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Ali Miller on Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Alexa Wilding fluctuates between a confident and seductive nymph, a stiff and unamused model, and a vulnerable damsel awaiting a rescue.
Jessica Stoller on the Sévres Breast Bowl
The dairy she created allowed her to demonstrate her political agency while intertwining ideas related to femininity, nature and health.
Constance Mallinson on Manet's and von Werefkin's Ragpickers
Few previous painters were capable of challenging and disturbing the consumerist mentality and self-satisfaction of the middle class and the economic and social systems that sustained them.
Zorawar Sidhu on František Kupka
Within a year of exhibiting it, he would never paint like this again
Dear Weather: Buzz Spector on Hobbema, Gainsbourough, & Vermeer
Little popcorn puffs or higher, more distant, cirrus... a shorthand for how the duration of a painting allows for some time.
Suzanne Stryk on Maria Sibylla Merian
Most alluring to me is her enviable touch—the delicately notched antennae, chomped and curled leaves, or gooey-pale larvae casting shadows as they inch along.
What's in a Name: Raoul Middleman on John Singleton Copley
How else to paint but to concentrate mercilessly on the singularity of high end realistic focus and finish... rendered to an almighty faultless Metaphysical T.
Marc Handelman on Martin Johnson Heade
The jungle is gathered as a flat organization of space, folded, and pierced so as to connect multiple locations.
Tony Robbin on Bonnard's Bathers
It is often said that Pierre Bonnard’s paintings featuring bathers are intimate works, as the women are caught unawares, glimpsed in unguarded and private moments...
Barry Nemett on Gwen John
The building weighs less than a flower. The parasol stem dreams about being a wicker chair...
Rosalyn Schwartz on Caspar David Friedrich
I first discovered the paintings of Caspar David Friedrich in the mid-1980’s when I was an Assistant Professor of Painting at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis...
Zaria Forman on William Bradford
In July 1869, American painter William Bradford, alongside photographers John L. Dunmore and George Critcherson, embarked on the first expedition to the Arctic devoted principally to art.
Ellen Altfest on Francois Boucher
I’ve always disliked the Rococo, and pretty much any artist who paints pink cheeks (Rubens, Renoir, Hals, etc.). For me, it’s not the pleasure, desire, or playfulness of the Rococo and other similar confections, but it is the one-note, overly-sweet eagerness to please that irritates.
Richard Estes on Bernardo Bellotto
There is a small painting by Bellotto at the Chicago Art Institute - a view of a street in the small town of Pirna, Germany a short distance from Dresden - that I used to see every day when I was a student there and which always fascinated me.
Amy Weiskopf on Carlo Carra
If Pompeian still life frescos and Cubist still life paintings had a baby, Carlo Carra's Natura Morta con la Squadra would be that child.
Julia Jacquette on Adélaïde Labille-Guiard
A number of years ago a well-known and influential New York art gallerist was brought to my studio by a private dealer I’d been working with.
Adam Cvijanovic on Thomas Cole
He was not a particularly remarkable painter. There is no dazzling brushstroke or consummate gesture. They are paintings that get the job done and punch the clock.
Julie Langsam on Frederic Edwin Church
I first saw Frederic Church’s “Twilight in the Wilderness” in 1996 on my first trip to Cleveland; I was wandering aimlessly through the galleries of the Cleveland Museum of Art when this painting stopped me dead in my tracks.