Sentences with phrase «magazine illustrations»

"Magazine illustrations" refers to the pictures or drawings that are created and used in magazines to enhance the content or tell a story. Full definition
It includes the book's skipping past paintings before 1960 and the sheer weight of magazine illustrations after New Masses.
I found out in comic books that there was a group called illustrators, and I would also see magazine illustrations.
Meantime, for the next couple of years (1913 - 16) he earned his living in magazine illustration, producing graphic art for the left - wing magazine The Masses, and later for The Liberator in the 1920s.
In addition to his work in books, Wyeth did a significant amount of magazine illustration including: Hearst's International, Century, Harper's Monthly, Ladies» Home Journal, McClure's, Outing, and Scribner's.
LMI see them, and I'm kind of fascinated by that, because it reminds me of Helen's description of seeing Jackson Pollock's black painting Number 14 (now in the collection of the Tate) at Betty Parsons: she saw a fox in it, and it reminded her of children's - magazine illustrations where you have to find the hidden figure.
Comic strips, squirts of oil paint, art magazine illustrations, and a host of textiles jostle for attention, and gestural paint strokes drawn directly from the vocabulary of Abstract Expressionism carry the same compositional weight as newspaper clippings of car thefts and department store advertisements.
A vintage feel also pervades his work; from the 60s magazine illustrations he uses for his collages to the salvaged materials he uses as media, through his choice of colours.
Bellows was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1882, and went to Ohio State, where he played baseball and sold magazine illustrations.
It turned out an editor who commissioned me for a regular magazine illustration slot was now working at LID publishing in Covent Garden and loved what had now amounted to enough of a story for a manuscript.
The paintings on view stylistically resembled optimistic post-war era magazine illustrations, but beneath Jaquette's polished renderings lays a critique of middle class Americana and its cultural reproduction through advertising.
1938 Returns to US, settling in New York, eeking out a living with magazine illustration, portrait commissions and mural work.
The principal heirs to Regionalism's tradition of naturalist realism included the great illustrator Norman Rockwell (1894 - 78), whose nostalgic but hugely popular magazine illustrations of the American family made him a household name in the 1950s, and Andrew Wyeth (1917 - 2009), whose tempera masterpiece Christina's World (1948, Museum of Modern Art) competes with Wood's American Gothic for the title of America's favourite painting.
Legendary German artist Gerhard Richter's nearly two - meter high work breaks down reality, which Richter depicts using photographs and magazine illustrations torn out of their original context.
For one, he revived conventional art - school techniques of old - fashioned modeling, the kind familiar to long - ago American magazine illustration.
They would look the part as magazine illustrations to a story (this is close to why I call them «anecdotal»), where the clumsiness would be acceptably clever, stylistically.
His paintings were known in magazine illustrations, and from the early 1930s could be seen at the Museum of Living Art.
Combining stop - motion animation drawn from collages of magazine illustrations and advertisementsn with filmed sequences and found footage, films such as Achoo Mr. Kerroochev (1960) and Breathdeath (1963) fused avant - garde cinematic techniques with social critique and Cold War politics.
When he began his magazine illustration career, working for such publications as Sports Illustrated and Time magazine, he found that his cartoons would more often than not feature a generic dog in the background.
Recognized as a leading graphic artist of the modern age, Austrian designer Julius Klinger (1876 - 1942) transformed visual culture through his innovative advertising posters, book and magazine illustrations, ornamental and typographical design, brand development and mass promotional campaigns.
In the studies for this print, Juarez combined casual, small sketches made daily, found botanical prints and magazine illustrations.
Saalburg had studied with John Sloan at the Art Students League in New York before following his brother into advertising and magazine illustration.
Later in his career, Warhol revisited celebrity subjects for commissioned portraits, print series, and magazine illustrations.
Warhol and Thiebaud play with the self - contained frame and deadening repetition of magazine illustration.
Close's first solo exhibition, held in 1967 at the University of Massachusetts Art Gallery, Amherst, featured paintings, painted reliefs, and drawings based on photographs of record covers and magazine illustrations.
Chuck Close's very first solo exhibition, held in 1967 at the University of Massachusetts Art Gallery, Amherst, featured paintings, painted reliefs and drawings based on photographs of record covers and magazine illustrations.
She still works hastily, with a weightlessness somewhere between a promising student's art and magazine illustration.
In a new exhibition at the Lever Gallery, Uncovered: Illustrating the Sixties and Seventies, celebrates iconic Pulp art through the display of 40 rare original works created primarily for book covers, magazine illustrations and posters.
Your work ranges from painting and murals to posters and magazine illustrations.
Born and raised in São Paulo, Brazil, Apolo Torres is a contemporary artist, whose work ranges from painting and murals to posters and magazine illustrations.
Apolo Torres, born in 1986, is a Brazilian contemporary artist whose work ranges from painting and murals to posters and magazine illustrations.
Stezaker, who had a retrospective at the Whitechapel Gallery earlier this year, collects old photographs — movie stills, publicity shots, postcards, book and magazine illustrations — slices them in two, then splices them with other cut pictures to create something altogether new and often slightly disturbing.
The vivid, garish, and clashing colors in many of Richter's abstract paintings were probably inspired by those Pop artists who exaggerated the simplified, bold, and eye - catching qualities of magazine illustrations, posters, signs, and billboards.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z