Ad
related to: william george painter
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sir William George Gillies CBE RA (21 September 1898 – 15 April 1973) was a renowned Scottish landscape and still life painter. He is often referred to simply as W. G. Gillies . Life
William George Tuck (1900–1999) was an English watercolourist from east London. A toolmaker by profession, he was an amateur painter whose recognition came in later life.. Tuck was adjudged to be the best artist in the water colour section at the seventh Exhibition of the South Eastern Federation of Art Societies at the Guildhall in London in 1957 and again in 1962.
Joy's paintings covered a variety of themes from strictly historical to religious and allegorical.He also painted portraits. His pursuit of the perfect female form in nude paintings like Laodamia (1878; Portsmouth City Museum), The Danaids (1887) and Truth (1892-93) are unusually bold for England and refer back to the French classicist tradition of Ingres and Girodet-Trioson.
George Grosz (1893–1959), German artist and caricaturist; Artur Grottger (1837–1867), Polish painter and graphic artist; Hugo Kārlis Grotuss (1884–1951), Russian/Latvian painter; Richard Gruelle (1851–1914), American painter, illustrator and author; Ernő Grünbaum (1908–1944/1945), Hungarian painter, draftsman and Holocaust victim
Robert Gavin (1827–1883), painter; William Geissler (1894–1963), water-colourist of the natural world; David Cooke Gibson (1827–1856), painter and poet; James William Giles (1801–1870), Scottish landscape painter; Sir William George Gillies (1898–1973), landscape and still-life painter
William Hoare (c. 1707–1792) Francis Hayman (1708–1776) Sir William Beechey (1753–1839) John Shackleton (1714–1767) – Principal Painter in Ordinary to George II and George III; Richard Wilson (1714–1782) William Keable (1714–1774) Charles Brooking (1723–1759) Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723–1792) – Principal Painter in Ordinary to ...
George William Whitaker (September 25, 1840 – March 6, 1916) was a prominent Rhode Island landscape painter during the late 19th and early 20th century, known as the "Dean of Providence painters" [1] [2] or the "Dean of Rhode Island Artists."
There's a little Rembrandt in paintings by William Hobbs, and fans and spectators always look for in his work. Rembrandt is the nickname of the little Jack Russell Terrier that often appears in Williams railway paintings. [2] It's a nod to the master Rembrandt, who placed a similar dog, darkly lit, in his most famous painting, The Night Watch ...