「Portraits」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Portraits

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  • n "spirit painting", with "Life Sized Spirit Portraits a Specialty" printed on their business cards
  • Art critic Hilton Kramer sees in Whistler's portraits a charm and a combination of craft and obser
  • He has a name for painting large family portraits, a genre made popular by his teacher Anthony
  • His portraits, acutely characterized, show similarly Manne
  • e Cookie Portfolio 1976-1989, a series of 15 portraits, after Mueller's death.
  • gh in his lifetime he was best known for his portraits, all of them are now lost.
  • lopment as a painter, Hensel painted or drew portraits almost exclusively, although he produced som
  • He painted portraits, altarpieces and decorative works, including
  • Wolfthorn was known for her portraits, among others of Ida Dehmel, Richard Dehmel,
  • ell to do a further series of senior officer portraits and a number of large landscapes of New Zeal
  • He painted portraits and also made many drawings of antiques, loc
  • According to Houbraken he was known for his portraits and historical allegories, and spent six yea
  • She was also the subject of several cubist portraits and sketches by Pablo Picasso in the late 19
  • o his genre paintings also distinguishes his portraits and still lifes, while it is less apparent i
  • nown for his impressionist style landscapes, portraits and his numerous painted nudes.
  • Exhibits will include portraits and individual biographies together with gov
  • wn here is one of the artist's few political portraits and is now in the National Gallery of Victor
  • Belgian painter, doing interior decoration, portraits and religious commissions.
  • e Iacono, incorporating drawings, paintings, portraits and poems from a mass of work that was creat
  • team, was the major contributor to character portraits and animation.
  • s here on the throne dais that royal wedding portraits and family photographs are taken.
  • a separate private studio he made drawings, portraits and small paintings without the assistance o
  • origin, best known for large figural works, portraits, and still lifes.
  • er own photography business, specialising in portraits and event photography.
  • Her pin-up work, portraits and vibrant color are world-famous, and her
  • his wife gave it some of its first gifts of portraits and furniture.
  • work includes fine art photography, fashion, portraits and photojournalism.
  • express emotion through realism in both his portraits and landscapes; his work in the latter, in w
  • working as an illustrator he began painting portraits, and was shortlisted for the John Player Por
  • ablished himself as a sculptor of monuments, portraits and busts.
  • ially in oil, with bold colors, ranging from portraits and figurative scenes to landscapes as diver
  • n movie posters, Civil War art, Presidential portraits and letters, authentic stagecoaches, and an
  • and their children, sometimes in individual portraits, and other times in scenes of domestic tranq
  • most known for painting religious scenes and portraits, and his art was also influenced by his exte
  • an English designer, engraver and painter of portraits and still life.
  • displays an art collection strong in English portraits and French eighteenth-century furniture in t
  • He painted with much success portraits and sacred subjects for churches.
  • In the town hall from 1618 are some group portraits, and portraits of the counts of Orange and N
  • Dubois painted primarily portraits and mythological scenes.
  • They are chiefly portraits and allegories.
  • In addition to portraits and landscapes, Ames' surviving accounts boo
  • g, creating wild environments, early English portraits and furniture."
  • llery it exhibits more than 100 18th century portraits and has seven new interpretation galleries c
  • From 1800 to 1814 Wyatt exhibited portraits and historical subjects in oils at the Royal
  • ned from figure painting to miniatures (both portraits and other subjects), initially under the pat
  • He painted portraits and devotional topics.
  • sterlin was commissioned to produce official portraits and frescoes in state buildings "through a m
  • ed renown for his own painting, most notably portraits and paintings of flowers.
  • nri de Toulouse-Lautrec, immortalized by his portraits and posters of her dancing at the Moulin Rou
  • He became a painter of traditional portraits and landscapes with a substantial workrate.
  • rlassen" - I ask my husband to bequeath my 2 portraits and the 4 landscapes by Gustav Klimt to the
  • dst of his boos, his pictures, his ancestral portraits and paintings and mementos of other times an
  • Baets (1793 - 1855) was a Belgian painter of portraits and architectural subjects.
  • his large-scale creative use of pushpins in portraits and multimedia artwork.
  • gious work by an artist better known for his portraits and for its air of naturalness and simplicit
  • He painted portraits and altarpieces such as a Annunciation for t
  • He excelled in painting portraits and historical subjects.
  • artist known for her paintings, watercolors, portraits, and illustrations depicting individuals and
  • He worked mainly on portraits and commissioned landscapes, advertising as
  • orence and active in Rome c. 1580, producing portraits and historical subjects in the style of Agos
  • ls strongly with the human condition through portraits and atmospheric images of vacant rooms and l
  • il 1, 1672) was a Spanish Baroque painter of portraits and still lifes.
  • His works, mostly portraits and nudes exemplifying a calm classicism, ar
  • urned to his native Milwaukee, where he drew portraits and wrote editorials for the Milwaukee Daily
  • She then began to exhibit portraits and religious subjects, being awarded the Ro
  • a Moroni, was similarly known for expressive portraits, and drab religious paintings.
  • rait Gallery has some 850 lithographs of his portraits and figure studies, done between 1825 and 18
  • from British and European history as well as portraits and genre.
  • Landscapes, portraits and historical compositions were his tradema
  • Pratt was an art collector, particularly portraits and miniatures.
  • Kay, John A series of original portraits and caricature etchings, Volume 1, Part 2, p
  • en this time and 1836 he contributed several portraits and landscapes in water-colours to the exhib
  • pupil of Ingres, and is known chiefly by his portraits and subjects from sacred history.
  • He studied and painted portraits and conversation-pieces in Rome, and afterwa
  • He is known for portraits and historical allegories.
  • He executed several fine male portraits and a self-portrait.
  • an and Algerian scenes, French peasants, and portraits, and also decorative work, notably for the T
  • d he had an extensive collection of engraved portraits, and nearly a complete series of Roman and E
  • The great hall has numerous family portraits and contains linenfold panelling brought fro
  • of color became more vibrant, and he created portraits and landscapes of extraordinary vitality and
  • Francesco de Mura, Italian painter of portraits and frescoes (b.
  • ish Baroque painter who specialised in group portraits and both "low-life" and elegant genre painti
  • elinck was especially good as an engraver of portraits, and executed prints of many of the most emi
  • in five volumes under the title Contemporary Portraits and biographies of his friends Oscar Wilde a
  • Tofanelli also painted altarpieces, portraits, and mythological scenes.
  • ed in the Monk's House Albums, these include portraits and group pictures of many who visited the h
  • ated an impressive collection of Ohio Valley portraits and over ten thousand museum artifacts.
  • ainting in miniature) the king's and queen's portraits, and for six other portraits.
  • itors of the Salon, where he showed numerous portraits and genre pictures, but his popular fame is
  • e features such as fully lipsynched dialogue portraits and its ability to handle complex animations
  • orks at the Salon from 1855 onwards, chiefly portraits and historical subjects, and was commissione
  • Cornelis Cels, a painter of portraits and historical subjects, was born at Lierre
  • omer had travelled to America twice to paint portraits and to give lectures.
  • ephas Giovanni Thompson, became a painter of portraits and landscape in his own right, and a friend
  • a more traditional painting style, including portraits and landscapes like the one at right.
  • He painted history, allegories, and portraits, and became a master of the Guild of St. Luk
  • There he painted portraits and sentimental domestic subjects, playing t
  • yrical descriptions of nature, psychological portraits, and abundant use of the rural vernacular.
  • In the 1920s and 30s Gluck became known for portraits and floral paintings; the latter were favour
  • ition for his strong contemporary figurative portraits, and for the "Truckscapes", landscapes he pa
  • Portraits and miniatures by Charles Willson Peale Amer
  • ly dedicated himself solely to oil-on-canvas portraits and watercolour miniatures.
  • He primarily engraved portraits and religious themed works, many of which ap
  • He is known for portraits and simple versions of allegorical and mythi
  • ed mannerist mythological subjects, but also portraits and genre paintings influenced by Pieter Bru
  • 1874 - 1969) was a British painter of mainly portraits and interiors in a traditional style.
  • Carolina, a publisher of church directories, portraits, and other print and web media products.
  • He allegedly spent his last years painting portraits and creating toys.
  • or, a French painter of historical subjects, portraits, and miniatures, was born in Paris in 1769.
  • 835) was an English dramatist and painter of portraits and historical subjects (N.B: Sir Isaac Poco
  • and a 1848 revolutionary, best known for his portraits and his choice of Romanian Romantic national
  • e settled in New York City, where he painted portraits and taught.
  • r 1905) was a Belgian painter of landscapes, portraits and still life.
  • published his fine art book, Sexpressionist Portraits, and a collaboration with Dave Archer, Steve
  • mmissioned watercolours and drawings, mostly portraits and illustrations, including for an edition
  • oyal Academy in 1818, sending some miniature portraits, and in 1819 exhibited the first of a series
  • He is best known for his numerous portraits and caricatures of political, literary and a
  • -1916) was a British painter specializing in portraits, and a member of the Royal Academy.
  • tablished himself as a successful painter of portraits and landscapes, as well as an accomplished w
  • He painted portraits and murals and moved to Greenwich in 1912.
  • She became a successful painter of portraits and genre paintings, sometimes collaborating
  • he died in 1562, leaving behind a wealth of portraits and altarpieces.
  • ainter Jeremias van Winghe, and is known for portraits and genre works, as well as book title pages
  • entury he went to Bungay, Suffolk to engrave portraits and illustrations for the Bible, Pilgrim's P
  • ughtsman, and a good colourist, and both his portraits and subject-pictures earned him considerable
  • to house his collections of weapons, armour, portraits, and curiosities.
  • ncil, built an impressive new house, painted portraits and landscapes, played a variety of musical
  • His paintings included portraits and Mexican landscapes resulting from his yo
  • In the book Dylan - Visions, Portraits, and Back Pages, compiled by the writers of
  • Portraits and Dreams: Photographs and Stories by Child
  • ty in painting genres such as still-life and portraits and hinting at the ability to paint the clas
  • r 1936) was a Scottish painter who worked on portraits and genre scenes of everyday life.
  • ndscapes (usually centered on architecture), portraits, and the female nude.
  • tte was also removed from both his character portraits and his sprites.
  • Art Colony in 1937 that produced hundreds of portraits and landscapes depicting Colville Indian Res
  • eligious Christian scenes, history painting, portraits, and a few landscapes.
  • e concentrated mainly on nude life drawings, portraits and landscapes.
  • His portraits and ambitious narrative paintings are charac
  • urches in Flanders and Brabant, aristocratic portraits and occasionally added figures to works by t
  • eled to the royal court in Vienna to perform portraits and decorate maps.
  • He afterwards exhibited portraits and landscapes, his last contribution being
  • There is also an image gallery containing portraits and photographs of the artists and illustrat
  • his paintings he chose historical subjects, portraits, animals and many allegorical themes, all co
  • Corneille's portraits are nearly miniature in scale, ranging from
  • follows the conventions of Kneller, but his portraits are often more relaxed and informal, favouri
  • Some of his portraits are in the possession of the public library
  • Faculty and staff portraits are in a separate section.
  • The Sitting, an arts series where celebrity portraits are produced during an interview session wit
  • Many of his smaller portraits are highly regarded.
  • The portraits are signed by the performers and then hung o
  • His photographic portraits are compassionate and empathetic to the live
  • man, very diffident of his own art, but his portraits are truthful and lifelike.
  • Engraved portraits are in Warburton's Prince Rupert and in the
  • His portraits are elaborately finished, although very thin
  • Some of his portraits are on display in the Indiana State Library
  • Greenhill's portraits are of great merit, often approaching those
  • Among his portraits are those of the cellist David Popper, and t
  • Many of these Tasmanian portraits are of considerable importance in the docume
  • On Pargat Diwas he is worshipped and his portraits are taken out in gay processions called Shob
  • Several of James Latham's portraits are in the National Gallery of Ireland colle
  • All the portraits are either wholly from life or using drawing
  • Many portraits are ascribed to him on very little evidence,
  • His most known commissioned portraits are of Queen Silvia of Sweden, Pope John Pau
  • He also painted several portraits around this time.
  • The Scottish portraits arrived too late for the book, and the woodc
  • The American art collection contains early portraits as well as 19th- and 20th century still life
  • le, washed-out flesh tones and are ideal for portraits as they smooth facial details while adding w
  • The collection includes more than 130 portraits, as well as mythical themes and figures in d
  • se their devices' camera function to display portraits as wanted posters in-game.
  • She also painted still lifes and many portraits, as well as many religious paintings.
  • hat belonged to him, especially drawings and portraits, as well as a gift from artist Man Ray (an i
  • He exhibited enamel portraits at the Royal Academy from 1781 to 1794, when
  • from his subjects to shoot these fascinating portraits at all.
  • He showed four portraits at the Salon du Champ-de-Mars in 1895 and co
  • f age he began practice as an artist, taking portraits at one shilling each, and advertising himsel
  • In 1777 he exhibited some portraits at the Royal Academy, and in 1787 became chi
  • ed the Duke of Tan and honored in one of the Portraits at Lingyan Pavilion, reserved for the greate
  • d 1805 Pocock exhibited subject-pictures and portraits at the Royal Academy, London, and occasional
  • Cape Town, "The Gray Hat," at Edinburgh, two portraits at Glasgow, and one at Montreal.
  • There is also one of her portraits at Frewen College, it has Helen Louisa Frewe
  • Three Gospels are introduced by Evangelist portraits at their opening pages.
  • ular genre; among his works and graphics are portraits, avante-garde pieces, and classical landscap
  • Orders were given that portraits be painted of the khagans and khatuns during
  • Her painted portraits became less realistic and more a set of enig
  • stament manuscripts in that it places author portraits before each epistle, act and gospel, as oppo
  • "The portraits belong to the Demekon family.
  • Portraits: Belvedere College, Dublin, 1832-1982 (1982)
  • us traditional and non-traditional images of portraits, bodies, birds and patterns.
  • for most of his career, and is known for his portraits, both of German princes and those of the lea
  • He painted a number of portraits both of James and his consort, Queen Anne of
  • Her early works are usually portraits, but later after 1920 she painted mainly sma
  • turn to his own country he painted some good portraits; but his colouring was too sombre to give a
  • He is known for engraved portraits, but also portraits in oils and pastels.
  • Soon Amaringo began to make money from portraits, but lost his market when photographers bega
  • riod; a time when she no longer painted many portraits, but retained the themes mentioned above.
  • Some were formal studio portraits, but there were also informal snapshots of g
  • Most of the over 700 portraits by Hodges are made in the early 19th century
  • roidered fifteenth-century funeral pall, two portraits by Romney, and river scenes by Samuel Scott.
  • The house contains portraits by Lawrence, Gainsborough, Romney, Lely, Rey
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