Sentences with word «luminism»

His DayGlo canvases hover somewhere between luminism and appropriation, like geometry caught in the act of cross-dressing.
During its period of activity, it spawned several other painting styles, including Luminism and the Rocky Mountain School.
Their style was based on carefully detailed paintings with romantic, almost glowing lighting, sometimes called luminism.
Albert Bierstadt (1830 - 1902) German - born landscape artist of Hudson River School, Luminism style.
You mention Luminism, and your work references the Hudson School of Painting, as well as Abstract Expressionism.
is Professor of Art History at the Graduate Center, City University of NY, has collaborated on museum exhibitions and publications including Home on the Hudson: Women and Men Painting Landscape; Luminism Revisited: Paintings and Collec - tion of James Suydam; The Landscapes of Louis Rémy Mignot: A Southern Painter Abroad; El Baron de Courcy: Ilustraciones de un viaje, 1831 — 1833; and Creation & Renewal: Views of Cotopaxi by Frederic Edwin Church.
A form of Luminism underlies Whistler's «Nocturnes».
• For landscape painting in America, see Hudson River School (1825 - 75) and its off - shoot Luminism (1850 - 75).
Les Vingt See entry under V. Luminism Term applied to American landscape painters of the Hudson River School from about 1830 - 70, as many of their paintings were dominated by intense, dramatic light effects.
The luminist movement was profiled in «American Luminism» (Perspectives USA, Autumn 1954), while in 1989 it was the subject of a definitive exhibition at the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC.
George Caleb Bingham (1811 - 1879) Missouri frontier genre - painter, landscape artist (Luminism school), portraitist.
Luminism Definition, Characteristics of American Landscape Painting Style.
The School spawned other mini-movements like Luminism and the Rocky Mountain School.
In Strange Muses I, the figure as a veil - like apparition is reinforced with a prismatic luminism employed by Hudson River School painters like Frederic Church; the aura surrounding the figure, although a product of the lenticular lens, takes us into the transcendental world of the Hudson River School painters.
A sub-group of Hudson River artists introduced the style of Luminism, active 1850 - 75.
Her master's thesis at Columbia University explored the connection between luminism and Eastern thought.
The work of this later group is sometimes referred to as Luminism, or the Luminist movement, due to their luminous colour palette.
Another Karolik donation, in 1947, of American paintings produced between 1815 and 1865, secured numerous works by artists of the Hudson River school and its offshoot Luminism, along with a series of American genre paintings.
American Light makes a fresh and comprehensive examination of the culminating phase of Hudson River painting, now commonly called luminism.
Kim Keever's painterly, panoramic photographs represent the evolution of landscape painting embodied by the Hudson River School, Luminism, and Romanticism.
Mark Innerst, too, has started to bring his luminism to the city.
Sullivan Goss will exhibit paintings from the Hudson River Valley School, American Barbizon, American Renaissance, Orientalism, Luminism, Realism, Impressionism, Symbolism, Art Nouveau, and Arts and Crafts.
The works hark back to a long tradition of Venetian painting, from Tintoretto's luminism to Bellini's tonalism and Titian's chromatic materiality, whilst insisting on the rigour of contemporary conceptualism.
19th century American landscape painting, depicting the American wilderness (including movements like Hudson River School and Luminism) is a particular strength of the museum and includes works by Frederic Church (1826 - 1900) and Thomas Cole (1801 - 48).
One of America's best landscape artists and the quintessential exponent of Romanticism, the American painter Frederic Edwin Church was an important member of the Hudson River School of landscape painting, a pupil and friend of Thomas Cole (1801 - 48), the movement's leader, and an important contributor to Luminism.
These included: the Hudson River School (c.1825 - 75), the Luminism movement, Tonalism personnified by Whistler (1834 - 1903), and American Impressionism (c.1880 - 1900).
For exponents of Romantic landscape painting influenced by Turner, see: Hudson River School (fl.1825 - 75) and Luminism (fl.1850 - 75).
See also: Luminism (1850 - 75).
In due course, the unique quality of Bingham's landscape art was recognized and given the name «Luminism» by John Baur, director of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.
Friedrich's mystical approach was a precursor to several American art groups, such as the Hudson River School of New England - exemplified by the works of Thomas Cole (1801 - 48) and Frederic Edwin Church (1826 - 1900)- and the mini-movements of Luminism and the Rocky Mountain School.
Sullivan Goss is pleased to announce a new exhibit of works by Lockwood De Forest, a painter whose works vary between Orientalism, Luminism and the American Hudson River School.
AMERICAN LANDSCAPE ART Romantic scenic painting in America was exemplified by the Hudson River School of landscape painting, and Luminism.
In the history of art, the term «luminism» refers to a style of realist landscape painting, characterized by its treatment of light, which was developed during the third quarter of the 19th century by American artists directly influenced by the Hudson River School.
As it was, luminism (an American painting style) came before Impressionism (a French style), and both movements evolved quite independently of each other.
Usually classified under Tonalism, but very close to Luminism.
• What is Luminism?
In America, Romanticism was exemplified by the Hudson River School of landscape painting (1825 - 75) and Luminism (1850 - 75).
It showcases all the important movements of modern art in America, including: Hudson River School (c.1825 - 65), Luminism (c.1850 - 75), Realism (19th century), American Impressionism (19th / 20th century) Ashcan School (New York c.1892 - 1919), Precisionism (aka, Cubist Realism, 1920s), Regionalism (1930s), American Scene Painting (c.1925 - 45), Abstract Expressionism (late 1940s / early 60s), Pop Art (late 50s on), Minimalism (60s / 70s), and Photorealism (60s on).
George Inness (1825 - 1894) American tonalist painter, a leading exponent of luminism, noted for his handling of outdoor light.
We will be bringing works from the following schools: California Plein Air, Trompe L'Oeil, Nineteenth Century Romanticisim, Luminism, Figurative Painting, Surrealism, American Scene (Regionalism), Early modernism, High Modernism and Contemporary Portraiture.
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