Work of the Week is excerpted from The Back Room, our lively recap funneling only the week’s must-know art industry intel into a nimble read you’ll actually enjoy. Artnet News Pro members get ...
Where would art be without the never-ending argument between imagination and reality? All art necessitates a leap of the imagination. All art, whether naturalistic or not, makes its own reality. And ...
NEW YORK (Reuters) – A new exhibition, the first major show in New York of works by Edouard Vuillard for more than 20 years, reveals the life of the French artist and reappraises the significance of ...
2 of 9 — Natanson and his wife, Misia, shown here in Cannes in 1901, were prominent tastemakers in French cultural life — they brought together Paris' intellectual and artistic superstars. 3 of 9 — ...
Lithography, printing images drawn on a flat stone, was strictly an advertising medium in 19th-century Europe. Parisian artists like Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec were the first to use prints as an art ...
“Vuillard is not one of the most highlighted artists of the 19th century,” said Laura Cosendey, an assistant curator at the Museum of Art of São Paulo (MASP), who is currently curating the upcoming ...
Even though it dates from just before he hit his stride, this 1889 self-portrait by Edouard Vuillard, in his current mini-survey at the Jewish Museum in New York, shows the great post-Impressionist ...
Edouard Vuillard was not as widely known as the Impressionist masters. But he created more than 3,000 paintings between the late 1800s and his death in 1940. NPR's Susan Stamberg tours the most ...
A new exhibit in New York explores the life of Edouard Vuillard — a lesser-known, intellectual Parisian artist — and the Jewish tastemakers... Vuillard: A Parisian Painter And His Jewish Patrons In ...