Pablo Picasso (Spanish artist, 1881–1973) Woman in a Plummed Hat 1901
Explore joseba.eskubi's 7654 photos on Flickr!
Vicente Romero Redondo is a Spanish figurative painter and educator, best known for his pastel depictions of graceful girls at solitary moments in rom
Cinta Vidal Agullo is a Spanish artist and illustrator. She recently got a lot of exposure on art, illustration, and design blogs for her series of
Anglada fue el pintor más joven de la segunda generación de modernistas y o
“María Teresa Roca de Togores, al abanico: «Eres frívolo y frágil,como el alma liviana/ de la grácil marquesa que te supo agitar./ ¡Oh, cómplice temible de la fiel cortesana,/ qué de intrigas contaras si pudieras hablar!». Francisco Soria Aedo (1898-1965) #art Pasión por el arte”
Madrid, Valencia o Barcelona son solo algunas de las ciudades que celebrarán el centenario de la muerte del pintor valenciano, el maestro por excelencia de la luz y del color
Explore Ricardo Cavolo's 702 photos on Flickr!
heliocentrism: Hermenegildo Anglada Camarasa
The impossible architecture depicted in paintings by Spanish artist Cinta Vidal Agulló are immersive M.C. Escher-meets-Dr. Seuss dreamscapes of
Nacho Diaz Arjona (Naolito) lives in Algeciras, Spain and has been working as an illustrator since 2009. Most of his works are dedicated to T-shirts design, although apart from that, he makes illustrations for the web, digital painting, and posters. His creations usually display combinations of deep social issues and light humor. The artist always tries to find new ways to express his ideas through art and he’s quite successful at doing so.
Santiago Bara is a Spanish artist who uses irony and sarcasm to depict the state of modern life. He discusses social media, existential
A recent tour of a studio tour of Joaquín Sorolla's artist's house. Monet called this Spanish impressionist painter, 'the master of light'.
More than 100 artists spin the Star Wars galaxy in new directions, casting Luke, Leia and multiple Darths into works saluting the sci-fi saga. Get a sneak peek at upcoming art book Star Wars Art: Visions and leave a comment for a shot at wining a copy.
Santiago Bara is a Spanish artist who uses irony and sarcasm to depict the state of modern life. He discusses social media, existential
Santiago Bara is a Spanish artist who uses irony and sarcasm to depict the state of modern life. He discusses social media, existential
Montserrat Gudiol i Corominas (Barcelona, 1933) . She is the daughter of the architect and art historian Josep Gudiol i Ricart (Gudiol Ricart).In 1950, she studied restoration of old paintings and focuses specifically on painting on wood and paper. It sets out in Spain but also in South Africa, the United States, Russia and Canada. In 1981 she became the first woman admitted to the Real Academia Catalana of Fine Arts of San Jordi. In 1998 she received the Cross of St. George http://www.montserratgudiol.com http://blog.daum.net/sooy0098/7706312 http://elle-belle10.livejournal.com/1642814.html?thread=16035902 http://www.artistsandart.org/2010/02/montserrat-gudiol-spanish-artist.html https://www.facebook.com/pages/Montserrat-Gudiol-Artist/52577479303
david cata weaves portraits of his loved ones into the palm of his hands as both a record of their memory and a remembrance of their loss.
You can't help but fall in love with Spanish artist Joseba Eskubi's work. He often uses different techniques (painting, collage, digital ...)
Ignacio Zuloaga y Zabaleta (July 26, 1870 – October 31, 1945) artinconnu.blogspot.com/
Ramón Casas Carbó "Montmarte"
Hermenegildo Anglada Camarasa (1871–1959), in catalana Hermenegild (ori Hermen) Anglada Caramasa, a fost un pictor spaniol catalan. Nascut in Barcelona, a studiat acolo la scoala Llotja. Primele lu…
Francisco Pons Arnau (Valencia, 1886-Madrid, 1955) was a Spanish painter, one of the most outstanding disciples of the painter Joaquín Sorolla. He also married María Sorolla, one of his teacher's daughters.
"Antes y después" 18 viñetas de Nacho Díaz
In the 1960s, while the United States and the Soviet Union were playing out their battle of who would make it to the moon first and so dominate the galactic skies, a former high school teacher in Zambia decided his country needed a space program.
Santiago Bara is a Spanish artist who uses irony and sarcasm to depict the state of modern life. He discusses social media, existential
Oil on burlap; 190.5 x 149.8 cm. The timelessness of the image as the axis of the visual experience is the determining factor in the production of the Valencian artist, Manolo Valdés. Timelessness, image and matter in a body of work that wanders between Pop Art and material art, between social and political commitment and a continuous search for reinvention. Born in Valencia in 1942, his time at the San Carlos Academy of Fine Arts allowed him to make contact with the young artists of the time. Among them was Rafael Solbes, with whom he founded Equipo Crónica in 1964, together with Joan Toledo. Like El Paso or Dau al Set, Equipo Crónica is one of the reference points of Spanish Art in the second half of the twentieth century, and this makes it almost impossible to separate Valdés from this group even twenty-five years after Solbe’s death and the subsequent dissolution of the Equipo. Since that time in 1981, Manolo Valdés initiated an intensely solitary career, marked by the lifestyle of New York, where he established his studio, a private paradise where he can recreate his private universe. Both in his early period with Equipo Crónica as well as in his later development by himself, image is a constant factor, going beyond concept. At first he showed close ties to the language of American Pop Art, and he turned to figuration as a device for social criticism stemming from his political commitment. His work is full of a sense of humor, even sarcasm, with large formats and flat colors. Once he began to work alone, Manolo Valdés moved away from linear irony to interpret the image as a symbol and a vehicle for contact between the work of Art and the spectator. To this end he has continued to seek inspiration in the creations of the grand masters of the History of Art, such as Velázquez, Rembrandt or Goya. He reinterprets them in visual games that delve into cultural memory. As he himself has said, “painting is learned from painting.” The production from this second artistic period also includes an abundance of graphic and sculptural pieces, ever larger in size, and in them one can note a marked turn towards a corporeal nature and a certain informalist tinge. In recent years, the materials he uses bring great sensuality to his work, and his media take on unusual prominence with damage and reconstruction that provide dramatic quality. His colors are no longer flat, but full of nuances. Throughout his long career Valdés has never stopped investigating and reinventing Art, with an insatiable appetite for conceptual and plastic experimentation. The result is unanimous critical acclaim and recognition from a growing public for his works that can be found in the great museums of the world or are exhibited outdoors in the parks and gardens of major cities. www.arteseleccion.com/maestros-en/valdes-manolo-184
‘Jeanne Samary Week’ (like ‘Shark Week’, but with cuter teeth) was inspired by a question about Jeanne Samary’s dress in Renoir’s full length portrait of her: I recreated the dress, and a reader wanted to know about the original gown. Who made it? What did it look like? Did it actually exist? This is my interpretation: Clearly I don’t have Samary’s enviable figure, but in all other ways I’m happy with my dress as a recreation of what Samary’s dress might have been. So, what do we know about Samary’s actual dress? Well, for one, it probably existed. Renoir was known to paint dresses that did exist, and did belong to the models he knew. The same frocks are repeated in various paintings in numerous paintings by Renoir and other Impressionist artists. Samary, for example, is shown in the same dress in The Swing and dancing in the Bal du moulin de la Galette, and Renoir and Monet both painted Monet’s wife Camille in a blue robe/tea gown. And, as seen in Tuesday’s ‘Rate the …
“Musées fermés...”