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The Scapegoat (painting) Snow Storm: Hannibal and his Army Crossing the Alps; Soleil dans le ciel de Saint-Paul; The Song of the Lark (Jules Breton) The Sower (Millet) The Sun (tarot card) Sunrise, Inverness Copse
Impression, Sunrise (French: Impression, soleil levant) is an 1872 painting by Claude Monet first shown at what would become known as the "Exhibition of the Impressionists" in Paris in April, 1874. The painting is credited with inspiring the name of the Impressionist movement. Impression, Sunrise depicts the port of Le Havre, Monet's hometown.
The reverberating image of the Sun in Metzinger's painting is an homage to the decomposition of spectral light at the core of Neo-Impressionist color theory. Coucher de soleil was exhibited in Paris during the spring of 1907 at the Salon des Indépendants (n. 3457), along with Bacchante and four other works by Metzinger. [1]
In the painting, the actual Sun is the yellow ball in the upper-right corner surrounded by the second circle. The large circle taking up most of the sky is a parhelic circle, parallel to the horizon and located at the same altitude as the Sun, as the painting renders it. This is actually a common halo, although a full circle as depicted is rare.
Sun in an Empty Room is a 1963 painting by American realist Edward Hopper (1882–1967). Created during his late period at his Cape Cod summer home and studio in South Truro, Massachusetts , the painting was completed just four years prior to his death at the age of 84.
In several versions of the painting, overlapping spirals, suggestive of the telescope body, [5] emanate from the golden-orange orb of the magnified and filtered Sun; these encounter the brilliant white star in the upper left—the Sun as seen with the naked eye. [3] The painting represents Balla's subjective experience of the event. [3]
Irworobongdo in the throne hall of Gyeongbokgung Palace. Irworobongdo (Korean: 일월오봉도; Hanja: 日月五峯圖) is a Korean folding screen with a highly stylized landscape painting of a sun and moon, five peaks which always was set behind Eojwa, the king’s royal throne during the Joseon Dynasty.
The Sun by Edvard Munch, 1911 The Rising Sun by Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo, 1904 The completed version of After the Deluge was exhibited at the New Gallery in 1891. [ 17 ] On the occasion of its 1891 exhibition and at a later exhibition in 1897, also at the New Gallery, it was accompanied by an explanatory note (thought to have been written ...