No. 7 [or] No. 11 by Mark Rothko https://www.nga.gov/artworks/67502-no-7-or-no-11
Accession Number 1986.43.144 Copyright Copyright © 1998 Kate Rothko Prizel
Meintest du kalter?
Accession Number 1986.43.144 Copyright Copyright © 1998 Kate Rothko Prizel
Peter Humfrey and Joanna Dunn based on the examination report by Kate Russell March
The strength and vitality of the people who helped establish the new Dutch Republic are nowhere better captured than in the work of Frans Hals, who was the preeminent portrait painter in Haarlem, the most important artistic center of Holland in the early part of the seventeenth century. This unidentified sitter—one of Hals’ most impressive portraits—was sixty years old when the painting was made, according to the artist’s inscription.
National Gallery of Art Bulletin no. 50 (Spring 2014): 2-19, repro. 2020 Dwyer, Kate
Meet a groundbreaking artist who made sculptures and prints for her people.
Meyerhoff and Rheda Becker, Agnes Gund, Kate Kelly and George Schweitzer, Lyndon
Kress Fellow, 2014–2016 The Art of Play: Games in Early Modern Italy 2014–2015 Kate
At the sixth impressionist exhibition in the spring of 1881, Edgar Degas presented the only sculpture that he would ever exhibit in public. The Little Dancer Aged Fourteen , the title given by the artist, has become one of the most beloved works of art, well known through the many bronze casts produced from this unique original statuette, following the artist’s death.
Edited by Kate Flint. London, 1984: 41-43. Trianon, Henry.
This painting is based on a true account of a shark attack in Havana Harbor in 1749. John Singleton Copley depicts a critical moment in the attempted rescue of 14-year-old Brook Watson.
American Art 30, no. 2 (Summer 2016): 8-13, color repro. 2024 Haw, Kate, Charles