Sentences with phrase «air painters who»

During the early twentieth century in particular, Mayo and Galway were magnets for plein - air painters who believed in the purity and authenticity of West of Ireland culture.
At the same time, I was learning from the California painters — the great fast and loose plein air painters who were driving the medium forward.
The shingle - style architecture, all twists and turns and gables and porches, is incurably romantic, though interiors are also impressive, as they include a prominent collection of art from early in the 20th century, including works by William Wendt, Jean Mannheim and other air painters who put Laguna Beach on the map.
There is no doubt that Hockney is a brilliant plein air painter who has been able to transfer all his skills to this equivalent digital format.
Dalessio is an en plein air painter who strives to leave his personal voice out of the artwork in order to let nature present itself without intrepretation.

Not exact matches

John Constable was one of the earliest painters in Europe who painted landscape in open air.
Rackstraw Downes is a gifted painter who has carved out his own unique brand of plein - air realism.
Also, there is an extremely small number of painters here in San Diego, that I've met anyway, who are serious «modern» perceptual painters — lots of plein - air type painters who have a more regional focus but very few people painting more contemporary realism from life.
Julian Kreimer is a painter who alternates between plein air painting and abstraction.
But despite the enclosure of the studio, Heidkamp's practice finds precedent in the tradition of the plein air painter, specifically those who spent time painting in the Hamptons during the 1950s and 1960s.
In addition to numerous group and one - man gallery shows, event invitations, cherished awards earned, juried show acceptances - and some wonderful editorial profiles - Suys's devotion to his craft, his participation in plein air invitationals, judging, and increasingly teaching, have helped him grow not just in reputation but as a soulful painter who believes in lifelong learning, «no excuses», and the power of observation.
The gathering reveals an ambitious, sometimes awkward painter devoted to working in the open air who felt compelled to respond to Jackson Pollock and the radical allover compositions of his abstract drip paintings.
You decide upon the spot that you will join the great tradition of plein - air painters, following in the revolutionary footsteps of John Constable, who first left his studio to approach a landscape painting in glorious nature herself.
Plein Air Peconic works in the tradition of Tile Club members William Merritt Chase and Winslow Homer, who are recognized as the first Plein Air painters on the East End.
(Flavin — who had trained as a priest before going into the air force and then turning to art — had a well - documented obsession with Russian art and later dedicated a group of fluorescent light «monuments» to the Constructivist Vladimir Tatlin, who had trained as an icon painter.)
They included: the Irish - born George Frederick Folingsby (1828 — 91), who arrived in Australia in 1879 and became Master of the School of Painting at the NGS in 1882; the Swiss artist Abram Louis Buvelot (1814 — 88) who arrived in 1865 and taught at the Carlton School of Design in Melbourne; the English - born art teacher Julian Ashton (1851 — 1942) who settled in Sydney where he ran one of the best art schools in New South Wales; the English - born plein - air specialist A.J.Daplyn (1844 — 1926) who arrived in Australia in 1882 and shared his experience of Fontainebleau and the Barbizon School of landscape painting, before later writing a book entitled Landscape Painting from Nature in Australia (1902); the Italian - born painter Girolamo Pieri Ballati Nerli (1860 — 1926), influenced by the Macchiaioli group, who first lived in Melbourne before moving to Sydney in 1886; the Portuguese - born plein - air artist and Symbolist painter Arthur Jose De Souza Loureiro (1853 — 1932).
Of those artists who did travel to the Levant and North Africa, many went with the idea of plein - air painting, although this became much more convenient following the invention of the collapsible tin paint tube in 1841 by American painter John Rand - an event which had a significant impact on the development of Impressionist landscape painting with its focus on capturing the momentary light at a scene.
Eugene Boudin (1824 - 98) Impressionist painter who encouraged Monet to take up plein - air painting.
Barbizon School of Landscape painting Group of French landscape painters of the mid 19th century, who painted landscape for its own sake, often in plein - air, directly from nature.
Note: Like Impressionist painters who came after them, Barbizon plein - air painters benefited significantly from the invention in 1841 of the collapsible tin paint tube by American painter John Rand.
Those Romantic painters who made tiny en plein air paintings of Italy glorified nature.
Dubbed the Aerolabe, the vessel is designed by painter and sculptor Gaspard Schlumberger, who seeks to devise a green alternative to air transport.
This is a company specializing in contractor insurance for contractors including those who work in air conditioning, electrician, HVAC, landscaping, lawn care, plumbers, painters, remodeling and stone work.
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