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I posted a photo yesterday about an art project being undertaken by on class. Three of the students found one another and decided to piece their targets together before getting down to work.
Visitors to the Dahab Festival took part in a workshop run by local resident Anja Makulik who spends her days making art out of trash thrown around the desert. Read full article: english.ahram.org.eg/News/39280.aspx
+ PICTURES OF DETAILS AND CEZANNE’S OWN WORDS :
www.flickr.com/photos/144232185@N03/collections/721576722...
A small selection from the hundreds of 2 w/w" x 3 1/2" ACEO sized pieces of art I have been creating on an almost daily basis. I used to fill up sketchbooks but now I do these which just continues my tradition of doing small drawings and paintings like I have been doing most of my artisic life.
The styles and subject matter range all over the place - whatever hits me at the moment. Creating these is great fun and hopefully they are fun for you to see as well. Thanks for looking
You can see lots more of my Pop Art Eye Candy at www.howiegreen.com
More than 350 pieces of artwork are made available for students to rent through the college's semesterly Art Rental program.
Photo credit: Jonathan Clark '25
Art at MaHalla, which is in the first electric power plant in Berlin -- now a performance space.
Berlin
October-2021
Manchester Art Gallery.
The Landlord.
By William Nicholson (1872-1949).
Oil on canvas, c1900.
A three-quarter length, right side portrait of Tom Jordan, the landlord of The George pub in Wallingford, Oxfordshire. He is shown as a large man with dark hair and a ruddy complexion, seated at a desk to the left, with his right hand resting beside a pile of papers and a pen. He sits against a neutral background.
In a letter to the Gallery Nicholson gave a vivid description of Tom Jordan: He was a charming companion and swore horribly in a voice you might take for a turtle dove. He was also a famous poacher and kept a large pocket in the back of his coat for game. He had a dozen illegitimate grandchildren of whom he was very proud. They all had good voices and sang sentimental part songs in the big kitchen of an evening. The monolithic nature of the landlord’s outline is perhaps a result of Nicholson’s experience during the 1890s in producing simplified designs for posters and woodcuts.