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Barbican Art Gallery: London Gwen John: An Interior Life, no. 28 (as "Girl with Cat") [4] Nov 28 – Jan 26, 1985–86 Manchester City Art Gallery: Manchester Gwen John: An Interior Life, no. 28 [4] Feb 26 – April 20, 1986 Yale Center for British Art: New Haven Gwen John: An Interior Life, no. 28 [4]
Lofi Girl (formerly ChilledCow until 2021) is a French YouTube channel and music label established in 2017. It provides livestreams of lo-fi hip hop music 24/7, accompanied by a Japanese-style animation of a girl studying or relaxing in her bedroom with a cat on the window.
Woman with a Cat or The Demanding Cat (French: La Femme au chat) is a 1912 oil on canvas painting by French Post-Impressionist painter Pierre Bonnard (1867–1947). The work depicts Marthe Bonnard , Bonnard's mistress, and a cat climbing on to a table arranged for a meal.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Woman with a Cat is an 1875 painting by French artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir. It depicts a young woman sitting in a chair holding a cat. It depicts a young woman sitting in a chair holding a cat. The work was gifted by Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin E. Levy to the National Gallery of Art in 1950.
Lippard, Lucy R. (1965). "LEGER. Woman with Cat, 1921." The School of Paris: Paintings from the Florene May Schoenborn and Samuel A. Marx Collection. The Museum of Modern Art. ISBN 087070575X. Rewald, Sabine (Fall, 1995). "Recent Acquisitions, A Selection: 1994–1995". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin. 53 (2). ISSN 0026-1521.
Woman with a Cat, 1875 painting by French artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Woman with a Cat, 1893–1894 painting by American artist Cecilia Beaux, Musée d'Orsay, Paris; Woman with Cat, 1908 painting by Dutch-French Fauve painter Kees van Dongen, Milwaukee Art Museum; Woman with a Cat, 1912 painting by ...
My Wife's Lovers is a canvas painting by Austrian artist Carl Kahler (1856–1906) depicting forty-two of American millionaire Kate Birdsall Johnson's Turkish Angora and Persian cats. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The title of the painting was potentially conceived by her husband, [ 3 ] who may have referred to the cats with the phrase. [ 4 ]