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ArtRage Gallery’s new exhibition “Life/AfterLife…Do You Have A Plan?” features work by Pam McLaughlin and Vykky Ebner, two ...
At the Newport Art Museum, Bobby Anspach's first museum show explores his pursuit of a unique sculptural form that could ...
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Kids Are A Trip on MSN15 Amsterdam Hidden Gems That Shouldn't Be MissedAmsterdam is a lively city known throughout Europe and the world because of its rich history, bustling nightlife, striking ...
Featuring 10 etchings, engravings and drawings from the 16th and 17th centuries, it’s drawn from the Dallas Museum of Art’s collection and displayed in a gently lit gallery on the museum’s second ...
The first gallery sets the stage with depictions of Amsterdam’s evolving landscape, including Rembrandt’s etching, “The Great Jewish Bride” (1635), paintings of newly built synagogues in ...
A reproduction of Jan Lievens’ 1625 painting “The Feast of Esther” at the entrance to “The Book of Esther in the Age of Rembrandt.” (Katherine Welander for WSN) On the second floor of the Jewish ...
As important as mining life was to Bervinchak, his first love was religious art. In 1958, he responded to a call to submit work to Saint Demetrius Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Carteret, New Jersey ...
In this new religious climate, artists began to create new types of paintings, studying the world around them. They included landscapes, seascapes, still lifes, and interior scenes of their homes.
The earliest paintings that would be called Dutch were predominantly religious. They were made for Christian devotion. In the 1500s, major divisions in the church led to a fragmentation of ...
In 1947 the Vatican spoke bluntly to modern artists presuming to handle medieval religious themes. In the encyclical Mediator Dei, Pope Pius XII warned ...
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