「watercolours」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

watercolours

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  • Watercolours and paintings by Turner
  • Watercolours and washes are held at the Hocken Library
  • nsive graphic collection includes drawings, watercolours and prints.
  • The gallery holds oil paintings, watercolours and Newcastle silver.
  • Later he used ink, watercolours and then a friend gave him six tubes of oil
  • Stock paints in oils and watercolours and in 1990 he added etching to his folio.
  • Ian McKeever: Watercolours and Gouaches 1993-2003, Jill Lloyd, Akvarel
  • Museum has a collection of about 380 of his watercolours and drawings.
  • hosts a wide variety of British paintings, watercolours and contemporary artworks.
  • He worked in both oils and watercolours and was a member of the Royal Watercolour S
  • d photographer and, in addition, he painted watercolours and enjoyed climbing in the Alps.
  • Northern Ireland Railways and exhibited his watercolours and black and white drawings.
  • books published, 'Mike Chaplin's Expressive Watercolours' and 'The Complete Book of Drawing and Pain
  • Then, from 1810, he began painting again in watercolours and oils on different surfaces, (canvas, si
  • tensive collection of 18th and 19th century watercolours and drawings, including work by Turner, Cot
  • phy in favour of painting, working in oils, watercolours and gouaches.
  • ember of the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours and exhibited with Walker's Galleries, Broo
  • ion, Anker created hundreds of commissioned watercolours and drawings, mostly portraits and illustra
  • ) was an English painter who specialised in watercolours and pastels of the scenes and people of Pet
  • work, including 41 oil paintings and three watercolours, and a major exhibition devoted to Hedley i
  • n important collector of first editions and watercolours and enjoyed big-game hunting, fishing and p
  • ngtung, China, as an artist he was drawn to watercolours and later oils.
  • ounder-member of the Society of Painters in Watercolours, and was a regular and prolific contributor
  • el three-colour process for reproducing her watercolours, and in October 1902 The Tale of Peter Rabb
  • works including tapestries, wall hangings, watercolours and sketches to the state, now on permanent
  • es, with Charles Barber, his earliest dated watercolours are from this year.
  • l Academy's refusal to accept the medium of watercolours as appropriate for serious art.
  • ge commissioned him to produce less than 30 watercolours, but collected many more of Jackson's Brist
  • 1995: Views of Windsor: watercolours by Thomas and Paul Sandby
  • d in 2004, and a short playing e.p. dubbed ' Watercolours' by local media followed in 2007.
  • In 1974 a group of thirteen watercolours by Turner was presented in memory of Sir St
  • Six Watercolours by distinguished New Zealand composer and b
  • of Medieval religious sculptures as well as watercolours, coins and medals by Carol Popp de Szathmar
  • t was hired by Charles Heath to display the watercolours commissioned by from Joseph Mallord William
  • His artworks includes a huge collection of watercolours depicting the northern Canadian landscape.
  • uring that period he drew many sketches and watercolours depicting Alsatian landscapes and monuments
  • nd 4 historic masters, ranging across oils, watercolours, drawings, graphics, mixed-media works, scu
  • 6 illustrations are extant: two sets of six watercolours each, and an additional four drawings in pe
  • ter who worked in a variety of media (oils, watercolours, engraving, etc.).
  • t, with Harry Fenn, working on drawings and watercolours for "Picturesque Palestine, Sinai and Egypt
  • Watercolours from Korthals's monograph (left to right):
  • He had been painting surrealist watercolours from the age of 15, but took up painting mo
  • He worked in many different media: oils, watercolours, gouache and pen and ink.
  • These watercolours have been invaluable in restoring the inter
  • Working in mostly Oils and Watercolours he has gained a reputation for his skill an
  • his article doesn't mention his drawings or watercolours in any great depth (well, no mention of wat
  • r is named after William Payne, who painted watercolours in the late 18th century.
  • e held his first exhibition of drawings and watercolours in Paris in 1985, and continued to record a
  • ame President of the Society of Painters in Watercolours in 1905, and among many other works, he ill
  • an associate of the Society of Painters in Watercolours in 1867, and a full member of the latter in
  • on of mainly 19th century oil paintings and watercolours including works by Frederic, Lord Leighton,
  • He wrote The Art of Landscape Painting in Watercolours, jointly with his son, and The Art of Sketc
  • In his watercolours, landscapes are populated in less formal, m
  • 1827-1859, he exhibited 60 pictures, mostly watercolours landscapes, at the Royal Manchester Institu
  • 00 works: copperprints, drawings, etchings, watercolours, lithographic works and other kinds of art
  • gs including works by Philip Steer, English watercolours, Liverpool Porcelain, and Della Robbia Pott
  • series of works that appropriated original watercolours made by the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.
  • entually commissioned to paint over seventy watercolours, nearly forty of which are still known toda
  • and Edwardian landscape painter in oils and watercolours noted for his Highland cattle.
  • Some 500 watercolours of fungi painted by his wife Anna were pres
  • James continued to produce oils and watercolours of East Anglia, including many genre subjec
  • band is commissioned to produce a series of watercolours of birds by Napoleon Bonaparte.
  • He contributed 258 watercolours of scenes from Bristol, England to the topo
  • Hugh's daughter Sarah painted a number of watercolours of the interior in the 1860s with exception
  • keter, and in 1905 produced a set of twelve watercolours of famous and mostly royal cricket players.
  • His Bristol watercolours of the mid 1820s were his most highly regar
  • d study trips in 1825 and 1834 leaving many watercolours of the city and the surroundings.
  • , he served in the Crimean War and produced watercolours of scenes he witnessed during it.
  • Alice Blanche Ellis, were engaged to paint watercolours of the fruit, whilst an honorary member, Dr
  • In 1545 he created two watercolours on canvas representing Our Lady of the Annu
  • n 1816 and took up a career as a painter of watercolours, particularly of waterfalls, earning the pr
  • This led him to produce drawings and watercolours recording events and places all over the wo
  • ormed as the Society of Painters in Oil and Watercolours, reverting to its original name in 1820.
  • chool but although a number of etchings and watercolours still decorate the walls of the school, not
  • traits, landscapes, genre scenes, worked in watercolours, tempera, and monumental painting.
  • There he began working on the 80 watercolours that would eventually appear as illustratio
  • After WWII he took up flower painting in watercolours then oil-painting, but without critical acc
  • Her pictures, usually watercolours, typically contain local scenes of Petersfi
  • Her recent work in watercolours was sparked by a desire to preserve Vaughan
  • A number of O'Brien's watercolours were exhibited in the 1865 New Zealand Indu
  • Several of these watercolours were reproduced in a special edition calend
  • en is famous for his landscape paintings in watercolours which incorporated influences from Chinese
  • ewise executed a few small oval drawings in watercolours, which he combined effectively with crayons
  • glish map-maker turned landscape painter in watercolours, who, along with his older brother Thomas,
  • ins to become an eminent artist in oils and watercolours whose commissions brought him Royal recogni
  • Hilton Hassell, Mary Hallen (Victorian era watercolours), William J. Wood, Thor Hansen, Group of Se
  • 4,000 art objects including oil paintings, watercolours, works on paper, etchings, prints, sculptur