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Today it is International Picnic Day! We hope you have some good weather and maybe plan to have a picnic this weekend? 📗 https://t.co/eTqGMjis6w 🏛 @whitneymuseum collection The Picnic Grounds by John French Sloan 1906-1907 #InternationalPicnicDay
Like the 17th-century Dutch masters whose work she admired, Hale excelled at depicting solitary women in light-filled interiors, absorbed in domestic pursuits. 📘 https://t.co/6CUPVVeMZf
🏛 @WomenInTheArts collection
June by Ellen Day Hale ca. 1893 #womensart
🎓 Yes, we had to include them, as Monet had a small obsession and painted around 250 paintings on the subject of water lilies.
🎨 https://t.co/QcJ9wGnfKY
Inspired in part by the recent development of Cubism, I and the Village (1911)displays Chagall’s distinct vocabulary of abstraction, characterized by fantastic colors, folkloric imagery drawn from memories of the artist’s Belarus home, a peasant town on the outskirts of Vitebsk.
💕 #EndangeredSpeciesDay Looking into the eye of this dodo is a true moment of revelation. Was that dodo still alive when Savery painted this work? - Sarah Mills 📘 https://t.co/qt25KS9LIv
🏛 @NHM_London collection ⠀
Dodo by Roelandt Savery no later than 1639 ⠀
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#sundayvibes &
🏛 @BuchheimMuseum collection
Sleeping Pechstein, Erich Heckel 1910
🌳Waldmüller’s landscapes demonstrate that plein air painting can even be consistent by doing without an emphatically subjective, spontaneous brushstroke, thus allowing the depiction of minute detail.🏛 Alte Nationalgalerie Berlin
Prater Landscape,Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller 1830
Utopian architectural designs, expressionist interiors, fantastic worlds of colour – all of this is only a fraction of the work of Wenzel Hablik (1881-1934).
Freestanding Dome With Five Mountain Tops as Base, 1918/23/24
Oil on canvas
© Wenzel Hablik Foundation, Itzehoe
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Study of tulips, watercolour sketch, Mary Moser, Britain, c.1764-1800
🏛 @V_and_A #womensart