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  2. Joyce Wellman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joyce_Wellman

    The exhibition allows us to view and experience their joy in spite of the pain they feel being separated from home and community." [ 12 ] In one review of a group exhibit featuring Wellman, a report for The Washington Post said Wellman's "abstract paintings feature multiple layers of paint, a palette of bright, luscious colors, and glossy ...

  3. Samuel Joseph Brown Jr. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Joseph_Brown_Jr.

    Brown uses distortion as a naturalistic device to evoke the feeling of pain, anguish, suffering or struggle”. [27] First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt recalled viewing So Tired in her syndicated “My Day” newspaper column a decade later on April 8, 1946, giving it her own title of The Scrub Woman. [2] [3] [28] [29]

  4. Pino Daeni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pino_Daeni

    Pino Daeni (November 8, 1939 – May 25, 2010) was an Italian-American book illustrator and artist. He is known for his style of feminine, romantic women and strong men painted with loose but accurate brushwork.

  5. Category:Paintings of women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Paintings_of_women

    The Bar (painting) A Bar at the Folies-Bergère; The Bathers (Renoir) Bathers with a Turtle; The Bathers (Cézanne) Beatrice Hastings in Front of a Door; The Beauty; Beijing 2008 (painting) The Beloved (Rossetti) Berlin Street Scene; Bertha Wegmann Painting a Portrait; Bharat Mata (painting) The Black Brunswicker; Black Woman with Child

  6. The Five Senses (series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Five_Senses_(series)

    Rubens painted the allegorical female figures, accompanied by a putto or a winged Cupid in Sight, Hearing, Smell, and Touch, and by a satyr in Taste.Brueghel created the sumptuous settings, which evoke the splendour of the court of Albert VII, Archduke of Austria, and his wife Isabella, governors of the Spanish Netherlands, to which the two artists were attached. [1]

  7. Monomaniac of Envy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monomaniac_of_Envy

    Art historians have often emphasized the distinctive facial features of the woman in Monomaniac of Envy, including her "bony cheeks" and "spider veins." [ 8 ] Robert Snell also assigns significance to the leftward direction of the woman's gaze, “which given the Western tendency to read paintings from left to right, seems to make it even ...