Albert Breauté (1853–1939)
Loved ones around the piano
Tag: art
Women in Artemisia Gentileschi’s paintings: “As long as i live, I will have control over my being.” – Artemisia Gentileschi (1593 – 1652/53)
Cy Twombly, Arcadia, 1958
peace of mind / mixed media in sketchbook / instagram
If you ask someone to name five artists, they will likely name prominent male artists, but how many people can list five women artists? Throughout March’s Women’s History Month, we will be joining institutions around the world to answer this very question posed by the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NWMA). We will be featuring Latinx artists from our collection, some of whom are included in our upcoming exhibition Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960-1985 which explores the groundbreaking contributions to contemporary art of Latin American and Latina women artists during a period of extraordinary conceptual and aesthetic experimentation. The show will be on view April 13-July 22, 2018.
Together we hope to draw attention to the gender and race imbalance in the art world, inspire conversation and awareness, and hopefully add a few more women to everyone’s lists.
Returning to Cuba from the United States in 1980 and 1981, Ana Mendieta began carving fertility figures into the caves and cliffs of her native land, which she called Rupestrian Sculptures. Many of these, such “Untitled (Guanaroca [First Woman]),” were named after indigenous goddesses, simultaneously serving as political and personal assertions of Mendieta’s presence and identity, as well as reminders of ancient traditions of goddess worship.
Posted by Allie Rickard
Detail from “Portrait of a Woman with Cigarette” by Oskar Zwintscher
~ Eye from a Bronze Statue.
Culture: Greek
Date: 5th – 2nd century B.C.
Medium: Marble, obsidian, glass, and copper.
Bernat Martorell c. 1434-1435
Saint George Killing the Dragon (detail)
Strong Dream, Paul Klee
Medium: gouache,watercolor,paper
Man carrying a child
Nayarit
Late Preclassic to Early Classic periods, 300 B.C.–A.D. 200
Object Place: Nayarit, México
Figurine depicting a standing male human carrying a child on his shoulders. The child’s upper torso is painted with cream slip that ends at his neck, which may indicate body paint or a long-sleeved tunic. The same cream slip covers his lower legs and feet, and also creates a vertical striped pattern on his hipcloth. The man wears a tubular headband and his legs are painted with cream slip.
this just made me cry