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Giorgio Morandi (July 20, 1890 – June 18, 1964) was an Italian painter and printmaker widely known for his subtly muted still-life paintings of ceramic vessels, flowers, and landscapes—their quiet, meditative quality reflecting the artist's rejection of the tumult of modern life.
Giorgio Morandi (1890–1964), Italian Still-life painter, proto-Minimalist Barnett Newman (1905–1970), American painter, abstract expressionist David Smith (1906–1965), pioneer of geometric and minimalist sculpture
Clarisse Loxton Peacock, born Klara Féhér (died 2004) was a Hungarian-born artist, later styled Lady Dunnett.An admirer of the Italian still life painter Giorgio Morandi, she was particularly known for her own still life compositions, though later in life also painted stylised human forms.
The still life is their tribute to Giorgio Morandi’s still life paintings, which have a looseness and tightness that never reconcile; their nuance and beauty rest not in cleverness but in their ...
In an interview with Chikako Ikegami in the Winter 1993 edition of Japanese art magazine, Contemporary Artists Review, Kodama relates an episode regarding how she shifted from still life paintings to abstract paintings. On a trip across Europe, she encountered many Morandi paintings for which she had until that point she had felt an affinity ...
Unlike the Netherlands, the painting of still life and genre painting did not attract as many practitioners among Italian painters. This is a partial list of still life painters active or born in Italy, concentrating on painters from before the 20th century.
Verdcourt has been working with clay since the 1950s. Following a period of working and exhibiting in NZ, for an exhibition at Manawatu Art Gallery in the early 1980s called, Still Life is Still Alive she was asked "to provide a large number of pottery vessels in the style of Morandi so that students and members of the public could be encouraged to draw and paint from them in the gallery space."
Juan Sánchez Cotán, Still Life with Game Fowl, Vegetables and Fruits (1602), Museo del Prado, Madrid. A still life (pl.: still lifes) is a work of art depicting mostly inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects which are either natural (food, flowers, dead animals, plants, rocks, shells, etc.) or human-made (drinking glasses, books, vases, jewelry, coins, pipes, etc.).