Woman Sewing at a Window, Gwen John
Gwen John (1876-1939) slept in fields and derelict buildings to pursue her art career. Read about her here.
@matthewsgallery / matthewsgallery.tumblr.com
Woman Sewing at a Window, Gwen John
Gwen John (1876-1939) slept in fields and derelict buildings to pursue her art career. Read about her here.
I wrote the other day about Charles Conder’s Tonalism- and Japanese-art-inspired oil paintings and their resemblance to water colors, but I have to write again.
This, dear reader, is Conder’s 1889 How We Lost Poor Flossie.
And even though you can plainly see the deep brush marks in the upper left side (and the cedar panel leaving little trails of grain throughout), the thick but dynamic outlines and soft, blending colors look like nothing so much as they look like a pen and ink wash.
(Plus, there’s something kind of charming about the implication that Conder lost his dog to a strange mutt in the rain.)
Stunning work, fascinating write-up.
Treacherous journeys, spectacular art... on Flickr.
Via Flickr: Charles Partridge Adams hiked deep into the Colorado Rockies to capture their beauty on canvas. See the Adams that's on our wall: d.pr/RF3L
A Western Legend! on Flickr.
Via Flickr: Charles Partridge Adams carefully detailed the thin mists that cleave to the foothills of the Rockies in the morning and the almost opaque storm clouds that crown their peaks in the afternoon. Learn about the artist's love affair with Colorado: d.pr/RF3L