Fridman Gallery | National Gallery of Art https://www.nga.gov/artworks/provenance/52705-fridman-gallery
and ink, and acrylic paint additions · Accession ID 2022.127.1 Artwork the wind
Meintest du wird?
and ink, and acrylic paint additions · Accession ID 2022.127.1 Artwork the wind
Discover works by Arthur L. Flory and learn about the artist
color lithograph Accession ID 1980.45.582 Not on view Artwork Grass in Wind
Artists have long been fascinated by the sea—whether for its serenity or for the interplay of light with turbulent waves. Painters like Willem van de Velde the Younger became known for marine scenes that show beaches or boats crossing rocky coasts.
details about Beach Scene at Trouville Close Modal Breezing Up (A Fair Wind
Explore our bounty of fall images.
1980.45.1069 More details about Autumn Haiku Close Modal Autumn Wind
Joan Miró i Ferrà was a Catalan-Spanish painter, sculptor, ceramicist, and printmaker. A key figure in the development of modernism, Miró was one of the great originals of 20th-century art.
Rives paper Accession ID 2002.157.31 Not on view Artwork Work of the Wind
American Silence: The Photographs of Robert Adams Robert Adams, Kerstin enjoying the wind
Joan Miró i Ferrà was a Catalan-Spanish painter, sculptor, ceramicist, and printmaker. A key figure in the development of modernism, Miró was one of the great originals of 20th-century art.
Rives paper Accession ID 2002.157.31 Not on view Artwork Work of the Wind
Edward Hopper was born in Nyack, New York, in 1882 to a middle-class family. After he graduated high school in 1899, his parents, though supportive of his artistic ambitions, encouraged him to pursue commercial illustration.
etching in black · Accession ID 1949.5.71 Artwork Edward Hopper, Evening Wind
Joan Miró i Ferrà was a Catalan-Spanish painter, sculptor, ceramicist, and printmaker. A key figure in the development of modernism, Miró was one of the great originals of 20th-century art.
color aquatint on Rives paper · Accession ID 2002.157.31 Artwork Work of the Wind
skull suspended from the tree). [11] Elaborating on this interpretation, Edgar Wind