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This is seen most importantly in his work with the Professional Native Indian Artists (Indian Group of Seven). [4] Sanchez had artistic aspirations from an early age, becoming interested in art and painting in 5th grade. [5] He became more serious about pursuing an art career when he met Daphne Odjig in Winnipeg in the early 1970s. [6]
The son of master mariner Joseph Gray, he trained as a sea-going engineer before attending South Shields Art School. He travelled extensively – to Spain, France, Germany and Russia – gathering material for his drawings, before settling in Dundee by about 1912, to work as an illustrator for the Dundee Courier and other publications.
In 1958, he won a Fulbright fellowship to study for two years in Florence and Rome, and began painting complexly colored watercolors of flower forms.He mounted his first New York City exhibition of his Umbrian watercolors in 1963, at the d’Arcy Galleries, while at the same time battling hepatitis from which he almost died; when he recovered, he shifted to "real life" images based on photographs.
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George Bain (1881–1968), Scottish artist and art teacher; Robert Bain (1911–1973), Scottish/South African sculptor and art professor; Thomas Baines (1820–1875), English painter and explorer; Baiōken Eishun (梅翁軒永春, fl. 1710–1755), Japanese painter and print-maker; Edward Baird (1904–1949), Scottish painter and draftsman
Joseph Glasco (January 19, 1925 – May 31, 1996) was an American abstract expressionist [1] painter, draftsman and sculptor. He is most known for his early figurative drawings and paintings and in later years for deconstructing the figure to develop his non-objective paintings building on abstraction of the 1950s.
Joseph Holston (born Joseph Deweese Holston Jr., April 6, 1944) is an American painter and printmaker best known for his portrayals of the African American experience, using vivid colors and expressive lines in a cubist-abstractionist style. His media include painting, etching, silk screen, and collage.
Joseph Raphaël, "The Shepherd", 1934. Born in the town of Jackson, California on June 2, 1869, Raphael studied with Arthur F. Mathews at the California School of Design. In 1902 he entered the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, but then moved to the Académie Julian and studied under Jean-Paul Laurens.