Girl in a Boat with Geese by Berthe Morisot https://www.nga.gov/artworks/52194-girl-boat-geese
Sisley, Grafton Galleries, London, 1905, no. 169. 1976 Women Artists: 1550-1950, Los
Sisley, Grafton Galleries, London, 1905, no. 169. 1976 Women Artists: 1550-1950, Los
by inheritance to the Bonnard-Terrasse family, Paris.[1] Anonymous collection, Los
Painted on Monhegan Island in Maine in August 1914, this portrait represents Florence Sittenham Davey, the wife of Bellows’s friend, the artist Randall Davey. Florence Davey was a modernist sculptor who had studied with Alexander Archipenko.
Paintings by George Bellows, N.A., Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art
Nelson is professor emeritus at the University of California, Los Angeles, where
Black White and Blue was painted at a critical juncture in Georgia O’Keeffe’s life. In 1929 she began to spend several months of each year in New Mexico, away from both New York and her husband, Alfred Stieglitz, the photographer and promoter of American modernist painting and photography.
Minneapolis; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Detroit Institute of Arts; Los
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los
Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1983, no. 42, repro. 1990 The Fauve Landscape, Los
1999 Around Impressionism: French Paintings from the National Gallery of Art, Los
When 80-year-old Emily Sims Motley posed for her grandson, her eyes focused on the artist working in front of her. That direct gaze now invites us to look carefully at this portrait.
Gallery, Chicago Woman’s Club, 1933. 1976 Two Centuries of Black American Art, Los
Completed in February 1911, New York is a large, ambitious painting in which George Bellows captures the essence of modern life in New York City. Although the viewer looks uptown toward Madison Square from the intersection of Broadway and 23rd Street, Bellows did not intend to represent a specific, identifiable place in the city.
Fine Arts, Panama-California Exposition, San Diego, 1915, no. 47, repro. 1916 „Los