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- Title: Short Bio of Fra Angelico (c. 1400-55)
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- But even in the most lavishly decorative of them all the
- Title: Short Bio of Jacopo Bassano (1553-1613)
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- something of the peasant artist, even though the influence of, for example,
- Title: Short Bio of Giovanni Bellini (1430?-1516)
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- painting six or seven new canvases. These, his greatest works, were destroyed
- Title: Short Bio of Carracci (1557-1602)
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- held in Bologna in 1956 was a notable event), but Annibale has now regained
- Title: Short Bio of Paul Cézanne (1839-1906)
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- and eventually challenged all the
- Title: Short Bio of John Constable (1776-1837)
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- father and married Maria Bicknell after a seven-year courtship and in
- Constable thought that No two days are alike, nor even two hours;
- these even more highly than the finished works because of their freedom
- Title: Short Bio of Cuyp
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- effects of the early morning or evening sun). He approaches Claude
- Title: Short Bio of Edward d'Ancona
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- The first company to publish d'Ancona pin-ups, about 1935 to 1937, was Louis F. Dow in St Paul. d'Ancona worked in oil on canvas and his originals from that time usually measured about 30 x 22 inches. His early work is comparable in quality to that of the young Gil Elvgren, who had begun to work for Dow in 1937. Because d'Ancona produced so much work for Dow, one might assume that he was born in Minnesota and lived and worked in the St Paul, Minneapolis area. It is known that he supplied illustrations to the Goes Company in Cincinnati and to several soft-drink firms, which capitalized on his works similarity to the Sundblom/Elvgren style, which was so identified with Coca-Cola. During the 1940s and 1950s, d'Ancona's superb use of primary colors, masterful brushstrokes, and painterly style elevated him to the ranks of the very best artist in pin-up and glamour art. His subject matter at this time resembled Elvgren's. Both enjoyed painting nudes and both employed situation poses a great deal. d'Ancona also painted a fair amount of evening-gown scenes, as did Elvgren, Frahm, and Erbit.
- Title: Short Bio of Eugène Delacroix (1798-1863)
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- historical or contemporary events or literature, and a visit to
- painters and even modern artists such as
- Title: Short Bio of Peter Driben
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- as many as six or seven of his covers being published every month.
- Title: Short Bio of Gil Elvgren
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- Art. After graduation he found work at Stevens and Gross, a prestigious
- Title: Short Bio of Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1732-1806)
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- characterization, and spontaneous brushwork ensured that even his most
- Title: Short Bio of Caspar Friedrich
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- evening sun, which the artist said depicted the setting of the old,
- Even some of Friedrich's apparently nonsymbolic paintings contain inner
- Title: Short Bio of Henry Fuseli
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- with an exhibition of forty-seven of his own paintings.
- Title: Short Bio of Thomas Gainsborough
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- Royal Family, even though his rival Reynolds was appointed King's Principal
- sober-minded and the complete professional, Gainsborough (even though his
- Title: Short Bio of Vincent Gogh (1853-90)
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- a mental illness that eventually resulted in suicide. Among his
- Title: Short Bio of Ando Hiroshige (1797-1858)
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- lyrical scenes that made him even more successful than his contemporary,
- Title: Short Bio of David Hockney (1937- )
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- made him a recognizable figure even to people not particularly interested
- Title: Short Bio of Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944)
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- He even claimed that when he saw color he heard music.
- Steven Brock.
- Title: Short Bio of Paul Klee
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- scleroderma, which forced him to develop a simpler style and eventually
- Title: Short Bio of Earl MacPherson
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- opportunity to work where ever he wished. 1946 saw the start of an eleven
- Title: Short Bio of Edouard Manet (1832-1883)
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- Manet broke new ground in choosing subjects from the events and
- Title: Short Bio of Jean-François Millet (1814-75)
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- and even more decidedly so
- Title: Short Bio of Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
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- of France. The rheumatism eventually crippled him (by 1912 he was
- Title: Short Bio of Henri Rousseau (1844-1910)
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- the utter freshness of his vision even when working on a large scale and
- Title: Short Bio of Egon Schiele
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- Title: Short Bio of Georges Seurat (1859-1891)
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- on France's northern coast. In his short life Seurat produced seven
- Title: Short Bio of Joshua Shaw
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- seventeenth-century Franco-Italian painter, Claude Lorraine, and to
- by these artists but also those developed by seventeenth-century Dutch
- Title: Short Bio of James Tissot
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- alleged involvement in the turbulent events of the Paris Commune (1871)
- Land in 1886-87 and in 1889, and his illustrations to the events of the
- Title: Short Bio of Diego Velázquez (1599-1660)
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- eventually made marshal of the royal household, and as such he was
- Title: Short Bio of Jean-Antoine Watteau (1684-1721)
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- dreams, the revenge of madness on reason and of freedom on moral rules.
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