The picture made full use of the fashionable technique of Cloisonnism (from the French cloison, meaning partition) a method popular with French
symbolist painters, which was characterized by flat areas of colour bordered by heavy outlines.
French
symbolist painters Moreau, Puvis de Chavannes, Redon and their followers: [exposition], London, Hayward Gallery, 7 June - 23 July 1972; Liverpool, Walker Art Gallery, 9 August - 17 September 1972
For the month of June, artists in Gallery Underground were challenged to paint in the style of Austrian
symbolist painter Gustav Klimt.
At this point in his career, Ernst's paintings showed clear influences of the German
symbolist painter Max Klinger (1857 - 1920) and the Blue Rider group, as well as Futurism.
Paul Serusier (1864 - 1927) Post-Impressionist
symbolist painter, founder of Les Nabis.
The Norwegian
symbolist painter «Edvard Munch famously declared that photography could never compete with painting because of its inability to represent heaven or hell,» Butler writes in the catalog.
Moon has been a professional textile designer and cites the abstract
symbolist painter Simon Gouverneur (1934 - 1990) as an influence.
Arnold Bocklin (1827 - 1901) Swiss
symbolist painter best - known for this masterpiece.
During his stays in France, Jenkins got familiar with the works of Odilon Redon, a 19th century French
symbolist painter.
Norval owns works by leading postwar artists, notably
symbolist painter Alexis Preller and sculptor Edoardo Villa, and paid a princely sum for Bruce Campbell Smith's collection of mainly black artists active between the 1920s and 2005.
Mikhail Vrubel (1856 - 1910) Russian
symbolist painter.
A new plein - air tradition was initiated by Corot and others from the Barbizon School; the German
symbolist painter Caspar David Friedrich injected his landscapes with a new form of romanticism; and the genre was taken to even higher and more extraordinary levels by the English genius JMW Turner.
Not exact matches
His painting comes out of the literary Anti-Transcendentalist context of American romantic and
symbolist art that has received illumination by
painters as diverse as John Quidor, Albert Pinkham Ryder, Darrel Austin, Ivan Albright and interestingly, the Luminist George Caleb Bingham.
The
Symbolists» revolt against naturalism and their emphasis on suggestiveness and self - expression resonated with contemporary
painters, who translated these ideas to visual art.
Labeled an abstract expressionist, «Beat
painter,» and «
symbolist,» she was born «Mary Joan» in Hanover, New Hampshire in 1929 and raised in San Francisco, rural northern California, and Colorado.
Across this ravishing expanse, nine paintings proceed from 2007 to 2014, indicating an artist growing steadily while inspired by precedents that include Gauguin and the
Symbolists, Picasso in his Blue Period, Matisse, Art Nouveau and the Color Field
painters and Ovid.
• Introduction • LIST OF FAMOUS
PAINTERS (1700 - 1900)- English Figurative Painters (18th and 19th Century)- English Landscape Painters (18th and 19th Century)- American Figurative Painters (18th and 19th Century)- American Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Japanese Ukiyo - e Artists (19th Century)- Romantic Painters - Pre-Raphaelite Painters - Realist Painters - Barbizon Plein Air Painters - Symbolists - Impressionist Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
PAINTERS (1700 - 1900)- English Figurative
Painters (18th and 19th Century)- English Landscape Painters (18th and 19th Century)- American Figurative Painters (18th and 19th Century)- American Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Japanese Ukiyo - e Artists (19th Century)- Romantic Painters - Pre-Raphaelite Painters - Realist Painters - Barbizon Plein Air Painters - Symbolists - Impressionist Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters (18th and 19th Century)- English Landscape
Painters (18th and 19th Century)- American Figurative Painters (18th and 19th Century)- American Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Japanese Ukiyo - e Artists (19th Century)- Romantic Painters - Pre-Raphaelite Painters - Realist Painters - Barbizon Plein Air Painters - Symbolists - Impressionist Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters (18th and 19th Century)- American Figurative
Painters (18th and 19th Century)- American Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Japanese Ukiyo - e Artists (19th Century)- Romantic Painters - Pre-Raphaelite Painters - Realist Painters - Barbizon Plein Air Painters - Symbolists - Impressionist Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters (18th and 19th Century)- American Landscape
Painters (19th Century)- Japanese Ukiyo - e Artists (19th Century)- Romantic Painters - Pre-Raphaelite Painters - Realist Painters - Barbizon Plein Air Painters - Symbolists - Impressionist Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters (19th Century)- Japanese Ukiyo - e Artists (19th Century)- Romantic
Painters - Pre-Raphaelite Painters - Realist Painters - Barbizon Plein Air Painters - Symbolists - Impressionist Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters - Pre-Raphaelite
Painters - Realist Painters - Barbizon Plein Air Painters - Symbolists - Impressionist Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters - Realist
Painters - Barbizon Plein Air Painters - Symbolists - Impressionist Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters - Barbizon Plein Air
Painters - Symbolists - Impressionist Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters -
Symbolists - Impressionist
Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters - Neo-Impressionists - Nabis - Post-Impressionists - Russian Figurative
Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters (19th Century)- Russian Landscape
Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster D
Painters (19th Century)- Australian School (19th Century)- Art Nouveau / Poster Designers
Zhang Xiaogang (simplified Chinese: 张晓刚; traditional Chinese: 張曉剛; pinyin: Zhāng Xiǎogāng; born in 1958) is a contemporary Chinese
symbolist and surrealist
painter.
Artistic inspiration has come from two centuries of sources, ranging from 19th Century impressionists to 20th Century
symbolist and abstract
painters like Gustav Klimt, Franz Kline, and Chicago Imagist, Ed Paschke.
He possessed a sensibility that was rooted more firmly in fine art, and while stylistically his work was closer to the «New York School»
painters, his lyrical treatment of subject matter had much in common with the gentler compositions of an earlier epoch: that of the Impressionists, and with the paintings of French
symbolist artist Pierre Bonnard (1867 > 1947), who endeavoured to evoke mystical ideas, emotions, and states of mind via the medium of scenes from everyday life.
It reveals what Lowry learned from the strange
symbolist townscapes of his French born teacher Adolphe Valette and demonstrate important parallels with the
painters of modern life Vincent van Gogh, Camille Pissarro, Georges Seurat and Maurice Utrillo, drawing upon these artists's continuous search for ways to depict the unlovely facts of the city's edges and the landscape made by industrialisation.