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

Arthur Getz, New Yorker Illustration Mid-Century Modern Realism American Scene "Antique Shop" (ca. 1950s)

View through Artsy
Watercolor and ink on paper, 17 × 14 × 1 in
image-zoom
Title: Arthur Getz, New Yorker Illustration Mid-Century Modern Realism American Scene "Antique Shop" (ca. 1950s)
Description:
Watercolor and ink on paper, 17 × 14 × 1 in.

Related Results

Nestoris (two-handled jar) with Mythological Scenes
Nestoris (two-handled jar) with Mythological Scenes
Red-figured Lucanian Type II nestoris. Broad ring foot with mid-length stem. Body flares from stem, rounds up, and turns in sharply to form a relatively narrow, flat shoulder. Neck...
Column Krater (mixing bowl for wine and water): Theseus and Poseidon; Musician and Audience
Column Krater (mixing bowl for wine and water): Theseus and Poseidon; Musician and Audience
On one side: the Athenian hero Theseus visits his divine father Poseidon. Theseus’s mother was Aethra, and ancient sources sometimes consider him to be the son of her husband, Aege...
The goddess Calypso rescues Odysseus
The goddess Calypso rescues Odysseus
The subject is unusual and disputed. In Sluijter-Seiffert’s study of the artist, it is simply referred to as “Landscape with Nymph” and it has also been called “Scene from the scap...
Illustration, Grattan Bridge, Co. Dublin, Ireland
Illustration, Grattan Bridge, Co. Dublin, Ireland
Lantern slide of an illustration of Grattan Bridge ( known historically as Essex Bridge) Co. Dublin. Originally catalogued with label 'D3VII 97.' Depicts an illustration of the b...
The Falls of Saint Anthony
The Falls of Saint Anthony
Between 1830 and 1836 the painter George Catlin followed the trail of Meriwetther Lewis and William Clark’s mythical expedition along the Mississippi, becoming the first artist to ...
The Water Stream, La Brème
The Water Stream, La Brème
“I also hold that painting is a quite concrete art, and can consist of nothing but the representation of real, tangible things, ” wrote Gustave Courbet in an open letter to his stu...

Back to Top