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Ashley Jackson (born 1940) is an English landscape watercolourist. Raised in Barnsley , then in the West Riding of Yorkshire , he opened his first gallery in 1963. He lives in the town of Holmfirth , near Huddersfield , where his gallery is also located.
Self-portrait with his wife, Marie-Suzanne Giroust, painting Henrik Wilhelm Peill, at and by Alexander Roslin Aiding a Comrade , at and by Frederic Remington Cymon and Iphigenia , by Frederic Leighton
Ashley George Old (born 1913, d. 2001) was an artist best known for documenting the lives of prisoners of war forced to construct the Thailand-Burma Railway. During World War II he was stationed in Singapore, and when it fell to the Japanese in February 1942, he was taken prisoner and sent to work on the aforementioned Death Railway .
Images in this category are illustrations from artists who have been deceased for more than 100 years. But if the person or organization who digitized it has released it under another license, list that other license as well as this one.
The List of painters in the Art Institute of Chicago is a list of the artists indexed in the Art Institute of Chicago website whose works in their collection were ...
Man Proposes, God Disposes. Edwin Landseer's 1864 painting Man Proposes, God Disposes is believed to be haunted, and a bad omen. [6] According to urban myth, a student of Royal Holloway college once committed suicide during exams by stabbing a pencil into their eye, writing "The polar bears made me do it" on their exam paper. [7]
Philadelphia Museum of Art: Image online [33] To My Betrothed: 1911: Philadelphia Museum of Art: Image online [34] Interior II: 1911: Private collection I and the Village [35] 1911: New York, Museum of Modern Art: The Father [36] 1911: Paris, Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme: Image online [37] Othello and Desdemona: 1911: Private ...
Bigger Trees Near Warter or ou Peinture en Plein Air pour l'age Post-Photographique is a large landscape painting by British artist David Hockney.Measuring 460 by 1,220 centimetres or 180 by 480 inches, [2] it depicts a coppice near Warter, Pocklington in the East Riding of Yorkshire and is the largest painting Hockney has completed.