Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "Murals in Spain" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. ... Mural paintings of the conquest of Majorca; T. The Sky of Salamanca
Panoramic view of the mural in the Municipal Sports Centre in the La Concepción neighbourhood. The Concepción feminist mural is a mural painting entitled "La unión hace la fuerza" ("Unity is strength") by the Spanish collective Unlogic Crew on the exterior wall of the municipal sports centre in the Concepción neighbourhood of Madrid at Calle José del Hierro nº5. [1]
Also: Spain: People: By occupation: Painters: Muralists. Subcategories. This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. + Spanish women muralists (3 ...
Talaiotic town of Torralba den Salord site, Menorca island. The early Iberians have left many remains; northern-western Spain shares with south-western France the region where the richest Upper Paleolithic art in Europe is found in the Cave of Altamira and other sites where there are cave paintings made between 35,000 and 11,000 BC. [1]
Milagros Correch (born 1991, Villa Urquiza, Buenos Aires), better known as Milu Correch, is an Argentine painter and muralist [1] recognized internationally for her large scale murals and illustrations. Her work can be found in cities in Argentina and around the world.
The Arlanza gryphon, fresco transferred to canvas, 189.5 × 322 cm, c. 1210, MNAC, Barcelona. The paintings from Arlanza are a set of frescos belonging to the mural decoration of a Benedictine monastery of San Pedro de Arlanza, in the Province of Burgos, Castile and León, Spain, dating to around 1210, and now dispersed among a number of collections.
Josep Maria Sert i Badia (Catalan pronunciation: [ʒuˈzɛb məˈɾi.ə ˈsɛɾt]; Barcelona, 21 December 1874 – 27 November 1945, buried in the Vic Cathedral) was a Spanish muralist, the son of an affluent textile industry family. [1]
Joan Miró and Josep Llorens Artigas met in 1910 at the school of art of the artist Francesc Galí (1880–1965), in Barcelona. Since the 1940s, Miró and Josep Llorens Artigas started an artistic duo that spawned objects and large ceramic murals such as one at the Unesco building in Paris or the ceramic wall of the Barcelona Airport.