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Duane Hanson, Woman Eating, polyester resin, fiberglass, polychromed in oil paint with clothes, table, chair and accessories, Smithsonian American Art Museum, 1971. Hyperrealism is a genre of painting and sculpture resembling a high-resolution photograph.
Tanya Davis is an American artist (born in Florida [1]) predominantly known for her hyper-realistic representational watercolors which are often on the subject of reflections and transparency. [2] She is a past President of the Torpedo Factory Artists' Association, [3] [4] [5] one of the largest artists associations in the US. [6]
Leng Jun (born 1963) is a Chinese painter known for his hyperrealistic paintings and drawings that appear like photographs. [1] He currently serves as the Leader of the Wuhan Painting Academy and Chairman of the Wuhan Artists Association. [2] Jun is from Sichuan Province, China. He graduated in 1984 from the Teachers College, Hankou, Wuhan, the ...
Art historian John Wilmerding wrote, "Such close attention by a painter to one model over so long a period of time is a remarkable, if not singular, circumstance in the history of American art". [1] For art critic James Gardner, Testorf "has the curious distinction of being the last person to be made famous by a painting".
In the 18th century, small paintings of working people remained popular, mostly drawing on the Dutch tradition and featuring women. Much art depicting ordinary people, especially in the form of prints, was comic and moralistic, but the mere poverty of the subjects seems relatively rarely to have been part of the moral message. From the mid-19th ...
Laura Wheeler Waring (May 26, 1887 – February 3, 1948) was an American artist and educator, most renowned for her realistic portraits, landscapes, still-life, [1] and well-known African American portraitures she made during the Harlem Renaissance. [1]
In 1897 he produced an individual decorative panel of a young woman in a floral setting, called Reverie, for Champenois. He also designed a calendar with a woman's head surrounded by the signs of the zodiac. The rights were resold to Léon Deschamps, the editor of the arts review La Plume, who brought it out with great success in 1897.
After the Bath, Woman Drying Herself; The Ages and Death; Ajax and Cassandra; Allée des Acacias in the Bois de Boulogne; Allegorical Painting of Two Ladies, English School; Allegory of Industry; Angelica and the Hermit; Annelies, White Tulips and Anemones; April Love (painting) Art Buff; Articulation (painting) Asia (Matisse) At the Seashore ...