Transverse Line by Wassily Kandinsky
(via @lonequixote)
The Scream, 1893, Edvard Munch
Medium: pastel,cardboard
https://www.wikiart.org/en/edvard-munch/the-scream-1893-1
Vincent van Gogh, Pine Trees and Dandelions in the Garden of Saint-Paul Hospital, 1890 Oil on canvas, 72.5 × 91.5 cm
The Scream, 1895, Edvard Munch
Size: 52.5x40.3 cm Medium: lithography on paper
Italian Jewish painter and sculptor Amedeo Modigliani was born on this day in 1884, known for his reclining nudes and portraits with elegantly elongated features. This fall, our exhibition of early drawings will illuminate Modigliani’s heritage as an Italian Sephardic Jew as pivotal to understanding his artistic output. Modigliani Unmasked will consider the celebrated artist shortly after he arrived in Paris in 1906, when the city was still roiling with anti-Semitism after the long-running tumult of the Dreyfus Affair and the influx of foreign emigres. Modigliani’s Italian-Sephardic background helped forge a complex cultural identity that rested in part on the ability of Italian Jews historically to assimilate and embrace diversity.
Still Life on a Table with ‘Gillette’, 1914, Georges Braque
Medium: charcoal,collage,gouache,paper
The Sun, 1916, Edvard Munch
Size: 455x780 cm Medium: oil on canvas
Senecio, 1922, Paul Klee
Size: 38x40.5 cm
Head of a woman (Marie-Therese Walter) 1937
Pablo Picasso
Noguchi
Franz Kline (USA 1910-1962) Yellow, Orange and Purple (1955) oil on canvas 200.7 x 131 cm