Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Swiss Pine

View through Harvard Museums
black ink on blue silk
Busch-Reisinger Museum Rudolph Rosenthal 1914 Sold to Metropolitan Museum of Art 1954. The Metropolitan Museum of Art Purchased from Rudolph Rosenthal 1954 Gift to HUAM 1955. Given to the BRM in exchange for 50 early 20th-century German textiles Harvard Art Museums/Busch-Reisinger Museum Gift of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
image-zoom
Title: Swiss Pine
Description:
black ink on blue silk.

Related Results

Long-sleeved Wedding Overrobe (Uchikake) with Decoration of Cranes and Snow-Covered Pines
Long-sleeved Wedding Overrobe (Uchikake) with Decoration of Cranes and Snow-Covered Pines
A white damask silk was dyed to a bright orange-red color to create the ground for this luxurious long-sleeved outer wedding robe with designs of cranes and pines. The white tufts ...
Table Plateau
Table Plateau
BORDSPLATY Consisting of a bottom plate (plateau) with a mirror glass, two flower bowls with artificial bouquets, two fruit bowls with glass bowls, six confectionery bowls with gla...
Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein with Elza and Stepdaughter Margot 1929 Berlin . Einstein, Albert Swiss-US (German-born) physicist; moved to Switzerland, becoming Swiss citizen 1900; examiner in Sw...
Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein
50 anniversary to electric lamp Albert Einstein congratulates Thomas Edison by telephone to America from Berlin 18 October 1930. Einstein, Albert Swiss-US (German-born) physicist; ...
Chest of Drawers
Chest of Drawers
Pine chestnut white pine, American...
Hideaki Yamamoto, vigor 3 (2024)
Hideaki Yamamoto, vigor 3 (2024)
Pine, pine resin, beeswax, plaster, cashew, etc., 18 × 18 × 4 cm...
Pine Grove
Pine Grove
The hanging scroll frames a horizontally oriented color painting that features a cluster of pine trees standing before a small thatched hut. The highly textured trees are rendered ...

Back to Top