painting

Stock exchanges have been offering the public a piece of corporate earnings since the Dutch East India Company opened one in 1602, but only recently has art become a tradable…

Acclaimed Australian artist Del Kathryn Barton (1972)– two-time winner of the Archibald Prize, the…

The Mint Museum is proud to present a major exhibition exploring the artistic and cultural revolutions of 19th-century Europe.

Born in England, formed as a surrealist in Paris, residing in Mexico since 1942,…

The exhibition, Painting Without Rules, is not only an immersion into American 

Alone, occupying a single wall in the Parrish Art Museum’s light-drenched first gallery space in Water Mill, NY is an improbably massive (10 feet by 20 feet by 1 inch), strangely…

Considered a founder of Impressionism, Edgar Degas actually disliked the label, preferring Realist or Independent. Best known for his paintings and bronze sculptures, Degas was also a printmaker and…
Considered one of the first major art movements of the modern era, Impressionism was a radical revolt against the contemporary standards of academic painting.

The Met’s Emily Sargent: Portrait of a Family presents a thoughtfully curated glimpse of the Sargent family, centering primarily on the long overlooked…

“Madonna and Child” is a 16th-century painting by Renaissance artist

Franz von Stuck (1863-1928) was a German painter, sculptor, printmaker, and 

When we think of Leonardo da Vinci’s most notable works, it would be easy to assume the women behind the Mona Lisa or Lady with an Ermine were his muses. One may therefore be surprised to discover…

If it’s true that the flame that burns twice as bright burns half as long, then Noah Davis is that flame. He arrived in Los Angeles at the age of 21, sold his first painting by the…

Can the visual arts capture movement in stillness? This slideshow traces the representation of dance, particularly of dancing groups, through western…