Event class: painting, portrait, painted, work, paintings, exhibited, art, works, exhibition, gallery

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Events with high posterior probability

Vilhelm KyhnHis landscape painting ability continued to improve over the years, as exemplified by the winter scene,'' Kystparti ved Taarbæk'' ('' View of Coast near Taarbæk'') and'' Udsigt over det flade Land ved Bjærgelide'' ('' View over the flat land near Bjærgelide'') painted in 1858, which featured the typical Danish countryside near Horsens.
Jenny SagesFor the 2011 Archibald Prize, Jenny painted Jack Sages her husband and companion of 55 years.
Alphonse LegrosIn 1855 Legros attended the evening classes of the École des Beaux Arts, and perhaps gained there his love of drawing from the antique, some of the results of which may be seen in the Print Room of the British Museum.
Jean-Michel BasquiatThat year, his Untitled (1981), a painting of a haloed, black-headed man with a bright red skeletal body, depicted amid the artist's signature scrawls, was sold by Robert Lehrman for $ 16.
Jerome MyersMyers' earliest oil, Backyard (1888), depicting clotheslines silhouetted against distant tenements, is today thought to be one of the first paintings exemplifying Ashcan School subject matter in America.
Emily Mary Osborn Her father's final entry in the parish registers of St. James', was on 2 November 1842, after which the family removed to London --'' to the great delight of his eldest girl, who rightly considered there was now some chance of realising the hopes she entertained of one day becoming an artist''.
Colin LavertyIn 1980 he authored a volume entitled Australian Colonial Sporting Painters : Frederick Woodhouse and Sons, about the Woodhouse family of animal and sporting artists active in Australia in the second half of the 19th century.
Guillaume FouaceHowever, he did not forget the Cotentin - in 1878 he painted 19 canvases of biblical scenes such as the Annunciation, Flight from Egypt and the journey of the Magi for the vaults of the church at Montfarville, while for its choir he painted a copy of Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper.
Evert Ploeg In 1999, Ploeg's painting of actress Deborah Mailman painted on wool bales was hung in the Archibald Prize, and won the People's Choice Award.
Jacob Thompson (painter)His attempts at classical and scriptural subjects, such as'' Acis and Galatea,'' exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1849, and'' Proserpine,'' were not a success.
Frants Henningsen The first painting he exhibited was a portrait of the actress Julie Sødring in 1874, after which he exhibited virtually every year at the Charlottenborg Spring Exhibition held at the Charlottenborg Palace.
George Richmond (painter)In 1830 his contributions to the academy comprised two poetical subjects, ` The Eve of Separation' and ` The Witch,' from Ben Jonson's ` Sad Shepherdess,' and three portraits.
Grace HudsonIn 1904, Grace Hudson accepted a commission from the Field Columbian Museum to take up residence in the Oklahoma Territory and paint further images of the remaining Pawnee, a people who had been nearly wiped out by contact with Europe an diseases.
Frederick Richard SayFrederick also painted Bright's portrait in 1825, and another in the late 1830s.
John MajorA portrait of Major, painted in 1996 by June Mendoza, is part of the parliamentary collection.
Sigurd WallinAmong the portrait paintings there are : Portrait paintings by Sigurd Wallin is also, inter alia, in many public institutions : In the 1940s Wallin appeared in a few exhibitions including Swedish portrait art of today in Nationalmuseum (1943) and the Christmas Exhibition of Thurestam's Salon at Klarabergsgatan 40 in Stockholm (1943).
David West (artist)West's paintings were largely of Morayshire scenes but one of his most famous paintings was the Dutch landscape `` On the Scheldt'' which was hung in Edinburgh in 1932.
Keith CoventryIn September 2010 his Spectrum Jesus painting won the # 25,000 John Moores Painting Prize.
Henry MooreIn 1934, Moore visited Spain ; he visited the cave of Altamira (which he described as the `` Royal Academy of Cave Painting''), Madrid, Toledo and Pamplona.
Joaqu?n SorollaA special exhibition of his works -- figure subjects, landscapes and portraits -- at the Galeries Georges Petit in Paris in 1906 eclipsed all his earlier successes and led to his appointment as Officer of the Legion of Honour.
Samuel LaurenceOne of his most successful portraits in oil is that of Leigh Hunt, painted in 1837, but never quite finished.
Sidney Richard PercyAmong his patrons during this time was Prince Albert the Royal consort who in 1854 gave Percy's landscape of A view of Llyn Dulyn, North Wales, which had just been exhibited at the Royal Academy, as a gift to his wife Queen Victoria.
Leopold SeyffertHe won the Popular Prize, Carnegie International Exhibition and had a solo exhibition of charcoal portraits at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C. right | thumb | Seyffert, Hemingway, and Speiser in Hendaye, France 1931 courtesy The Speiser & Easterling-Hallman Collection of Ernest Hemingway, University of South Carolina Libraries In 1931 he won the Isidor Medal at National Academy of Design and that summer he travelled to Hendaye, France, spending time with his family, Maurice Speiser (a longtime friend from Philadelphia) and Ernest Hemingway (right).
Percy ShakespeareIn 1933, he had his first exhibit at the Royal Academy,'' A Mulatto'', a portrait of a lady, which was later bought by Dudley Art Gallery.
Olive CottonOlive Cotton captured her childhood friend Max Dupain from the sidelines at photoshoots, e. g.'' Fashion shot, Cronulla Sandhills, circa 1937'' and made several portraits of him.
John Singer SargentAround 1890, Sargent painted two daring non-commissioned portraits as show pieces -- one of actress Ellen Terry as Lady Macbeth and one of the popular Spanish dancer La Carmencita.
Michael ChevalIn 2011, commissioned by Gina Lollobrigida, he completed a full body, official portrait of her.
Arthur Bowen DaviesHis reputation at the time, and still today (to the extent that he is known at all), rests on his ethereal figure paintings, the most famous of which is Unicorns : Legend, Sea Calm (1906) in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Donald MaclurcanHis most memorable achievement at school in fact was the notoriety he attracted when, with two friends, he hung a dummy in 1934 over the newly completed Sydney Harbour Bridge which prank garnered news paper coverage.
Jogesh DuttaBut he remain the father figure and helped in the initiation and glooming of many others in this art ultimately came the national homage paid him in the form of JOGESH mime academy, established in 1971, where he now imparts his talents and technique to the budding artists.
William Irvine (Australian politician)In 1932 a painting of Irvine by Ernest Buckmaster won the Archibald Prize, Australia's best-known portrait prize.
Oscar ClaytonIn 1890 a portrait of Clayton was painted by Frederick Goodall and exhibited at the Royal Academy.
Piet de Jong (artist)In 1957, Piet produced watercolor reconstructions of the fresco paintings from the so-called `` Painted House'' at Gordion.
Julius ExnerHe painted another famous painting of Amager folk, the cheerful'' Blindebuk'' ('' Blind Man's Bluff'') depicting a farmhouse interior with children at play, in 1866.
Andre DurandDurand's portrait of the Irish novelist Elizabeth Bowen (1972) is one of the most popular portraits in London's National Portrait Gallery.
Fred WilliamsIn February 1979, Williams visited the Lal Lal Falls on the Moorabool River to the west of Melbourne near Ballarat and painted the Lal Lal polyptych, a four panel painting that he regarded as a single work.
Fyffe ChristieIn the 1970s Christie attended Saturday morning life classes at the Sir John Cass School of Art and in 1973 he began a series of around 40 large figure compositions of nudes, oil on canvas, often painting in the living room of the small flat in which he and wife Eleanor lived, often working under artificial light.
Filipp MalyavinIn 1897, he was awarded the status of Artist, but only after much debate, and for his series of portraits rather than his competition painting, Laughter, which depicted Russian women in red dresses in a green meadow.
Bram van VeldeIn 1973, he painted at La Chapelle-sur - Carouge several large gouaches which are seen as the last'' savage'' appearance of colour in his work.
Walter GoodmanThe same year Goodman sent another full-length portrait of a A Chinese Lady of Rank (the sitter was Kuo Tai-Tai -- the wife of Kuo-Ta-Jen) to the Royal Academy, after first previewing a preliminary study for Queen Victoria in March 1879 at Windsor Castle.
Salem BlandA well-known figure in Toronto, he had his portrait painted by Group of Seven artist Lawren S. Harris in 1926.
Sofia Minson Embarking on a Contemporary Maori Oil Portrait series in 2011, Minson has since painted prominent figures in Maori culture such as activist Tame Iti, musicians Tiki Taane and Stan Walker, Ta Moko artist Turumakina Duley and social anthropologist Dame Joan Metge.
Nicky WinmarWinmar donated the jumper he was wearing in the photograph to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC) in 1998.
Brodrick HaldaneOn his drawing room walls he displayed some of the more memorable portraits of the rich and famous, and at the time of his death in 1996 was planning a retrospective exhibition of his life's work.
Kai Nielsen (sculptor)He had his breakthrough with Naked (1908) which was acquired by the Danish National Gallery.
Zden?k BurianAn example of how his work was compromised is evident in another version of Brachiosaurus that he painted in his later years under the direction of Vratislav Mazak ; the animal, now shown on dry land, appears oddly out of proportion and fails to compare to the celebrated 1941 version.
James Wallace BlackBlack's photograph of abolitionist John Brown in 1859, the year of his insurrection at Harpers Ferry, is now in the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution.
Vaughan GryllsThe work Grylls exhibited in 1973 entitled' An Indo-Chinese Punsculpture' was a large photo-mural commenting on the signing of the so-called Paris Peace Treaty.
Marjorie Arnfield Of her commemorative exhibition at Nottingham University in July 2001, a review in The Times by Amber Cowan said it was among the five best one-person art exhibitions in the UK that month :'' As a student in Sunderland in the Fifties, Arnfield made a series of oil sketches of miners gathering sea coal along the beach and tending their allotments.
Henri RegnaultIn 1868 he had sent to the Salon a life-size portrait of a lady in which he had made one of the first attempts to render the actual character of fashionable modern life.
Jean Ren? BazaineIn 1943 he made three windows for the church of Nôtre Dame de Toute Grace at Assy on the subject of saints related to music, at the glazier's workshop of Marguerite Huré who showed him the tricks of the trade.
Frants HenningsenHis painting of En Begravelse (A Funeral) (1883) shows how he had mastered the use of colour from the Spanish school, for example Diego Velázquez.
Percy SpenceIn 1893 Spence made two drawings of Robert Louis Stevenson in Sydney ; one is now in the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Harry Lauder Lauder is credited with giving the then 21 year-old portrait artist Cowan Dobson his opening into society by commissioning him, in 1915, to paint his portrait.
Ramon Casas i Carb?He continued painting landscapes and portraits, as well as anti-tuberculosis posters and the like, but by the time of his death in 1932, shortly after the emergence of the Second Spanish Republic, he was already more a figure of the past than the present.
Dean LukinIn 2000, a portrait of him was hung in the Archibald Prize called Strongest Man of the Games, painted by David Bromley.
Edgar Speyerand his own portrait, painted by William Orpen, which was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1914.
David BierkBoth Goodman's review and Bierk's 2002 New York Times obituary note that Bierk used framing to call attention, in a way that is pointedly'' postmodern'', to the historical disjunction between the evoked masterworks and the contemporary cultural environment :'' He painted copies of works by artists like Vermeer or the Hudson River School painter Frederic Edwin Church, for example, and framed them within broad steel panels, setting up a tension between humanism and old masterly craft on the one hand, and Modernist abstraction and industrial fabrication on the other.''
Katharine Emma MaltwoodIn 1925, Maltwood was commissioned to draw a map outlining the adventures of the Knights of King Arthur and the Holy Grail, a subject made popular in the Victorian era by the Pre-Raphaelites and Alfred, Lord Tennyson.
Edward WestonIn 1937 Weston was the first photographer to receive a Guggenheim Fellowship, and over the next two years he produced nearly 1,400 negatives using his 8 × 10 view camera.
Arthur Beresford PiteHe is buried in London at West Norwood Cemetery Outside of the RIBA, Jeane Trend-Hill owns possibly the largest collection of Pite memorabilia including slides of his early work, influences, travels and drawings, an extensive collection of photographs of his many commissions and letters in his own handwriting, which he sent from the Royal College of Art on 27 July 1917.
John Singer SargentOn a visit to Monet at Giverny in 1885, Sargent painted one of his most Impressionistic portraits, of Monet at work painting outdoors with his new bride nearby.
Friedrich Hohe Notable works by Hohe include The Entry of King Otho into Nauplia (after Peter Hess) ; Neue Maler Werke aus München (Works of New Painters from Munich, c. 1841), a collection of lithographs of selected paintings of living artists in Munich ; illustrations of German classical ballad s and romances with A. Brügger ; and The Old Stag, a series of 12 plates.
Richard RappaportThe summer following freshman year Rappaport paints independently in August of 1963 his first suite of mature portraits, which include those of Mrs. Ress (1963), Ann (1963), and the standing three-quarter length Self Nude (1963), whose straight-on depictions of character relate to the portraits of Alice Neel, whom the artist is unaware of at the time, winning for himself the art department's Leisser Award and affording him the occasion of his first exhibition of these portraits lining its central hallway at the beginning of his sophomore year.
Cyril Wiseman HerbertHis first picture, ` Homeward after Labour,' representing Roman cattle driven home after the day's toil, was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1870.
Robert GarranThe first Constitutional Convention was held in 1891 in the chamber of the Legislative Council of New South Wales in Macquarie Street, Sydney, around the corner from Garran's chambers in Phillip Street ; Garran regularly attended and sat in the public gallery to see'' history... in the making under my very eyes.''
Natalia ChernogolovaShe first visited the United Kingdom in 2005 when she created many vivid oil paintings of street scenes in Congleton and Cheshire landscapes.
Christian Cardell CorbetIn July 2009, Corbet had a solo exhibition at the Priaulx Library where the Bailiff of Guernsey, Channel Islands, Sir Geoffrey Rowland, unveiled a portrait of himself painted by Corbet.
Walter GoodmanIn 1887 Goodman exhibited three portraits -- Mary Anne Keeley, Fanny Stirling (both presumably loaned from The Garrick Club), and Grace Darling, at the Signor Palladiense Gallery, on Bond Street in London.
Ren? FontayneRemaining faithful to his Vieilles maisons in the Périgord and Aveyron, the painter continued to show Languedoc landscapes and paintings of flowers until 1950.
Sanford RossBy 1950 Ross also had become known for his commissioned oil portraits of children whom he often depicted with serious, thoughtful expressions.
Bill NewtonA famous photograph showing Siffleet about to be executed with a katana was discovered by American troops in April 1944 and was thought to have depicted Newton in Salamaua.
Federico de MadrazoIn 1837 he was commissioned to produce a picture for the gallery at Versailles, and painted'' Godfrey de Bouillon proclaimed King of Jerusalem''.
George PhoenixIn 1922, Phoenix presented six his paintings to the Gallery as his personal tribute to the survivors of the Great War (The World War I).
J?rgen RoedHe submitted a portrait of sculptor H. V. Bissen for his admission piece, and was accepted into the Academy as a portraitist in 1844.
G?nter Rittnerthumb | 200px | Self-portrait of Günter Rittner 1997 Günter Rittner, as early as six years old, had already created portraits of his grandparents.
Edmund BlampiedFrom photographs he drew small pencil portraits of authors and actors for a magazine called The Queen and an oil of Queen Mary (Mary of Teck) for the Christmas issue in 1934 ; he collaborated with his great friend and benefactor John St Helier Lander, a noted portrait artist and fellow-Jerseyman, on a picture of King George V ; and he did an etching of the Jersey-born politician, Lord Portsea (Bertram Falle), which was shown at the Royal Academy in 1934.
Giorgio de ChiricoAt the beginning of 1910, he moved to Florence where he painted the first of his' Metaphysical Town Square' series, The Enigma of an Autumn Afternoon, after the revelation he felt in Piazza Santa Croce.
John HaberleAmong his later works are paintings of flowers executed in a looser style, and in 1909 he painted his final trompe l'oeil, the large Night, in the collection of the New Britain Museum of American Art, New Britain, Connecticut.
Heinrich DreberHis pictures, which were exhibited together in 1876 in the National Gallery at Berlin, are with few exceptions in the hands of private persons ; there are two in the Berlin Gallery -- a' Landscape, with the Hunting of Diana,' and' An Autumn Morning in the Sabine Mountains.'
Fletcher SibthorpHe persisted, however, in experimenting outside of commissioned work, predominantly in the area of sport and in 1992, his efforts culminated in his first solo show, entitled ` In Motion', at the Stable Gallery, Wandsworth, London.
Adam August M?llerIn 1829, he exhibited Aladdin, staaende bag Pillen, ser Gulnare (Aladdin, standing behind the pillar, sees Gulnare) and the following year exhibited a number of portraits, two of which were purchased by Statens Museum for Kunst.
James Prinsep BeadleGrowing up in a military family, the artist was particularly attracted to military subjects and one of his earliest pieces depicted the inspection of the Duke of Yorks Own Loyal Suffolk Hussars at Bury St. Edmonds in 1893.
Isabel BacarditIn 1990 she lives in Rio de Janeiro, where she works with organisations for the welfare of street children, gives painting classes and establishes her studio in the gallery Maria Teresa Vieira.
William Duke (artist)In 1852, Duke followed the lure of the Victorian gold rush, relocating with his growing family to country Victoria, where he continued portrait painting and theatre work.
Andre DurandIn 1970 Durand painted a series of pictures inspired by the dancers of the Royal Ballet.
Richard James Lane In 1829 he drew a well-known portrait of the future Queen Victoria, aged ten years, and he later executed portraits in pencil or chalk of the queen and most of the royal family at various ages, besides prints after Franz Xaver Winterhalter's portraits.
Paul GauguinIn the autumn of 1906, Picasso made paintings of oversized nude women, and monumental sculptural figures that recalled the work of Paul Gauguin and showed his interest in primitive art.
Henry Dawson (artist)Henry Dawson, though painting much, and selling his pictures for high prices in his later life, remained, strange to say, very little known except to artists and connoisseurs until the large and very interesting collection of his works that was made for the Nottingham Exhibition in 1878 brought him wider fame.
Andrew MacLarenHe was knowledgeable on renaissance art and in 1948 was commissioned by National Gallery to write a report on Leonardo da Vinci's `` Madonna of the Rocks''.
John CopnallHis early work is largely figurative and he won the prestigious Turner Gold Medal for Landscape Painting in his final year in 1954.
Robert Frederick BlumHis oil painting The Venetian Beadstringers (1889) was a popular work, which, when shown at the National Academy of Design, resulted in him being elected an Associate.
?mile SchuffeneckerMuch has been said about Gauguin's portrait of'' le bon Schuff'' and his family, painted early in 1889 in Schuffenecker's studio, soon after Gauguin's return from Arles : judging from Gauguin's portrait, the personal relations of the couple are widely considered to have been precarious.
George O'Brien (painter)His' Designs of R. A. Lawson', now in the Otago Settlers Museum Dunedin, is often reproduced and his' Dunedin from the Junction' 1869, in the same repository, is well known.
William StruttDespite the lack of interest for major history paintings in Melbourne, Strutt continued to sketch suitable subjects, including the ` Black Thursday' bushfires, which swept over the colony on 6 February 1851.
Robert NeffsonIn 1976, Neffson's life and work were significantly changed when he was awarded the Fulbright-Hayes Fellowship for Painting at the American Academy in Rome, who had a strong influence on his still life paintings at the time.
F?lix Vallottonwoodcut from the series Intimités, 1898 His woodcut subjects included domestic scenes, bathing women, portrait heads, and several images of street crowds and demonstrations -- notably, several scenes of police attacking anarchists.
Linda Syddick NapaltjarriOther works represent her traditional country, such as her painting Tingari Men at Wilkingkarra (Lake Mackay), which was a finalist at the 2009 National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award s. Artists of the Western Desert region, such as Linda Syddick, frequently portray figures from the Tingari cycle of' songlines', particularly the Tingari Men.
Austin HopkinsonA portrait of him by William Dring was exhibited at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition of 1955.
John Leech (caricaturist)In 1845 Leech illustrated St Giles and St James in Douglas William Jerrold's new Shilling Magazine, with plates more vigorous and accomplished than those in Bentley, but it is in subjects of a somewhat later date, and especially in those lightly etched and meant to be printed with colour, that we see the artist's best powers with the needle and acid.