Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts - Philadelphia, PA
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts with Paint Torch, a 51 foot paintbrush sculpture by Claes Oldenburg. PAFA designed by Frank Furness.
PAFA First: For the Future of American Art
On September 14, 2016 we officially kicked off the PAFA First campaign with a launch party on Lenfest Plaza. Over 250 guests, including City Council President Darrell L. Clarke, joined us under the tent as we celebrated our success to-date, unveiled our future plans, and debuted our PAFA First video, which represents the diverse faces of PAFA and speaks to all that we do here – past, present, and future.
PAFA First is about ensuring that PAFA continues to impact our city, our students, our community, and the art world at large. It’s about staying committed to what we stand for: innovation, access, education, transformation, and excellence. It’s about laying the strongest possible foundation for the future, so that the most powerful, expressive, bold, and contemporary ideas will flourish here.
For more information: pafa.org/pafafirst #PAFAFirst
PAFA: SEE FOR YOURSELF
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
See for Yourself
PAFA.EDU
Admissions:
215-972-7625
admissions@pafa.edu
Social Media:
twitter.com/PAFAcademy
facebook.com/PAFAcademy
The Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts
Come sail with The Captain as he walks around the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. He actually knew a thing or two about three of the paintings the rest of the time he plays his stupid game of what would I buy?
Here is the link to the patron page......
Want to see The Captain go to a spot or an event hit him up on his Facebook page here
Dave's American Art - Part 1: The Pennsylvania Academy of The Fine Arts
In Philadelphia stands America's first art museum: The Pennsylvania Academy of The Fine Arts. Here you will find American Art from before revolution up to our time.
We begin with Penn's Treaty with the Indians by Benjamin West from 1772 . One of the museum's founders, Charles Willson Peale painted George Washington at Princeton in 1779. Here he is shown at his own museum. His son, Rembrandt Peale painted this posthumous portrait of The President in 1824.
The famous Lansdowne Portrait, painted by Gilbert Stuart uses a rainbow to symbolize the covenant between the government and The American people.
In John Vanderlyn's painting, Theseus abandons Ariadne sleeping on the island of Naxos. One can only wonder why.
John Lewis Krimmel's Fourth of July in Centre Square showcases America's first public fountain, in which stood a sculpture by William Rush, another of the museum's founders.
William Sidney Mount's whimsical genre painting: The Painter's Triumph was painted in 1838. A drawing of The Apollo Bellvedere offers artistic inspiration.
In 1875, Thomas Eakins's The Gross Clinic caused quite a stir due to an accurate rendering of an operation. It is shared with The Philadelphia Museum of Art.
In Fox Hunt from 1893, a fox, fleeing winged predators sinks in the snow, as does the signature of the artist: Winslow Homer.
We end as we began with Bejamin West and his splendid Christ Rejected from 1814. It is opposite his Death On A Pale Horse from 1817.
Designed by the American architects Frank Furness and George Hewitt, the museum's current building opened during America's centennial. Visit the cradle of American Art at The Pennsylvania Academy of The Fine Arts.
Please like my video if you enjoyed the film.
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Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) | Philadelphia Wedding
Venue: Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA)
James Toogood in Conversation with Robin Rice
James Toogood, a PAFA alumnus and faculty member, discusses his work, technique and Watercolors exhibition with arts critic and commentator Robin Rice. Watercolors was on view in PAFA's Alumni Gallery from September 16 - November 29, 2015. #PAFAAlumni
For more info:
PAFA Open Studio Night 2016
During PAFA's Open Studio Night, which was held on February 19, 2016, students enrolled in MFA, BFA, Certificate and Post-Baccalaureate programs opened their studios in the Samuel M.V. Hamilton Building to the public. #PAFAOpenStudio
Open Studio Night is the one night each year when visitors have the opportunity to meet PAFA students, see the inner workings of their studios, view their works in progress, and get a sense of how they develop their ideas leading up to the Annual Student Exhibition in May. The 115th Annual Student Exhibition opens May 13, 5-8 pm. #PAFA115ASE
Video by Joe Duva
DRIVING DOWNTOWN PHILADELPHIA 4K - USA
PHILADELPHIA STREET VIEW.
Video Focus on Philadelphia CITY HALL, MARKET ST, S BROAD ST, 13 STREET, PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::History of Philadelphia:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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An 18th century map of Philadelphia
The written history of Philadelphia begins on October 27, 1682, when the city was founded by William Penn in the English Crown Province of Pennsylvania between the Delaware and Schuylkill rivers.
Before then, the area was inhabited by the Lenape (Delaware) Indians and Swedish settlers who arrived in the area in the early 1600s. Philadelphia quickly grew into an important colonial city and during the American Revolution was the site of the First and Second Continental Congresses. After the Revolution the city was chosen to be the temporary capital of the United States. At the beginning of the 19th century, the federal and state governments left Philadelphia, but the city remained the cultural and financial center of the country. Philadelphia became one of the first U.S. industrial centers and the city contained a variety of industries, the largest being textiles.
After the American Civil War Philadelphia's government was controlled by a corrupt Republican political machine and by the beginning of the 20th Century Philadelphia was described as corrupt and contented. Various reform efforts slowly changed city government with the most significant in 1950 where a new city charter strengthened the position of mayor and weakened the Philadelphia City Council. At the same time Philadelphia moved its support from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party which has since created a strong Democratic organization. The city began a population decline in the 1950s as mostly white and middle-class families left for the suburbs. Many of Philadelphia's houses were in poor condition and lacked proper facilities, and gang and mafia warfare plagued the city. Revitalization and gentrification of certain neighborhoods started bringing people back to the city. Promotions and incentives in the 1990s and the early 21st century have improved the city's image and created a condominium boom in Center City and the surrounding areas that has slowed the population decline.
Philadelphia, known colloquially as Philly, is the largest city in the U.S. state and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and the sixth-most populous U.S. city, with a 2018 census-estimated population of 1,584,138.[7] Since 1854, the city has had the same geographic boundaries as Philadelphia County, the most populous county in Pennsylvania and the urban core of the eighth-largest U.S. metropolitan statistical area, with over 6 million residents as of 2017.[5] Philadelphia is also the economic and cultural anchor of the greater Delaware Valley, located along the lower Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers, within the Northeast megalopolis. The Delaware Valley's population of 7.2 million ranks it as the eighth-largest combined statistical area in the United States.[6]
William Penn, an English Quaker, founded the city in 1682 to serve as capital of the Pennsylvania Colony.[10] Philadelphia played an instrumental role in the American Revolution as a meeting place for the Founding Fathers of the United States, who signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776 at the Second Continental Congress, and the Constitution at the Philadelphia Convention of 1787. Several other key events occurred in Philadelphia during the Revolutionary War including the First Continental Congress, the preservation of the Liberty Bell, the Battle of Germantown, and the Siege of Fort Mifflin. Philadelphia remained the nation's largest city until being overtaken by New York City in 1790; the city was also one of the nation's capitals during the revolution, serving as temporary U.S. capital while Washington, D.C. was under construction. In the 19th century, Philadelphia became a major industrial center and a railroad hub. The city grew from an influx of European immigrants, most of whom came from Ireland, Italy and Germany—the three largest reported ancestry groups in the city as of 2015.[11] In the early 20th century, Philadelphia became a prime destination for African Americans during the Great Migration after the Civil War,[12] as well as Puerto Ricans.[13] The city's population doubled from one million to two million people between 1890 and 1950.
[wedding] Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts | Lindsay Docherty Photography
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, PA
Visit to view the portfolio and inquire about pricing.
Contact me at hi@lindsaydocherty.com or call 215.703.7717.
Interview with Evangelos Frudakis
Philadelphia, PA - His journey as an artist has been life-long. From the age of 8, he recalls his first visit to Greece in 1929 on a ship that took days to cross the Atlantic. “I remember drawing human figures constantly on that journey. I knew even then I was going to be an artist,” says Evangelos Frudakis.
At the age of 93, Frudakis is a sculptor who has traveled his own path and is one of America’s most significant twentieth-century sculptors. Frudakis’ best known works are his national monuments, including, The Signer, exhibited outside Independence Hall in Philadelphia, and The Minuteman, at the National Guard Building in Washington, DC, which is also the official logo for the U.S. National Guard. His exquisite over-life-size female nude (see Gallery section of this site) Reaching is displayed in the Brookgreen Gardens Sculpture Museum, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
Other major pieces are located in the Philadelphia Zoo and Civic Center. His stunning bronze fountain, Icarus and Daedalus, created in 1967, is found at the Central Arkansas Library, in Little Rock, Arkansas. A renowned mentor, he owned and operated the Frudakis Academy of Fine Arts, a workshop in Philadelphia for many years and is responsible for teaching many of the finest sculptors in America, who are now coming of age.
Frudakis’ portrait sculptures are too many to list, but they include President John F. Kennedy. His numerous awards include the prestigious Prix de Rome and the Herbert Adam’s Award (National Sculpture Society). Affiliations include: National Academician, Fellow; American Academy in Rome, Fellow; and, National Sculpture Society, and he is listed in Who’s Who in America and Who’s Who in the World.
Just two years ago, at the age of 90, Frudakis was awarded the prestigious Medal of Honor–for lifetime achievement–by the National Sculpture Society. With only one winner each year–since 1929–this significant and celebrated award is analogous to the Academy Award for sculptors.
Between the 1890’s and early twentieth century, intense active Greek labor agents brought thousands of Greeks to the Salt Lake City region for work in the mines. This was the beginning of the Greeks that journeyed to the American west. Frudakis’ father, Vasilis, was part of these patriotis that arrived and he immigrated to the United States in 1910, from Ali Kambos near Knossos, Crete, Greece, and settled and worked in the coal mines around Reins, Utah. From a photograph of a young girl from Crete, showed to his father by a friend, the young Vasilis picked out his future bride, Christina. The couple was soon married and Frudakis was born in 1921.
He recalls life as being hard on his family. Greeks migrated back and forth, from Wyoming to Utah, for the work in the mines and railways, but art, and love of music, was in the blood of the Frudakis family. His father would play the Cretan Lyra when friends and family gathered for social affairs. Their roots of Hellenic traditions and customs from their homeland were deeply imbedded. Even without a church, a traveling priest would visit a household where the community would gather for Sunday service.
After a second attempt at making a living in Greece, the family returned and settled in New York City, where Frudakis started his art education. Growing up in the tough streets of Hell’s Kitchen, he found himself constantly getting into fights with other kids. His midwestern upbringing and love of the arts alienated him from his street-tough peers but also opened the door to his future. A transfer to an all-boys school got him noticed for his artistic abilities. Eventually this led to teaching at the National Academy of Design, the second oldest art school in the country. There, he was considered a premier teacher of sculpture in New York City at the time.
His teaching at the Academy was followed by a scholarship to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts where he entered in 1941, for a short time. World War II and the draft took him to Europe where he served for two years, before returning to finish his scholarship. He later moved to Rome with his first wife, Virginia Parker, in 1950 after winning the Prix de Rome for sculpture. He settled back in Philadelphia, where in 1975, he taught and hosted his own workshops throughout the years.
Today, Frudakis continues to create and follow a path of expression as he has done from the beginning as an artist. Frudakis stated, of his life as a sculptor:
“When you look at my work, you sense a feeling of appreciation for the beauty and the truth, thats in that work. Because I admire and respect nature. But far beyond, theres poetry that you try to arrive to, concept that comes from the heart, thats what you try to get into your work….so that it inspires people, and makes them feel good.
PAFA Fine Art and Mountain Music
Cynthia Norton 'Ninnie' songstress, a reminder of Minnie Pearl with Kentucky musicians Dave Howard and Steve Cooley in fine art setting at Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Don't let the straight men fool you; this can be very funny.
【Travel】美國的搖籃:賓州費城 The Keystone State:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania︱Pennsylvania, U.S.A︱2017
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【Travel】美國的搖籃:賓州費城 The Keystone State:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania︱Pennsylvania, U.S.A︱BGM: Elton John - Philadelphia Freedom︱2017
美國的搖籃:賓州費城 The Keystone State:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania, U.S.A
BGM: Elton John - Philadelphia Freedom
国家独立历史公园 Independence National Historical Park
地址: 143 South Third Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106-2818 電話: +1 215-965-2305
美國鑄幣局 United States Mint
地址: 151 N Independence Mall E, Philadelphia, PA 19106-1819 電話: +1 215-408-0114 一 - 六 09:00 - 16:30
美国第一银行 First Bank of the United States
地址: 302 S 3rd St, Philadelphia, PA 19106-4229 電話: +1 215-597-8974 一 - 五 08:00 - 17:00
罗斯故居 Betsy Ross House
地址: 239 Arch Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106 電話: +1 215-629-4026 日 - 六 10:00 - 17:00
瑞汀车站市场 Reading Terminal Market
地址: 12th and Arch, Philadelphia, PA 19107 電話: +1 215-922-2317
市政廳 City Hall (對面的廣場裝飾藝術)
地址: Penn廣場, Broad and Market Streets, Philadelphia, PA 19107 電話: +1 215-686-2840 一 - 五 09:00 - 17:00
富蘭克林紀念館 Benjamin Franklin Museum
地址: 317 Chestnut St, Philadelphia, PA 19106-2707 電話: +1 215-694-3773
爱心公园 Love Park
地址: John F. Kennedy Blvd and North 15th St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 電話: +1 215-636-1666
東方州立監獄 Eastern State Penitentiary
地址: 費爾蒙特街2124號, Philadelphia, PA 19130-2603 電話: +1 215-236-3300 日 - 六 10:00 - 17:00
馬特博物館 Mutter Museum
地址: 19 S 22nd St, Philadelphia, PA 19103-3001 電話: +1 215-560-8564 日 - 六 10:00 - 17:00
意大利集市 Italian Market
地址: 第9街, Philadelphia, PA 電話: +1 215-334-6008 日 08:00 - 13:00 二 - 六 08:00 - 16:00
好時巧克力世界 Hershey's Chocolate World
地址: 101 Chocolate World Way, Hershey, PA 17033 電話: +1 717-534-4900 日 - 四 09:00 - 18:00 五 - 六 09:00 - 19:00
Amish Farm and House
地址: 2395 Lincoln Hwy E, Lancaster, PA 17602-1133 電話: +1 717-394-6185 日 - 六 10:00 - 16:00
Pennsylvania Dutch Country
地址: 23 North Market Street, Lancaster, PA 17603 電話: +1 717-735-6890 二06:00 - 16:00 五06:00 - 16:00 六06:00 - 14:00
國家憲法中心(National Constitution Center): 143 South 3rd St
獨立廳(Independence Hall): 41 N 6th St
自由鐘(Liberty Bell): 701 Market St
國家憲法中心(National Constitution Center): 525 Arch St
卡本特廳(Carpenter's Hall)
議會廳(Congress Hall): 41 N 6th St
法蘭克林廣場(Franklin Court): 318 Market St
獨立宣言屋(Declaration House): 701 Market St
基督教堂(Christ Church): 20 North American St
塔杜思故居(Thaddeus Kosciuszko National Memorial): 3rd & Pine St
貝西羅絲故居(Betsy Ross House): 239 Arch St
艾爾佛瑞斯巷(Elfreth’s Alley): 126 Elfreths Alley
消防局博物館(Fireman's Hall Museum): 147 North 2nd St
國家鑄幣廠(The United States Mint): 151 N Independence Mall East
美國猶太人歷史博物館(National Museum of American Jewish History): 101 South Independence Mall East
獨立海港博物館(Independence Seaport Museum): 211 South Christopher Columbus Boulevard
第三街商店街(The 3rd Street Corridor)
費城歷史博物館(Philadelphia History Museum):15 South 7th St
賓州美術館(Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts)
旺納梅克管風琴(Wanamaker Organ)
費城非洲博物館(The African American Museum in Philadelphia)
藝術大街(Avenue of the Arts)
瑞丁市場[Reading Terminal Market
東市場廣場(The Gallery at Market East)
古董街(Antique Row)
中國城(Chinatown): 位於Broad St以東
費城自然科學博物館(Academy of Natural Sciences): 1900 Benjamin Franklin Pkwy
富蘭克林科學博物館(The Franklin Institute Science Museum): 222 N 20th St
穆特博物館(The Mütter Museum): 19 S 22nd St
費城美術館(Philadelphia Museum of Art):26th St and Benjamin Franklin Pkwy
羅丹博物館(Rodin Museum): 22nd St and Benjamin Franklin Pkwy
羅森貝奇博物館(Rosenbach Museum and Library): 2008 DeLancey St
Comcast中心(The Comcast Center): 1701 John F Kennedy Blvd
自由廣場購物中心(The Shops at Liberty Place):16th & Chestnut
貝爾維購物中心(The Shops at the Bellevue)
核桃街(Walnut Street)
意大利市場(The Italian Market): 9th & Christian
東方州立監獄(Eastern State Penitentiar): 2027 Fairmount Ave, Philadelphia, PA
瓦格納免費科學研究所(Wagner Free Institute of Science): 1700 W Montgomery Ave, Philadelphia, PA
愛倫坡國家歷史古蹟(Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site): 532 N 7th St, Philadelphia, PA
天普大學(Temple University): 1801 N Broad St, Philadelphia, PA
費城動物園(Philadelphia Zoo): 3400 W Girard Ave, Philadelphia, PA
請觸摸博物館(Please Touch Museum): 4231 Avenue of the Republic, Philadelphia, PA
莫瑞斯植物園(The Morris Arboretum): 100 E Northwestern Ave, Philadelphia, PA
❤️照片Photos:
T* 美國的搖籃:賓州費城。The Keystone State︱Pennsylvania, U.S.A︱
❤️影片Videos:
【Travel】美國的搖籃:賓州費城 The Keystone State:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania︱Pennsylvania, U.S.A︱2017
#賓州 #Pennsylvania
#費城 #Philadelphia
#旅遊 #Travel
Cecilia Beaux (American, 1855-1942) - Part I - Works painted between 1883 and 1895
Cecilia Beaux (May 1, 1855 – September 17, 1942) was an American society portraitist, in the manner of John Singer Sargent. She was a near-contemporary of American artist Mary Cassatt and also received her training in Philadelphia and France. Her sympathetic renderings of the American ruling class made her one of the most successful portrait painters of her era.
In 1895 Beaux became the first woman to have a regular teaching position at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where she instructed in portrait drawing and painting for the next twenty years. That rare type of achievement by a woman prompted one local newspaper to state, It is a legitimate source of pride to Philadelphia that one of its most cherished institutions has made this innovation. She was a popular instructor. In 1896, Beaux returned to France to see a group of her paintings presented at the Salon. Influential French critic M. Henri Rochefort commented, I am compelled to admit, not without some chagrin, that not one of our female artists…is strong enough to compete with the lady who has given us this year the portrait of Dr. Grier. Composition, flesh, texture, sound drawing—everything is there without affectation, and without seeking for effect.
Cecelia Beaux considered herself a New Woman, a 19th-century women who explored educational and career opportunities that had generally been denied to women. In the late 19th century Charles Dana Gibson depicted the New Woman in his painting, The Reason Dinner was Late, which is a sympathetic portrayal of artistic aspiration on the part of young women as she paints a visiting policeman. She was one of the New Woman of the 19th century successful, highly trained women artists who never married, like Ellen Day Hale, Mary Cassatt, Elizabeth Nourse and Elizabeth Coffin.
Beaux was a member of Philadelphia's The Plastic Club. Other members included Elenore Abbott, Jessie Willcox Smith, Violet Oakley, Emily Sartain, and Elizabeth Shippen Green. Many of the women who founded the organization had been students of Howard Pyle. It was founded to provide a means to encourage one another professionally and create opportunities to sell their works of art.
Cecilia Beaux died at the age of 87 on September 17, 1942, in Gloucester, Massachusetts. She was buried in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania. In her will she devised that a Duncan Phyfe rosewood secretaire made for her father go to her cherished nephew Cecil Kent Drinker, a Harvard physician, whom she had painted as a young boy.
During her long productive life as an artist, she maintained her personal aesthetic and high standards against all distractions and countervailing forces. She constantly struggled for perfection, A perfect technique in anything, she stated in an interview, means that there has been no break in continuity between the conception and the act of performance. She summed up her driving work ethic, I can say this: When I attempt anything, I have a passionate determination to overcome every obstacle…And I do my own work with a refusal to accept defeat that might almost be called painful.
Text & images:
Music:
Brandenburg Concerto No4-1 BWV1049 - Classical Whimsical
7:17
Kevin MacLeod
Clásica | Feliz
Puedes usar esta canción en cualquiera de tus vídeos, pero debes incluir el siguiente texto en la descripción:
Brandenburg Concerto No4-1 BWV1049 - Classical Whimsical de Kevin MacLeod está sujeta a una licencia de Creative Commons Attribution (
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Artista:
David Lynch at PAFA Press Conference (Sept. 10, 2014)
David Lynch and PAFA exhibition curator, Robert Cozzolino, answer questions during a press conference for David Lynch: The Unified Field on September 10, 2014 at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) in Philadelphia. Lynch is a PAFA alumnus and The Unified Field is his first major museum exhibition in the country, featuring over 90 works of art.
Learn more about the exhibition at pafa.org/davidlynch.
12 Top Tourist Attractions in Philadelphia
12 Top Tourist Attractions in Philadelphia:
City Center, Eastern State Penitentiary, Fairmount Park, Fort Mifflin, Franklin Institute Science Museum, Independence National Historical Park, Independence Hall, Liberty Bell Pavilion, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts Museum, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Rodin Museum
Audio Wikipedia - Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
Audio Wikipedia - Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
William Merritt Chase
Born in 1849 in Indiana, William Merritt Chase showed artistic talent as a young boy. His family arranged for him to begin formal training in art at the age of eighteen with a local portrait painter in Indianapolis. In 1869 Chase went to New York, where for two years he was a student at the National Academy of Design. He moved briefly to St. Louis, as his family had relocated there, and in 1872, sponsored by contributions from a group of St. Louis art patrons, Chase went to Munich to attend the Royal Academy, something that had been his dream for years. In Munich he studied with Karl von Piloty, who helped him to perfect a quick, bold brushstroke and taught him the dramatic Munich dark manner. A few years later Chase abandoned this somber palette in favor of the lighter tones of French impressionism. He returned to New York in 1878 to teach at the Art Students League, a position he held until 1896, when he opened his own art school in the city. Suited to teaching by intellect and personality, he began a long and successful career. He traveled abroad continually, looking at new art and old—the paintings of Velázquez, Whistler, Sargent, as well as Japanese prints—eventually incorporating travel into his teaching career by taking his students abroad.
By 1874 Chase was established in his Tenth Street studio, located in a building that was a center for artists. His works often contain views of his studio, an aesthetic setting extravagantly furnished with art and decorative objects he had collected. In his studio, Chase painted, taught, and entertained other artists, students, and patrons. His early portraits and figural compositions show backgrounds that are loosely brushed, with abstract geometric arrangements of paintings, mirrors, and textiles as a foil for the figure, creating a lively counterpoint of straight and curving forms.
In 1886 Chase married Alice Gerson, who had been his model. Not only did he depict his wife frequently in his paintings, but also their many children. The family spent their summers in a large house in Shinnecock, Long Island, N.Y., and the fresh and sparkling outdoor scenes he painted there established Chase's reputation as a superb landscape painter. Between 1891 and 1902 Chase directed a summer school in Shinnecock Hills, which became the most important outdoor art school in America.
He was elected president of the Society of American Artists in 1885, a position he held for the next ten years, and in 1890 he was elected academician in the National Academy of Design. Chase was a well-known and prolific artist. His paintings were admired in the United States and abroad for their luminous color, virtuoso brushstroke, and assured composition, and his work was exhibited widely, often winning prestigious awards. He was an influential teacher whose students included many of America's noted modernist painters—Sheeler, O'Keeffe, Hartley, and Demuth among them. Besides founding the Chase School in New York, he traveled regularly to Philadelphia to teach at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and in his later years, taught summer classes in England, Spain, Holland, and Italy.
Musique : Rachmaninov Piano Concerto N° 2 en C Minor
List 8 Tourist Attractions in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Travel to United States
Here, 8 Top Tourist Attractions in Philadelphia, US State..
There's Independence National Historical Park, Liberty Bell Pavilion, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Eastern State Penitentiary, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts Museum, City Center, Society Hill Historic District, Rodin Museum and more...
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Astrid Bowlby Art Talk.m4v
For over a decade, Bowlby has steadily gained recognition for her room-sized fantasy landscapes composed of thousands of hand-cut simplified ink drawings
on paper. This exhibition's sweeping embrace represents new shifts for the artist.
Bowlby received her M.F.A. from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, where she is currently a visiting critic and represented by Gallery
Joe. Bowlby has shown extensively in Maine, the United States, and abroad.
Recent exhibitions include VOLTA, Basel, Switzerland; Vacationland, Bogart Salon, Brooklyn, NY; and Calm, Cool, Collected, Danese, New York, NY. Bowlby has
received a Pew Fellowship in the Arts and numerous other awards. Her work is
included in the collections of the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Philadelphia
Museum of Art, and the New York Public Library, among others.
This participatory installation invites visitors to stroll through unfurled rolls of paper filled with black ink drawings of paper clips, chewed gum, balloons, flowers, and everything else visitors request Bowlby to draw. Originally from Maine, Bowlby received her B.F.A. from USM and is currently an Artist-in-Residence in the Art
Department.