thaxter during the periods she returned to the islands, while the two younger sons traveled with the husband to Florida after his serious illness in 1868–69. Her life with Levi was not harmonious, and there were other periods of separation, She missed her islands, and so after ten years away, Thaxter moved back to Appledore Island. She became the hostess of her father's hotel, the Appledore House, and welcomed many New England literary and artistic notables to the island and to her parlor, including writers Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, John Whittier, Sarah Orne Jewett, and the artists William Morris Hunt and Childe Hassam, the latter of whom painted several pictures of her. The watercolorist Ellen Robbins also painted the flowers in her garden.
With it, was inaugurated the art gallery "Madelca", then located at Santa Ana main square in the Canary Islands' capital. It was a collection of 20 watercolours which depicted different parts of the old town, going ahead to the commemoration of the V Centenary of the founding of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria which was marked the next year. That year he won the contest of the late Cairasco gallery, receiving the silver medal by the "Agrupación de Acuarelistas Canarios" (Canarian Watercolorist Association) for the work "Bruma" (Mist), as well as the award of "collection of work" by the Saving Bank of Gran Canaria. In July 1978, he offered another solo exhibit at "Madelca" presenting again themes on the historic centre to mark the 500th Centenary of the constitution of his hometown, on this occasion the collection comprised 30 watercolours.
By the age of twenty-one, Paw Oo Thet was earning enough to make a living from his art as an illustrator and cartoonist in local magazines and newspapers, including the People's Daily in Mandalay, The Mirror, and the Working People’s Daily in Yangon. He won a scholarship in 1959 that let him and Win Pe undertake Norman Rockwell's correspondence course, the Famous Artists School, in the United States. The exposure to the work of Dong Kingman, the Chinese-American watercolorist, often described as an impressionist and who was one of the instructors of the Famous Artists School, influenced both Paw Oo Thet and Win Pe in a large way. In the case of Paw Oo Thet, Kingman's influence carried over in Paw Oo Thet's vibrant use of color, which was a refreshing change in Burmese arts for much Burmese painting until then was characterized by somber and subdued coloring, and in oil painting, heavy and dark use of chiaroscuro, acquired from the style of Ba Nyan.
His sealed tomb stands in the north section of the churchyard, notable as the only sealed tomb in the churchyard. The Dugald Stewart Monument erected to him on the south-west edge of Calton Hill is just out of sight from the tomb. Hugh William Williams (1773–1829), a watercolorist and landscape artist, was known as "Grecian Williams" for his foreign studies. It was allegedly Williams who coined the term "the modern Athens" in reference to Edinburgh, therefore his resting place, with Edinburgh's "Acropolis" (Calton Hill) standing to the right, is fittingly appropriate. Mausoleum of Sir William Fettes Sir William Fettes (1750–1836), a former merchant on the High Street, served as Lord Provost of Edinburgh in the early 19th century. His bequests funded the building of Fettes College (opened 1870). The monument is a large sandstone mausoleum with gilded, grey marble tablets, inscribed: George Chalmers (1773–1836) was a master plumber and founder of Chalmers Hospital. He had lived at 208 Canongate.
He received painting instruction of some kind in England but from which academy or teachers is not known. When Maung Maung Gyi returned to Burma a year or two later, his adventures abroad earned him celebrity status and he began to pass on his skills as a plein air watercolorist in the Western style to other artists in Burma. Thus, it is possible, but not certain, that somewhere between 1909 and 1916 that Maung Maung Gyi served as Saya Saung's first teacher. The art historian Nyan Shein (who studied painting under Saya Saung) says that Saya Saung became a professional painter by the age of 18, or by about 1916. The art scholar and painter Min Naing, biographer of Ba Nyan, documents that after Ba Zaw returned to Burma in 1930 from three years of studies at the Royal College of Art in London that he began to teach watercolor “wash” painting to Saya Saung.
Perkins' presence set the tone for the American presence in Iran during the second half of the 19th century when the missionary-led American presence took responsibility for a broad network of primary and secondary schools in northwest Iran that served to bring literacy among the indigenous Christian Aramaic speakers - members of the Assyrian Church of the East. Following his example, Americans concentrated on improvements in education, book and periodicals publishing, and especially in establishing the first medical college in Iran (1879). The Americans may also be credited with creating the opportunity to put into writing the vernacular Assyrian neo- Aramaic of the Christians of northwest Iran and producing the first periodical in all of Iran (1849), produced in the language at the American Mission press in Urmia. Perkins was not only a trained missionary, but he was also an ethnically aware watercolorist whose drawings of men, women and children belonging to the various ethnic groups of northwest Iran survive in his books as well as in unpublished drawings.
Shortly after he died in 1916, two books of his works were published: J.J. Hilder, Watercolorist, a catalog in 1916, and The Art of J.J. Hilder in 1918. One of these books, probably the latter, was on sale in Burma and fell into the hands of Ba Zaw and Saya Saung. The Hilder influence on the works of both Ba Zaw and Saya Saung is legendary in Burma, although it is not absolutely certain whether Ba Zaw introduced Saya Saung to the works of Hilder or if Saya Saung encountered them on his own. Ba Zaw may well have been the initiator as the early art historian G. Hla Maung, in his sketches on Burmese painters, quotes Ba Zaw as telling Saya Saung that the best method for Saung to develop as a painter was to copy each of Hilder's paintings at least “hundred times”. Amar quotes Saya Saung as telling her that Ba Zaw learned painting by copying each of Hilder's paintings in the Hilder book he possessed “twenty times”, which suggests that Ba Zaw was the discoverer of Hilder's work.
He then renders the subject matter with a densely thick layering of various brushstrokes. Newsom consistently paints a wide variety of animals and flora.John Newsom: Allegory of Nations, Mike Weiss Gallery, November 18, 2006–December 31, 2006 (retrieved September 14, 2012) His reduced subject matter and calligraphic style, has been compared to the works of Philip Guston, for the reason that by focusing on a limited, but meaningful subject matter, an individual technique matures.Marc J. Straus, Plan B, in: John Newsom: Allegories of Naturalism, Milan: Charta, 2010, p. 10. Moreover, Newsom’s work has been interpreted as allegorical still lifes that capture the essence of Darwinism: "The tradition of the great naturalists – creating works of art that explore the complex relationships in nature."Richard J. Massey, The Great Naturalists, in: John Newsom: Crescendo, Milan, Charta, 2011, p. 5. However, Newsom’s oeuvre is not only inspired by the thoughts and musings of Charles Darwin, but also by the artwork of the early French-American watercolorist John James Audubon.see Note 2 The momentous color-plate book by Audubon, The Birds of America, (1827 – 1839) features detailed studies of birds in their habitats, and promoted the discipline of ornithology throughout the United States.
Gallery 30 opened in October 1979 when watercolorist L. Chris Fick and former Gettysburg College professor Elizabeth “Betty” Martin partnered in a venture that they called a “half bookstore, half gallery.” The women named their business “Gallery 30” in honor of its location at 30 York Street in downtown Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Gallery 30 opened with a small selection of paintings, photographs and sculptures by local and regional artists and about 4,000 books. The book selection spanned many literary genres but focused primarily on children's literature, reflecting the owners’ appreciation for the art of illustration. In June 1988, Gallery 30 was acquired by former music teacher and Kansas native Rodney Gisick. Although previous owner Betty Martin continued to be involved with Gallery 30's book department in an advisory capacity, Gisick took Gallery 30's selection in a different direction with the launch of a literary project that he dubbed “Man to Man Books.” By 1992 Gisick had compiled “the largest catalogue of men’s studies books available” in the United States, prompting one publisher to call Gallery 30 “the men’s bookstore for the nation.” During his time as owner, Gisick also made changes to Gallery 30's art department, adding handcrafted gold and sterling silver jewelry and more contemporary artisan crafts.

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