「Paintings.」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)12ページ目
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he next two decades, Titian added three more | paintings: The Worship of Venus (Museo del Prado, Madr |
, when the king of Prussia acquired over 160 | paintings, the most important of which were destined f |
atrocities of war in his sketches and early | paintings, the artist was eventually banished from Hun |
Among his main | paintings the two large pictures that depict St. Bruno |
In Pearlstein's | paintings, the human body, placed in a corner of a flo |
He also decorated with mural | paintings the church of St. Francois Xavier at Paris, |
, the abstractions typical of iconographical | paintings, the vermicular style, etc. are all there. |
The Prado and Louvre contain numbers of his | paintings; the National Gallery, London, three. |
But in Hobbs's | paintings, the dog doesn't scurry around musketeers in |
Gluck became known for portraits and floral | paintings; the latter were favoured by the interior de |
He is best known for his | paintings The Battle of North Point, and The Defense o |
the journey, and among his products were the | paintings The Wreck of the Waterloo at Cape Town in 18 |
wn Murder", and later renamed a group of his | paintings The Camden Town Murder. |
Unlike the large-scale | paintings, the genre works appeal to a bourgeois sensi |
Ruckle's | paintings The Battle of North Point, and The Defense o |
wing years saw the production of three major | paintings: The Wave (1955), The Return (1956) and The |
The offering to Flora and the pair of | paintings: the still life with Flowers and a Dog, and |
Dave Hickey, Dexter Dalwood: New | paintings, The Gagosian Gallery, 2002. |
er of drawings, and either from these or the | paintings themselves followers made large numbers of c |
His | paintings there attracted favorable attention, and in |
d "The 113 Painting Book" which includes the | paintings they created for these packages. |
The catalogue shows 16 | paintings; they are accompanied by verse, surrealist i |
ather than his works, and where it does show | paintings, they are not of his more famous works. |
One of Bingham's most famous | paintings, this work is owned by the Metropolitan Muse |
in the eventual deterioration of a good many | paintings, those of Delacroix being just one notable e |
roughout this time Kaplan was also producing | paintings though in view of their subject matter they |
These | paintings, though much damaged, are still preserved, a |
There is a rood screen with fine | paintings thought to be East Anglia, which are of a lo |
His | paintings throng local churches; for example, the Basi |
(January 1594) to make their own way selling | paintings through the dealer Costantino. |
ed pencil technique that he used for smaller | paintings throughout the rest of his life. |
n he describes the location and owner of the | paintings, thus becoming a valuable source for art pro |
surrounding area in a series of watercolour | paintings, thus creating an important eyewitness recor |
The building housed several expensive oil | paintings, Tiffany stained glass windows and other wor |
nterest in 2000 with his series of political | paintings titled Mwana Kitoko ("beautiful boy"), which |
e died, Florence McClung gave several of her | paintings to the Dallas Museum of Art. |
on Goodman sold a large Viking collection of | paintings to a collector in New York (some 50 or so pa |
iety of British Artists in 1902, and sent 52 | paintings to exhibitions at their Galleries in Pall Ma |
Greco-Buddhist sculptures, Mughal and Pahari | paintings to Lahore Museum in 1964. |
962, a friend encouraged Tiger to submit his | paintings to the American Indian Artists Annual at the |
nd donated European impressionist and modern | paintings to other Chicago institutions such as the Ar |
He also bequeathed several Rembrandt | paintings to the National Dutch collection. |
In 1783 she sent two | paintings to Catherine the Great of Russia and was rev |
Florence, and in 1386 he provided four panel | paintings to the Avignon office of the merchant France |
The Family wishes the return of many of the | paintings to be sold at auction to raise funds for the |
Belgium, Nussbaum entrusted the bulk of his | paintings to a family friend, who ended up keeping the |
He went to America to sell some old | paintings to restore the family fortunes but on the wa |
Falkirk High School, she donated one of her | paintings to the school on the occasion of its centena |
ds of original works of art ranging from oil | paintings to pastels to sculpture, and many individual |
ny Otis, who also contributed one of his oil | paintings to be used as the album's cover. |
iety of wall decorations, from medieval wall | paintings, to graffiti from later periods, including t |
the subject (though he had donated thirteen | paintings to the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1901). |
26, Charlotte Salomon gave her collection of | paintings to Dr. Moridis, a trusted friend who had tre |
from the extreme subject matter of his early | paintings to portraits of friends in the mid-1960s, Dy |
Hockney, Bacon and Lucian Freud all provided | paintings to hang on the walls of Odin's and Langan's |
In a reversal of the movement of European | paintings to the United States during this period, one |
of sources (travel brochures, calendars, old | paintings) to canvas as accurately as possible, and be |
r would often cut apart her own drawings and | paintings to create collages and, at times, revised or |
oque music, over 30 characters and over 2000 | paintings to study. |
t school at the age of 16 she submitted some | paintings to the Birmingham Society of Artists but the |
of Sutherland, who loaned it (with 26 other | paintings) to the National Galleries of Scotland in 19 |
ictures in pen and ink, as well as copies of | paintings to supplement his meager earnings. |
sts booths each year with items ranging from | paintings, to jewelry, to home decor, to just about an |
ormation about submissions for adding Naegle | paintings to the Naegle Catalogue of Works, 2004 - 200 |
collections ranging from 17th century Dutch | paintings to contemporary works, as well as a collecti |
is associate Tyler Harris, took these canvas | paintings to indicate an intrinsic motivation for abst |
mp to depict Holter Dam as one of four mural | paintings to hang in the state's Law Library (located |
t to her son Archer, who donated many of her | paintings to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New Yor |
Art, a portfolio of pochoir prints artists' | paintings to be published in France. |
His exhibits ranged from | paintings to graphics, medals, ceremics, sculptures, g |
s translucent fiberglass panels, which allow | paintings to be lit safely and naturally by soft sunli |
thing back, no manuscripts to store away, no | paintings to show on walls and maybe hang in museums, |
, however, we will continue to attribute the | paintings to the Master of the Embroidered Foliage, wh |
olony, Krans donated a large portions of his | paintings to the colony. |
r Bonnie, (Aparna Sen) who wants to sell the | paintings to Sotheby's, and a few others. |
which he explained the iconography of church | paintings to a wide readership and explored the Anglo- |
Because of this, his | paintings today are valued almost as much for the insi |
His | paintings today hang in various museums where he worke |
Many studies are displayed with finished | paintings, together with descriptions by major critics |
llector, Cochin bought several impressionist | paintings together with Paul Durand-Ruel including one |
st all of the statues, crucifixes, frescoes, | paintings, tombs, stained glass windows and the altar |
and becoming one of Jehovah's Witnesses her | paintings took on a happier, brighter style. |
e Philadelphia Exposition of 1926, where his | paintings took first place. |
series of books illustrated with these naive | paintings topped the bestseller lists in the early 197 |
amas, relief sculpture, murals and miniature | paintings, touch screen computers, taxidermy and ancie |
Haven and New London, has antique furniture, | paintings, toys and quilts. |
His signature figurative | paintings transform mediated film, television, and pri |
ntends to deaccession and sell two Victorian | paintings, Triumph of Love (1880) by Albert Joseph Moo |
ric) is an expert in forging famous artists' | paintings, trying to become a legitimate artist in his |
ieved to be responsible for a large group of | paintings; two of these are altarpieces of the Death o |
"[Pushman's] | paintings typically featured oriental idols, pottery a |
worth, whose designs are based on Roman Wall | paintings uncovered in 1777 at the Villa Negroni on th |
No. 21 MU was the subject of a number of | paintings under the collective title "the bomb store" |
The epic size of the landscapes in these | paintings, unexampled in earlier American painting, re |
Khmelko is known for his Socialist Realism | paintings: Unification of the Ukrainian Lands (1939-19 |
ed to depict large-scale urban scenes in his | paintings until his death in 1980. |
Susan notices in the house that there are | paintings up of male ancestors but none of the wives. |
In his | paintings upon china he introduced figures from the wo |
Williams' | paintings use a narrative content to give a sense of t |
reate visual aids for her preaching, and her | paintings use a colorful religious iconography. |
own for the many dioramas (three-dimensional | paintings) used to interpret geology and one or two mi |
His works have been exhibited widely and his | paintings used to illustrate the National Trust desk d |
Famous Doubles, a show of the original | paintings used for the posters, was promoted at the Wa |
His | paintings usually depict the California landscape. |
Leyba's mixed media | paintings utilize photographic collage, acrylic paint, |
Zhang specialized in landscape and bamboo | paintings, utilizing steady and bold brushstrokes. |
In addition to selling his | paintings, van Dongen also gained an income by selling |
' at MYU Gallery Tokyo comprising of stencil | paintings, Video/Photography installations at Experime |
work is diverse and includes fields such as | paintings, videos, installation and photography. |
Her oil | paintings vividly depict Lancashire life as it was bet |
g archival materials (writings, photographs, | paintings, voice-records, films, personal clothes etc |
ery also contains ancient Buddhist miniature | paintings, wall paintings, stupas, statues and Buddhis |
ony, which included songs and elaborate sand | paintings, was meant to keep the young men's souls hea |
In 1958, one of his finger | paintings was used as the cover of Mad #38, and Muggs |
The main inspiration for the | paintings was Biblia Pauperum, a collection of events |
The work on the | paintings was completed on September 13, 1501. |
A series of his target | paintings was the subject of issue 32 (1961) of the st |
st's work, then mainly composed of landscape | paintings, was not selling very well. |
requent foreground subject in many of Gray's | paintings was a Bush island boat which Gray personally |
However one of the | paintings was shown at Leeds City Art Gallery in 1993, |
One of Sutcliffe's | paintings was shown at the Walker Art Gallery in Liver |
Among the Cardinal's | paintings was Correggio's Mystic Marriage of Saint Cat |
One of Langley's | paintings was singled out as "a beautiful and true wor |
One of his | paintings was published in two of Coffield's books as |
At one time, one of his | paintings was on display in New York's Museum of Moder |
His signature on his | paintings was usually "AvU". |
ction of Dutch old masters and Expressionist | paintings was said to be valued in the "millions." |
The imminent prospect that his collection of | paintings was about to be sold by his estate, in 1824, |
In April 2002, an exhibition of Sherman's | paintings was held in London, England, at Thompsons' G |
Amongst the missing | paintings, was one of Dinocheau, a generous donor, who |
A particular interest for his | paintings was children. |
original donation the museum's collection of | paintings, watercolors, drawings, prints, photographs, |
0, 1881) is an American artist known for her | paintings, watercolors, portraits, and illustrations d |
Today the museum contains Moreau's drawings, | paintings, watercolors, and sculptures. |
The gallery hosts a wide variety of British | paintings, watercolours and contemporary artworks. |
The gallery holds oil | paintings, watercolours and Newcastle silver. |
numbers over 4,000 art objects including oil | paintings, watercolours, works on paper, etchings, pri |
Among his genre | paintings we may mention his 'Highland Keeper's Daught |
Most of Nussbaum's | paintings went unseen by the wider world for the first |
By 1977, the original | paintings were in such fragile condition they could no |
In 1972 some of his | paintings were chosen, together with those of De Chiri |
Towards the end of the Second World War his | paintings were looted by Soviet troops but some were r |
Most of his | paintings were topographical (of specific places), alt |
sk suffered damage, too, and 35 historic oil | paintings were destroyed. |
as an accomplished visual artist and her oil | paintings were featured at the Wally Findlay Galleries |
His | paintings were a highlight at a recent event at the Mu |
140 of her own | Paintings were left to her godchild Ida van Haelewijn, |
The | paintings were recovered by Oslo Police on August 31, |
His | paintings were popular and sold, sometimes for as much |
These | paintings were widely reproduced during the early 20th |
Two | paintings were posthumously exhibited at the same venu |
Before 1900, Schwabe's | paintings were more individual and experimental, indic |
Although his early | paintings were signed "Sidney Williams", from age 20 o |
French Quarter apartment, most of Bonsall's | paintings were kept at the family estate in Grand Chen |
The | paintings were very original. |
alleries of Liverpool and Southport, and his | paintings were sold at Christie's. |
During the 1960s and 1970s, the | paintings were being damaged by the carbon dioxide in |
The | paintings were returned to the cathedral in the late 1 |
His | paintings were displayed at galleries in London, Paris |
The | paintings were found in Paris and the thieves, who wer |
e rest of her life, the vast majority of her | paintings were either of coastal scenes near Catterlin |
Furthermore, it is said that these | paintings were highly prized by Bergamesque collectors |
His | paintings were displayed at New York's Hudson Walker G |
Cagnaccio's early | paintings were in a Futurist idiom, but by the early 1 |
it is commonly believed that Sudduth's early | paintings were executed exclusively in mud and found p |
destroyed, classical literature and Chinese | paintings were torn apart, and cultural and religious |
All of his many | paintings were of divine subjects, and it seems that h |
ng exhibition at the Alabama State Fair, the | paintings were shipped to Shreveport for display at th |
overlooks Portland's harbor and many of his | paintings were created in the adjacent studio. |
In 1937, 608 of Schmidt-Rottluff's | paintings were seized from museums by the Nazis and se |
A large number of his | paintings were inspired by sketches made on frequent c |
Many of Roberts' | paintings were landscapes or ideas done on small canva |
ite a few of his most important and enduring | paintings were created in the 1940s, some 70 years ago |
of Nussabaum's only surviving relatives, the | paintings were reclaimed, restored and exhibited in a |
His | paintings were abstracts that dealt with social and sp |
her on the path to success when three of her | paintings were acquired by eminent Indian scientist Ho |
Her | paintings were recognized and championed by Hilla von |
Both | paintings were first recorded as belonging to the coll |
ul restaurateur, a poet and an artist, whose | paintings were displayed by the Scottish Academy. |
Some of his | paintings were donated to the University of New Orlean |
But the | paintings were never sold. |
f San Sebastiano in Mantua, Italy, where the | paintings were hung from 1506 in a specially built gal |
Henri-Julien Dumont's | paintings were rewarded in 1900 with a bronze medal at |
Many of his | paintings were produced "in the field" and are bold in |
His | paintings were reproduced by the thousands, often as p |
eath, his reputation was damaged: though his | paintings were praised for their charm and facility, t |
hitect Erik Fant, when the church's medieval | paintings were recovered. |
wever, many of his more colourful and lively | paintings were on Mediterranean subjects in Malta, Cyp |
In the 14th century numerous wall | paintings were added, remains of which survive. |
The | paintings were commissioned for various churches of Ve |
Two of the | paintings were autobiographical. |
His oil | paintings were frequently featured in popular magazine |
Some of these | paintings were reportedly sold through the famed art d |
Hondecoetor's murals and large | paintings were well-suited to both the large country h |
Painting and The Simple Art of Tai Chi, his | paintings were exhibited at a solo display in the Ashm |
rvaded, French furniture, porcelain and fine | paintings were collected to enhance the rooms. |
Incidentally, these | paintings were found by the famous Finnish composer Je |
In 1968 these 140 | paintings were purchased by her great nephew Luitwin v |
In the next decade, both he and his | paintings were to travel the world, participating in e |
Three Vermeer | paintings were described as "tronies" in the Dissius a |
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