Waterloo Bridge, Gray Day by Claude Monet https://www.nga.gov/artworks/46658-waterloo-bridge-gray-day
Admission is always free 6th and Constitution Ave NW Washington, DC 20565 Only
Admission is always free 6th and Constitution Ave NW Washington, DC 20565 Only
The artist’s wife Camille stands on a hill with their son Jean behind her. Monet worked quickly to record this moment.
Admission is always free 6th and Constitution Ave NW Washington, DC 20565 Only
Latin America, with its rich histories and cultures — as well as dense jungles, towering volcanoes, and mountain ranges — fascinated American artists in the mid-19th century. Frederic Edwin Church traveled in the tropics and used the sketches he made in different locations to create popular landscape paintings.
National Gallery of Art, Washington.
A pleasant sense of ease and harmony pervades this landscape of almost photographic clarity. The large areas of brilliant sunshine and cool shade, the rambling line of the fence, and the beautiful balance of trees, meadow, and river are evidence of the artist’s creative synthesis of the actual site.
National Gallery of Art, Washington.
Admission is always free 6th and Constitution Ave NW Washington, DC 20565 Only
Admission is always free 6th and Constitution Ave NW Washington, DC 20565 Only
Admission is always free 6th and Constitution Ave NW Washington, DC 20565 Only
One of Domenico Veneziano’s major works is an altarpiece that he painted about 1445 for the Church of Santa Lucia dei Magnoli, in Florence. The incident illustrated in this small panel from the base of the altarpiece is John’s act of exchanging his rich, worldly clothes for a rough, camel–hair coat.
National Gallery of Art, Washington (undated, 1960s): 10, as St.
This bold composition reveals the influence of the flat, patterned surfaces, simplified color, and unusual angles of Japanese prints, which enjoyed a huge vogue in Paris in the late 1800s. The dark figure of the man compresses the picture onto the flat plane of the canvas, and the horizon is pushed to the top, collapsing a sense of distance.
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
Admission is always free 6th and Constitution Ave NW Washington, DC 20565 Only