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

Mosaic is Light: Work by Jeanne Reynal, 1940-1970

Title: Mosaic is Light: Work by Jeanne Reynal, 1940-1970
Description not available.

Related Results

Untitled (To Bob and Pat Rohm)
Untitled (To Bob and Pat Rohm)
During the 1960s, Flavin shared with other proponents of Minimalism an analytical approach to art that rejected all associative or evocative forms. In each piece of this period, th...
Horsewoman, Full-Face (L'Amazone)
Horsewoman, Full-Face (L'Amazone)
First Manet then the Impressionists followed the road paved by Courbet in representing reality in painting and went even further by initiating new research based on the perception ...
Pantokrator with Emperor Leo VI of Byzantium :
Pantokrator with Emperor Leo VI of Byzantium :
KU Leuven. Glass slides art history. Université de Louvain, between 1839 and 1939. Photographer unknown. Added information on slide. Current / Style: Byzantine art. Creation/Buildi...
Breechcloth
Breechcloth
Breechcloth; probably Yanktonai; 1860-1870Wool, porcupine quills, sinew, metal, horsehair, pigments; 117.5 x 28.5 cm.\RMV 710-9; Herman F.C. ten Kate collection; purchased from tra...
mosaic fragment
mosaic fragment
This mosaic fragment is made from grey-white tesserae. It may have been a plain mosaic in a corridor, or the border to a more decorative mosaic....

Recent Results

Hempel’s Raven Revisited
Hempel’s Raven Revisited
The paper takes a novel approach to a classic problem—Hempel’s Raven Paradox. A standard approach to it supposes the solution to consist in bringing our inductive logic into “refle...
Chinese Opera in Turn-of-the Century Canada: Local History and Transnational Circulation
Chinese Opera in Turn-of-the Century Canada: Local History and Transnational Circulation
One of the most curious aspects about Canadian Chinese cultural history is the role of opera theatres. They served as the public face of the community, cultural ambassadors or even...

Back to Top