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National Gallery of Artさんのイラストまとめ


A place where everyone is welcome to explore and experience art, creativity, and shared humanity. #myngadc
nga.gov

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Saturday at 1:00 pm, take a guided tour of West Building highlights given by a deaf guide in ASL. The tour is also interpreted into spoken English.

Details: https://t.co/Tkf8AuB8zr

[Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, “Madame du Barry,” 1782, oil on canvas, on view in gallery 55]

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Marie Laurencin was a pioneering artist who studied and exhibited among the Cubists, but who defined her own unique—and decidedly feminine—aesthetic.

“In the Park” (1924) is now on view in gallery 103D on the Ground Floor of the East Building.

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Patiently waiting for the first snow. ❄️

[Robert Allan Cale, “First Snow on Gold Street,” 1975, reduction woodcut in two colors]

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Wishing you a happy filled with family, food, and maybe even a mound of butter.

The Gallery is open until 5:00 pm today.

[Antoine Vollon, “Mound of Butter,” 1875/18875, oil on canvas, on view in gallery 23 in the West Building]

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And join us on November 16 for a Edit-a-Thon to make your own contribution! We’ll focus on prints and drawings, and make use of the 22,000+ works on paper from our collection available on .

Registration opens at noon on October 1: https://t.co/oj9FN6VqAy

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Labor Day is an annual tribute to the contributions workers have made to our country. 🌾 This year, we’re recognizing Labor Day with Thomas Hart Benton’s “Corn and Winter Wheat” (1948).

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Our August 2019 newsletter is here, filled with upcoming lectures, public programs, films, and more. Read it now: https://t.co/aauyr0dhAv [Winslow Homer, "Breezing Up (A Fair Wind)," 1873-1876]

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On Memorial Day, we honor the men and women who have died serving in the U.S. Armed Forces. The Gallery is open today from 10am to 5pm. [John Singer Sargent, "A War Memorial," 1918, watercolor and gouache over graphite on paper]

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Grant Wood was born on this day in 1891. The artist painted "New Road" in 1939. It is an idealized view of the rolling hills dotted with trees, farm buildings, windmills, and grazing animals characteristic of the rural Iowa landscape.

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Archibald Motley painted this portrait of his grandmother, Emily Motley, in 1922. Emily was born a slave in 1842, was freed after the Civil War, and moved north to Chicago. Her grandson paid tribute to her strength with this dignified portrait.

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