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Sunday, June 2, 2013

Sunday Salon: Outside with Flowers

French painter Henri Martin (1860 - 1943)

American painter Kate Freeman (Clark) 1875 - 1922)

French painter Ernest Quost (1842 - 1931)

Cornish painter Harold Harvey (1874 - 1941)

German painter August Macke (1884 - 1914) Killed in action, WWI.

American painter Childe Hassam (1859 - 1935)

German illustrator Fritz Baumgarten (1883 - 1966)

American contemporary painter Timothy Easton

Russian painter Boris Kustodiev (1878 - 1927)

Hungarian painter Andor Novak (no dates or info available)

Swedish painter Carl Larsson (1853 - 1919)

French painter Louis Hayet (1864 - 1940)

French painter Claude Monet (1840 - 1926)

English painter Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale (1872 - 1945)

Dutch painter Vincent Van Gogh (1853 - 1890)

American painter Childe Hassam (1859 - 1935)

American painter Frederick Frieseke (1874 - 1939)

Claude Monet (1840 - 1926)

French painter Paul Cezanne (1839 - 1906)

French painter Raoul Dufy (1877 - 1953)

Various outdoor scenes interpreted by various artists. All masterful, all lovely in one way or another. Summer is here with a vengeance.

16 comments:

  1. So beautiful. Thank you for sharing them. We are just into winter here now so lovely to see sunny paintings with all the colours of the flowers.

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  2. Thank you so much! What is spring without beautiful paintings of flowers, of nature blossoming?

    Many of these artists are familiar to me; some aren't. My question is: Did Matisse ever get it wrong? I don't think so. But this painting is unusual to me, not busy as his works usually are.

    And Monet and Cezanne -- ah! I grew up with a mother who loved the French artists, Cezanne being a favorite. I can see why.

    What lovely art has been given to us today. It's appreciated. I'll bookmark this page and return to it.

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  3. Dear Yvette,
    I enjoyed this post.
    Thank you for introducing me to August Macke. This is an artist I had not heard of before. I like his style of work. I also really like the way Monet painted the flowers in that example you have given. Very nice!
    Kirk
    PS
    I notice one small typo: It would appear that Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale was born in 1872 and not 1842.

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  4. Real or still life, I have always found flowers the second most difficult thing to draw after the human face. And yet it seems so simple to line draw a circle, a few petals around it, and a stem all the way down. My idea of drawing flowers, Yvette!

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  5. I want to live in that Kate Freeman Clark painting!

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  6. Hi, Yvette,

    It's good to see the work of some artists like Van Gogh and Cezanne, highlighting pieces of theirs with which I wasn't familiar.

    Friends of mine recently visited a garden Van Gogh painted in Arles, and were delighted to see that it has been carefully retained just as Van Gogh painted it.

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  7. Thank you, Pat. Very calming, yes. :)

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  8. Hi Pam, it's a topsy-turvy world. Winter by you, summer by us. Maybe I'll do some winter paintings too - especially as it gets hotter and hotter here in the States. :)

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  9. Kathy, there's no Matisse in my post, maybe you meant Henri Martin? He's an especially wonderful artist too.

    I love sharing artwork, I'm so glad you appreciate it all as much as I do.

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  10. Kirk, I'm smiling because I suddenly noticed this morning that Brickdale would have had to have lived to be over a hundred - not impossible, but maybe unlikely. You are quite right of course. 1872 it is.

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  11. Sounds very expressionistic, Prashant. Why don't you try it?

    Realism is overrated. :)

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  12. That's a nice one, Joan. I love that house and the pasture and implied garden.
    Wouldn't it be nice if we could just walk inside a painting and take up residence?

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  13. I always try to find something out of the common when I can, Mark. Everyone knows all the more famous pieces after all.

    Glad you enjoyed my choices. :)

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  14. Well, the Henri Martin, which I wondered about as a Matisse, turns out not to be, but is still lovely.

    Coming here is like smalling the blooms.

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  15. I enjoyed all of these painrings and all the wonderful "flowers for today" that yu post on facebook, Yvette!

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