Sentences with phrase «french countryside»

Do you have a place in the Italian or French countryside to recommend?
French Country combines a mix of antiques (mainly from the 18th century) with colours inspired by the matchless light and rustic beauty of the French countryside, and wraps it all in comfort: cozily stuffed upholstery, curtains that puddle dramatically on the floor, richly textured fabrics and carpets.
From a converted butter factory in Byron Bay, to a fairytale Château in the French countryside, these inspiring homes are some of the most unusual properties around and make a normal house seem positively boring.
The next best thing to a trip to the French countryside, The Cottage Journal's French Cottage special issue is full of romantic inspiration from Parisian chic to Provincial charm.
According to Annie, Honfleur is named after a seaside harbour town in Normandy and inspired by rich warm browns found in the rustic French countryside and mid-20th century design.
This French countryside and cottage - style aesthetic soon attracted interior designers and decorators the world over.
The bathroom is amazing — the little mirrored table, birdcage, rustic wood elements — would be like escaping to the French countryside every time you set foot...
The perfect kitchen Flowers, freshly picked from the garden and casually arranged in rustic containers, are set to one side so they don't distract from the stunning view of the quaint French countryside.
I love the French Countryside as well as the Antique White dinnerware.
When it comes to French countryside living, one of my favorite sources of inspiration is the blog Dreamy Whites...
Colors are reminiscent of the French countryside and include vibrant colors of yellow, gold, red, blue, and green as well as muted shades of blue, lavender, green and grey.
I used simple and beautiful silverware from Mikasa — this pattern is French Countryside.
Wall Color — Gray Owl at 75 % in Matte Finish Trim Color — Simply White in Semi-gloss Finish Beadboard Wallpaper — Allen and Roth from Lowe's Chandelier — Savvy in Williamsburg, VA Dinnerware — Mikasa, French Countryside Collection Chargers — Pottery Barn (seven years ago) Placemats — Target (probably nine years or so ago) Slipcovered Chairs — IKEA Side Chairs — Joss and Main Farmhouse Table — We made it — more details here Clock — Savvy in Williamsburg, VA (a couple of years ago) Mirror — Restoration Hardware (six years ago but I think they still sell it) Drapery Panels — IKEA Ritva Panels Drapery Rods — Lowe's Sideboard — The Velvet Shoestring (consignment shop — then painted with Annie Sloan's French Linen chalk paint from Lady Butterbug.
I'm dreaming of the French countryside right along with you!
Modern kitchen decor ideas in Provencal style can be inspired by beautiful French countryside landscapes, the smell of delicious food and fresh flowers.
It harks back to the days when candles and fires were the primary light source for the farmers and peasants of the French countryside.
This rustic French style villa in Washington D.C. was inspired by the cottages of the French countryside.
The inspiration for today's tablescape is the French Countryside.
The shore, the French countryside, an English Castle.
Through all the suds, I spied a Mikasa French Countryside plate, didn't I?
That cobalt would look great with my Mikasa French Countryside set!
When imagining the French countryside, I dream of saturated color, sunshine, gardens and homegrown food cooked in rustic country kitchens.
We've even found a magical French farmhouse replica in California surrounded by a wildlife preserve that transports your senses to the French countryside.
Taupe is an ideal complement to blue - grays, especially when applied in a French countryside theme in a kitchen or living room.
I can get stuck in to a few emails or make a couple of final few tweaks to my presentation and, if I get bored of the view my laptop's offering, I can stare out the window at the French countryside.
Returning to Paris after a six year self - imposed hiatus in the French countryside, the artist Jean Dubuffet rediscovered city life with an energy captured in his «Paris Circus» paintings, an example of which — «Paris Polka» (1961)-- set an auction high last year at Christie's for $ 25 million.
The exhibition will focus on the various locales the artist painted over the years, including Provincetown, Seville, Venice, Paris, the French countryside, and Marrakesh.
By the late 1950s, her color palette was redolent with the hues of the French countryside, reflecting an evolution away from the starkness of the New York School's abstract expressionism.
Other highlights include five Monet landscapes spanning 30 years, from views of the French countryside to his late immersive representations of water lilies, evocative works by Paul Cézanne and Gustav Klimt, and modern and contemporary perspectives by 20th ‐ century artists as diverse as Georgia O'Keeffe, Edward Hopper, David Hockney, Gerhard Richter, and Ed Ruscha.
Monet's ambition of documenting the French countryside led him to adopt a method of painting the same scene many times in order to capture the changing of light and the passing of the seasons.
In «Swirl and Roil,» her new work leaves behind drawing inspiration from the French countryside to look to math and science in the forms of topology, subatomic particles and waves of light and sound.
Most of her paintings are of the French countryside, particularly the Riviera and Provence.
There he created a series of watercolors and paintings with the French countryside as his subject.
This connection was further illuminated with Mitchell's move to the French countryside where she set up her studio in the realm of van Gogh and Claude Monet and fed on the vibrant natural energy of the area.
This collection is particularly strong in the works of Monet: five great Monet landscapes spanning thirty years are featured, from views of the French countryside to one of his late immersive representations of water lilies, Le Bassin aux Nymphéas of 1919.
As a student in Paris in the late 1930s, she painted nudes, city scenes, the French countryside, and traditional still lifes.
Five Monet landscapes spanning 30 years are featured, from views of the French countryside to one of his late representations of water lilies, Le Bassin aux Nymphéas of 1919.
Like many of the Impressionists and Post-Impressionists, Mitchell was fascinated by the French countryside and the lush landscape of Vétheuil featured prominently in her late paintings.
The Visceral Gallery in Centerville showed the works of Bing Davis and his son Derrick Davis with «Kente Spirit» panels masterly executed with Prismacolor colored pencils through February 18; the rich Impressionist «Canvases from the French Countryside» by Richard Mantia through June 17; and the «Parallel Visions» group of works by Susan Scherette King with polished acrylics, organic hard - edged ceramics by Don Williams, and Constructivist prints and sculpture by Matthew Burgy through August 18.
The patterned motif, which originated in eighteenth century France, often depicts farm life and pastoral vignettes of the French countryside.
The «Paris Circus» paintings in February 1961 signal Dubuffet's vivacious rediscovery of city life, heightened by a return to Paris after a self - imposed six - year exile in the French countryside.
This compact show touched on the long arc of Mitchell's career, from her early, calligraphic slashes in the 1950s, when she was painting in a studio off St. Marks Place in New York and drinking with the AbEx boys, through her time in Paris in the»60s, and, until her death in 1992, in the French countryside at an estate with an overgrown garden and a
«Visit» a landscape painting to take a swim in a lake, hike up a mountain, or walk in the French countryside.
The French countryside was a strong influence on her work.
In the 70's and 80's, Joan Mitchell found in the French countryside ample natural phenomena that became source of inspiration for her works, as expressed in some of her titles: Green Tree (1976), Red Tree (1976), Tilleul (1977).
Along with an oil - on - panel fish, modeled on a Courbet, and a plucked goose whose broken neck allows its head to lie gracefully beside it, the exhibition's final room contains a couple of barnyard animals Soutine made while in hiding in the French countryside after the Nazi invasion of Paris in 1940.
Born in Paris in 1946 and raised in the heart of an idyllic French countryside near the Loire Valley, Jacques Lamy began painting at a v...
«Sheep Behind a Fence» (circa 1940), which Soutine made in hiding in the French countryside after the Nazis invaded Paris.
When I think of veteran painters like Raoul de Keyser ensconced in the small Belgian town of Deinze, or the reclusive expatriate James Bishop who has spent much of the last half century hiding out in the French countryside, the first lines of John Ashbery's poem «Soonest Mended» pop into my mind: «Barely tolerated, living on the margin / In our technological society.»
The 35 - year - old, Tel Aviv - based artist's works often depict the whimsical trots of his globe: sailing in the Aeolian Islands off the coast of Italy, bunkering down in the French countryside amidst sun - drenched fauna and terra cotta - roofed houses; or simply harnessing a keen observation and infatuation with the small moments of life that we tend to neglect, but can influence us in a big and prominent way.
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