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(#3) “Trees in Art” Canadian Group of Seven painter A.J. Casson; “Jack Pine and Poplar” (1948)
(#6) “Trees in Art” Painted when he was allowed to leave the grounds of Saint-Remy asylum. One of his favorites and most famous; Vincent van Gogh, “Wheat Field with Cypresses” (1889)
(#7) “Trees in Art” His paintings are historical records of the Micmac and Montagnais people on Quebec’s rivers; Canadian painter Cornelius Krieghoff; “Taking Shelter from the Storm” (1857)
(#4) “Family Theme Paintings” Anthony van Dyck; “The Children of Charles I of England” (1637)
Family painting also includes artist families who maintained a tradition of excellence for generations: the Holbeins; Brueghels, Teniers…Van Ruisdaels. This, by one of the three Le Nain Brothers, Louis; “Milkmaid’s Family” (c1641)
(2/2) (#9) “Provocative Paintings: Part 2” Norwegian Expressionist painter Edvard Munch; “Vampire (Love and Pain)” (1895)
During the Blue Period, Picasso focused on Barcelona street people - beggars, drunks, prostitutes, and the crippled, hungry, sick, and destitute; “The Blind Man’s Meal” (1903)
In part, colorist painting is characterized by the use of intense, exaggerated or unexpected color that becomes a dominant feature of a work of art. Here, the blue and blue-green tones focus attention on one subject #Picasso
(2/2) “Jonah and the Whale”, Folio from a Jami al-Tavarikh (Compendium of Chronicles) Attributed to Iran (c.1400)