Untitled (Marine Fantasy with Tamara Toumanova), Joseph Cornell, circa 1940
Collage and tempera on paperboard
21 x 13 ½ in. (53.34 x 34.29 cm)
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC, USA
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Jan Heyse (Dutch 1882-1954)
Nude lying down (1931)
Tempera on canvas
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Today’s sketches with tempera half of which I made in art class and half by myself to practice…… its first time I’ve made sketches with tempera or gouache like stuff
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1. Alex Colville, “Horse and Train” (1954), casein tempera on hardboard, 54.2 x 41.2 cm.
2. Ellen Rogers, photo from the series, The Visitation Pt. 1.
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"The Mocking of Christ" by Cenni di Pepo known as CIMABUE (Active in the years 1272 to 1302).
The long-lost work by 13th century Florentine master has been found to be hanging over a kitchen hot plate in the French town of Compiègne in 2019.
It is believed that the piece is part of a diptych made up of eight scenes centered on the passion and crucifixion of Christ.
Two other related panels, Flagellation of Christ and the Madonna and Child Enthroned between Two Angels, were bought by the Frick Collection in New York in 1950 and the National Gallery in London in 2000, respectively. It too was lost for centuries before a British aristocrat found it in his home in Suffolk.
Only around eleven of Cimabue's paintings are know in the world.
The Louvre Museum in Paris has added a “national treasure” to its collection.
Tempera and gold leaf ground on a poplar panel.
25.8 x 20.3 cm.
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The Subway, George Tooker, 1950
Tempera on composition board
18 ½ x 36 ½ in. (47 x 92.7 cm)
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City, NY, USA
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Paul Cadmus (American, b. 1904)
Fantasia on a Theme by Dr. S, 1946
Tempera on composition board
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i try to get out of myself and i succeed by diambe da silva, 2023, tempera on linen, 95 × 70 centimeters
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Antonio Rubino (Italian, 1880–1964) - painter, writer, illustrator, designer, and animator considered the father of Italian comics.
Covers and interior illustrations for The Toy School — a series of six color albums designed as a vade mecum, each album being responsible for introducing children, not without irony, to the things of life. There we find an alphabet book, a book of algebra and geometry, a bestiary, a chooser, a fable and an edifying tale. Of these six albums, O by Giotto is a visual dictionary of familiar objects but also a reflection on creation.
O DI GIOTTO (O by Giotto) - 1927
RE BIFÈ (King Bifè)
Belle Lettere (Beautiful Letters) - 1928
LA SCUOLA DI SCARABOCCHIO (The Scribble School)
LÀ CITTA DI ABACO (The City of Abacus) - 1928
IO ASINO PRIMO (Me, First Dunce) - 1930
BESTIE PER BENE (Well Behaved Animals) - 1928
other publications:
TIC E TAC (Tic & Tac) - a novel for children of all ages
VIPERETTA - 1934
undersea scene - sketch for fabric design
MONDO FANCIULLO (Child's World) - poster for his animated cartoon
Giornalino della Domenica (Sunday Newspaper) - Anno II #25 - 1907
Giornalino della Domenica (Sunday Newspaper) - Anno III #14 - 1908
Giornalino della Domenica (Sunday Newspaper) - Anno III #50 - 1908
LA NAVE! (The Ship!) - Here is the ship in stormy sea . . .
Quadratino (Small Square) - comic panel - 1910
Antonio Rubino Self-Portrait - 1930
www.printmag.com/daily-heller/futurist-wacky-antonio-rubino/
www.50watts.com/Daily-Rubino
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