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Toby Edward Rosenthal. Tobias Edward Rosenthal, known as Toby (15 March 1848 in Strasburg, Prussia – 23 December 1917 in Munich) was a German-American genre and portrait painter. He generally claimed to have been born in New Haven, Connecticut. [1]
Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art: Stonehenge at Sunset: 1836 Yale Center for British Art: The White Horse: 1800s National Gallery of Art: Salisbury Cathedral from Lower Marsh Close: 1820 National Gallery of ArtAndrew W. Mellon collection: Cloud Study: Stormy Sunset: 1800s National Gallery of Art: A View on Hampstead Heath with Harrow in the ...
Rigo 23 (born Ricardo Gouveia, 1966) is a Portuguese-born visual artist.He is known in the San Francisco community for having painted a number of large, graphic "sign" murals including: One Tree next to the U.S. Route 101 on-ramp at 10th and Bryant Street, Innercity Home on a large public housing structure, Sky/Ground on a tall abandoned building at 3rd and Mission Street, and Extinct over a ...
The Bay Area Figurative Movement (also known as the Bay Area Figurative School, Bay Area Figurative Art, Bay Area Figuration, and similar variations) was a mid-20th-century art movement made up of a group of artists in the San Francisco Bay Area who abandoned working in the prevailing style of Abstract Expressionism in favor of a return to figuration in painting during the 1950s and onward ...
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.
Robert Alan Bechtle [3] (May 14, 1932 – September 24, 2020) was an American painter, printmaker, and educator.He lived nearly all his life in the San Francisco Bay Area [4] and whose art was centered on scenes from everyday local life. [5]
Cuneo's numerous solo exhibitions included ones in London, Paris, Rome, New York, and Los Angeles. [2] [4] His work was featured in exhibits at the Helgesen Gallery (San Francisco) (1913), Metropolitan Museum of Art (1933), Museum of Modern Art (New York), San Francisco Art Association (1916–34), Golden Gate International Exposition (1939), California Palace of the Legion of Honor, and the ...
Holdredge was born in 1836, [1] and moved to the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1850s, where he became head draughtsman at Mare Island Naval Yard. In 1874, with the assistance of friends and patrons, he moved to Paris for two years where he studied painting and traveled around Europe.