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Self-Portrait with a Servant and Flowers Self Portrait fff Rubens Painting an Allegory of Peace Winter Landscape with Skaters fff The London Mail leaving The Three Crowns Wheatfield and Row of Trees download icon Castle Ried -34- china scenery Deposition nwr Balaam-s Ass King Charles II Fairhope -and making it into a great cross i set Saint Anthony the Abbot Tempted by a Lum Holtville Pieta -05- Lungren, Fernand Harvey Madonna with the Serpent View through a Window to the Chateau of Westport Details of Madonna and Child with Angels The Family of Charles IV A Young Girl called Princess Charlotte Bathsheba Bathing Dish of Peaches HEMESSEN, Jan Sanders van Acteon Changed into a Stag -05- Dancing Girl with Castanets The Denial of St Peter dfg Noon : Rest from Work The Annunciation Portrait of Jose Antonio, Marques Caball Anton Raffael Mengs Prince Bahram i Gor listens to the tale Night,A Port in Moonlight -43- A Difference of Opinion Santa Fe Parable of the Lost Drachma dghj Claxton
Diego Rivera:
Mexican Social Realist Muralist, 1886-1957,Mexican muralist. After study in Mexico City and Spain, he settled in Paris from 1909 to 1919. He briefly espoused Cubism but abandoned it c. 1917 for a visual language of simplified forms and bold areas of colour. He returned to Mexico in 1921, seeking to create a new national art on revolutionary themes in the wake of the Mexican Revolution. He painted many public murals, the most ambitious of which is in the National Palace (1929 ?C 57). From 1930 to 1934 he worked in the U.S. His mural for New York's Rockefeller Center aroused a storm of controversy and was ultimately destroyed because it contained the figure of Vladimir Ilich Lenin; he later reproduced it at the Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico City. With Jose Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros, Rivera created a revival of fresco painting that became Mexico's most significant contribution to 20th-century art. His large-scale didactic murals contain scenes of Mexican history, culture, and industry, with Indians, peasants, conquistadores, and factory workers drawn as simplified figures in crowded, shallow spaces. Rivera was twice married to Frida Kahlo.








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