Art6 Man in a Turban https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/437385 Rembrandt (Rembrandt van Rijn) | Man in a Turban | The Metropolitan Museum of ArtUse your arrow keys to navigate the tabs below, and your tab key to choose an item New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. "The Hudson-Fulton Celebration," September–November 1909, no. 79 (lent by Mr. W. K. Vanderbilt, New York). New York. The Metropolwww.metm.. 2025. 7. 15. Waterloo Bridge, Gray Weather If not for the fog, Claude Monet once remarked, “London wouldn’t be a beautiful city. It’s the fog that gives it its magnificent breadth.” While working on his London series, he rose early every day to paint Waterloo Bridge in the morning, moving on to Charing Cross Bridge at midday and in the afternoon. He observed both motifs from his fifth-floor window at the Savoy Hotel. The Art Institute’s .. 2025. 4. 22. Stacks of Wheat (End of Summer) The monumental stacks that Claude Monet depicted in his series Stacks of Wheat rose fifteen to twenty feet and stood just outside the artist’s farmhouse at Giverny. Through 1890 and 1891, he worked on this series both in the field, painting simultaneously at several easels, and in the studio, refining pictorial harmonies. In May 1891, Monet hung fifteen of these canvases next to each other in on.. 2025. 4. 18. A Road in Louveciennes This picture, which is in effect drawn directly with paint, was almost certainly executed out-of-doors about 1870. The site is in the village of Louveciennes, west of Paris, where Camille Pissarro lived and worked in 1869-70 and was inspired to paint the same motif, but from a different vantage point (National Gallery, London).At the time, Renoir was staying nearby with his parents, who had reti.. 2025. 4. 11. A Bouquet of Flowers Peeters was a founding figure in the history of European still life, a genre that attracted many women artists who did not have the opportunity to study nude models. In this ambitious composition, Peeters paid close attention to naturalistic details like dewdrops, insect bites, and drooping tulips that hint at transience and decay. At the same time, she asserted her own achievement by inscribing.. 2025. 4. 10. Olive Trees https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/437998This is one of five pictures of olive orchards that Van Gogh made in November 1889. Painted directly from nature but animated by Seurat-like stippling and stylized passages of broken color, these works responded to recent compositions by Paul Gauguin and Émile Bernard. "What I’ve done is a rather harsh and coarse realism beside their abstract.. 2025. 4. 9. 이전 1 다음