| The First Art Newspaper on the Net | | Established in 1996 | Monday, October 4, 2021 |
| VFA...ABSTRACT ADDICTIONS... PAINT IT BLACK.... | |
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Please click here to view our catalogue on ABSTRACT ADDICTIONS... PAINT IT BLACK.... NEW YORK, NY.- Once again welcome back to VFA this will be our 16th video since the first one we produced last September. Instead of shying away during the past 20 months of the pandemic, we moved forward purchasing 350 works of art. We have stretched our imaginations showing how our taste is ever evolving as our curiosity continues driving us to new places. We have also just completed our 200 page annual catalogue titled Abstract Addictions: Paint it Black which will be mailed in early November due to the shipping congestion currently happening in NY harbor but can be viewed on our website shortly. Our annual catalogue is our signature statement that no other gallery comes close to producing. It shows our vast inventories along with our taste and vision revealing itself. Our videos have touched upon subjects such as Women Artists, Black Artists, Abstract Expressionism and the New York School along with the American Abstract Artist Group of modernists and individual a ... More |
The Best Photos of the Day A cassette with the recording of four Danish schoolboys' interviews with John Lennon and Yoko Ono during the famous couple's winter stay in Thy, in Jutland, Denmark, in 1970, is is being auctioned at Bruun Rasmussen Auction House in Copenhagen on September 28, 2021.The cassette and polaroid pictures from the visit will be auctioned on September 28, and is valued at between 25, 000 and 40, 000 euros. Philip Davali / Ritzau Scanpix / AFP.
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Pearl Tytell, examiner of dubious documents, dies at 104 | | Minneapolis Institute of Art acquires four Baroque Italian paintings commissioned by the Barberini Family | | New exhibition of works on paper at Palmer Museum takes viewers on a journey across the globe | Pearl Tytell examines a Treasury check believed to have been forged in New York, Aug. 27, 1981. Keith Meyers/The New York Times. by Richard Sandomir NEW YORK, NY.- Pearl Tytell, the matriarch of a family of questioned-document examiners whose intricate knowledge of paper, ink, handwriting and typewriters made her a prominent investigator of frauds, forgeries, tax evasion and poison-pen letters, died Sept. 26 at her home in the Riverdale neighborhood of the Bronx, New York. She was 104. Her death was confirmed by her daughter and only immediate survivor, Pamela Tytell. Pearl Tytell worked with her husband, Martin, at their typewriter repair and rental business on Fulton Street in Lower Manhattan, which branched out into the scientific examination of documents in the early 1950s. A rare woman in a male-dominated field, Pearl Tytell ran that end of the business and trained her son, Peter, a widely known examiner of documents until his death last year. Pearl Tytell was an expert witness for the federal government in 1982 in the tax-evasion case against the Rev. ... More | | Cristoforo Roncalli (il Pomarancio), Italian (Tuscany, c. 1553-1626). Jacob Wrestling with the Angel, early 1620s. Oil on canvas. Gift of John Morton Morris in honor of Patrick Noon, 2020.54.1 MINNEAPOLIS, MN.- The Minneapolis Institute of Art announced the acquisition of four paintings commissioned by the prominent and influential Barberini family of Rome in the 1620s. The paintingsThe Archangel Michael (c. 1624-26) by Cavaliere d'Arpino, Jacob Wrestling with the Angel (early 1620s) by Cristoforo Roncalli, The Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Paradise (1627) by Domenico Passignano, and The Crucified Christ Triumphant over Death, Evil, and Sin (1621) by Paolo Guidottievoke the splendor of Baroque Rome in the seventeenth century and the triumphant message of the Catholic Church during the Counter-Reformation. The Barberini familys patronage represents one of the peaks of this era. The paintings by Arpino, Roncalli, and Passignano, all monumental in scale, have remained together for more than 400 years with direct descendants of the Barberini princes and the Barberini Pope Urban VIII (reign 16231644). The works by Arpi ... More | | Colin Campbell Cooper (American, 18561937), The Grand Place, Antwerp, 1908, watercolor and gouache on paper, 36 x 29 inches. Gift of Susan Sherlock, 2020.31. UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.- For those who have been staying in one place throughout the last year and a half, the Palmer Museum of Art has an antidote for your wanderlust: the current special exhibition Place to Place: Recent Gifts of American Drawings and Watercolors, 19001950. This exhibition of works on paper by American artists presents a wide array of geographical locales depicted with a dynamic range of mediums and artistic approaches, offering a jaunt around the United States and abroad during the first half of the twentieth century. The exhibition is on view at the Palmer now through December 12, 2021. Organized by the Palmer Museum and curated by Adam Thomas, curator of American art, Place to Place brings together twenty-three new arrivals to the museums collection, nearly all donated since 2017 and all on view for the first time. We are profoundly grateful to the collectors and donors who have enhanced our collection with thes ... More |
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Saving a vibrant history, one frame at a time | | Kehinde Wiley's "A Portrait of a Young Gentleman" revealed at The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens | | Statues reflecting on racial injustice go up in Union Square | Shahid Zaidi riffles through sleeves of negatives at his studio in Lahore, Pakistan, on June 16, 2021. Betsy Joles/The New York Times. by Betsy Joles LAHORE.- Before Shahid Zaidi was born, before his home was an independent country, his father opened a portrait studio and captured the nations emerging history. His father, Syed Mohammad Ali Zaidi, captured a Hindu couple in 1939. The man wore a conservative double-breasted suit, hair slicked, while the woman sported a sari, with earrings dangling and bangles on her wrists, the exact colors eluding the black-and-white negative. The next year he captured a Muslim couple, listed as Mr. and Mrs. Mohammad Abbas, the bride in a shimmer-trimmed shalwar kameez and a matha patti, an ornamental headpiece, and the groom resplendent in a qulla, a wedding turban. Word spread about his studio, and Syed Mohammed Ali Zaidis customers began to include the elite of the new nation of Pakistan. He photographed Muhammad Ali Jinnah, a lawyer turned separatist who became the modern countrys founder. He photographed Liaquat Ali Khan, ... More | | Kehinde Wileys A Portrait of a Young Gentleman (2021) installation view in the Thornton Portrait Gallery at The Huntington. Photo: Joshua White. The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. SAN MARINO, CA.- Visitors got a first look at Kehinde Wiley's A Portrait of a Young Gentleman yesterday as it made its world debut at The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. The institution's newly commissioned work reconceives its famous painting The Blue Boy (ca. 1770) by Thomas Gainsborough in a contemporary context. The work is now on view through Jan. 3, 2022, opposite the recently restored Gainsborough icon. The acquisition of the Wiley portrait celebrates the 100th anniversary of the purchase of The Blue Boy by Henry and Arabella Huntington, the institution's founders. Just as scholars come to The Huntington to study and reinterpret our significant collections, with this commission we are delighted that Kehinde Wiley has reenvisioned our iconic work, The Blue Boy, and Grand Manner portraiture in a powerful way, said Huntington President Karen R. Lawrence. Across the breadth of our library, art, and botan ... More | | A sculpture of Rep. John Lewis, one of three works by artist Chris Carnabuci displayed in Union Square in New York on Sept. 30, 2021. Earl Wilson/The New York Times. by Precious Fondren NEW YORK, NY.- In Union Square on Friday night, Terrence Floyd a brother of George Floyd, whose murder in May 2020 by a police officer prompted confrontations over police brutality and racial injustice spoke softly into a microphone. These monuments have meaning, Floyd said as he stood among large sculptures of his brother, Rep. John Lewis and Breonna Taylor. The statues were covered in black cloth, and the growing crowd of people held cellphone cameras, ready to capture the moment when Floyd and others revealed the sculptures, which are nearly 6 feet tall and made of 200 layers of African mahogany plywood coated in bronze metallic paint. In the moment, there were no signs, no pain-filled chants and no gas masks dramatically different from a little over a year ago, when Union Square was often a central location where nights of protest started or ended. Sometimes dozens of people ... More |
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Telling stories of Black life rescued him | | Carnegie Hall counts down to its reopening | | Christie's Post-War to Present sale achieves its highest total: $34,409,820 | The designer Ron Norsworthy at his home and studio in Roxbury, Conn., with one of the matchbook quilts memorializing Black people killed by law enforcement and Blackity wallpaper, Aug. 24, 2021. Norsworthy explores his own experiences of marginalization in his textiles, installations and quilts. Kendall Bessent/The New York Times. by Seph Rodney ROXBURY, CONN.- Ron Norsworthy, a visual artist and designer, could slot easily into popular cultures ideal of the hero: He is a man of relentless self-invention. He studied architecture at Princeton, worked for a year as a designer with Michael Graves, and, after being laid off, remodeled himself into an art director and production designer for widely recognized hip-hop groups in the 1990s (among them Missy Elliott, Busta Rhymes and Salt-N-Pepa). While at first the art direction work was exciting, Norsworthy said, I realized in the late 90s that the hip-hop music video world was one [where] I found myself marginalized. In the early 2000s, ... More | | Clive Gillinson, Carnegie Hall's executive and artistic director, inside the halls archives in New York, Sept. 17, 2021. Michael George/The New York Times. by Javier C. Hernández NEW YORK, NY.- The pianos have been tuned. The crimson carpets have been cleaned. The crystal chandeliers have been dusted. After nearly 19 months without concerts, Carnegie Hall, the nations preeminent concert space, plans to reopen its doors to the public Wednesday. With the coronavirus still omnipresent, the reopening is a logistical feat, involving questions about air ventilation systems, crowd control and hand-sanitizing stations. Its also an emotional moment for Carnegie, which lost millions of dollars in ticket sales during the pandemic and at one point was forced to reduce its staff by nearly half. The hall is grappling with an anticipated budget deficit of up to $10 million and is planning a lighter-than-usual season of about 100 concerts (versus the usual 150) as it tries to gauge demand. ... More | | Auctioneer Rahul Kadakia sells Curio Cards for ETH393. © Christie's Images Ltd 2021. NEW YORK, NY.- On 1 October 2021, in a historic first for a leading auction house, Christies accepted live bids in the cryptocurrency Ether, selling the first lot of the Post-War to Present sale, Curio Cards, Full set of 30 cards plus 17b. for ETH393 ($1,267,320). This set of 31 NFTs is considered to be some of the oldest artworks on the Ethereum blockchain. The auction achieved its highest total of $34,409,820, with strong depth of bidding of 145% hammer above low estimate. The sale, which brought together leading examples of contemporary art, NFTs, and design saw strong participation throughout its entirety. It was led by two abstract paintings from the post-war era, that each sold for $2,670,000; Helen Frankenthalers Warming the Wires, and Philip Gustons The Clock II. Gustons work surpassed its presale estimate of $280,000 350,000 by nearly tenfold, selling for 954% of its low estimate. Isabella Lauria, Christie' ... More |
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Messums Wiltshire presents a collection of large-scale sculptures by Dame Elisabeth Frink | | Freeman's to offer important Qianlong jade seal | | Richard Kirk, post-punk pioneer of industrial music, dies at 65 | Installation view. TISBURY.- Man is an Animal is the most extensive collection of large-scale sculptures by Dame Elisabeth Frink to be shown in this country since the artists death in April 1993. Loaned from various institutions and private collectors, it was first exhibited at the Gerhard Marcks Haus Museum in Bremen, Germany. The exhibition explores axioms of tension, threat, intensity and mankinds atavistic tendencies within Frinks figurative representational sculpture. It presages how her work continues to be resonant of her time as well as function as a carapace to our contemporary concerns. [Frink] believed that traditional patterns of expectation had a lot to do with the fact that men tend to be more fixated on power than women. I think the male obsession with power is something they have been brought up with, Frink said in an interview with [Sarah] Kent, it is put upon them." -- Feico Hosktra This exhibition allows for a contemporary reflection on the duality of masculin ... More | | The Taishang Huangdi Zhi Bao seal arrives to Freemans from a private collection and is presented at a presale estimate of $300,000-500,000. PHILADELPHIA, PA.- Freemans will present a rare Imperial Emperor Emeritus celadon-white jade seal of great cultural and historical importance at its October 14 Asian Arts auction. An outstanding example of Chinese jade carving, the seals upper face is gracefully sculpted with a qilong and two smaller qilong among scrolling waves or clouds, likely referring to the Chinese saying Canlong jiaozi, which may be translated as the Eastern [blue] dragon teaching his son(s). The Taishang Huangdi Zhi Bao seal arrives to Freemans from a private collection and is presented at a presale estimate of $300,000-500,000. The Qianlong Emperor of ChinaEmperor Emeritusmade a vow to voluntarily abdicate the throne to his heir in 1795, if he was blessed with a reign of sixty years. Remarkably, he reached this significant milestone, fulfilled his vow, and designated his fifteenth ... More | | Cabaret Voltaire, of which he was a founder, began as a band of experimental provocateurs and later moved to the dance floor. NEW YORK, NY.- Richard Kirk, a founding member of the English group Cabaret Voltaire and a major figure in the creation of the post-punk style known as industrial music, has died. He was 65. His death was confirmed by his former record label, Mute, in an Instagram post Sept. 21. The post did not say when or where he died or cite the cause. Kirk formed Cabaret Voltaire in 1973 in Sheffield, England, with Stephen Mallinder and Chris Watson. They borrowed the name from the Zurich nightclub where dada, an art movement that responded to societys ills with irrationality, was born in the early years of the 20th century. When we started, we wanted to do something with sound, but none of us knew how to play an instrument, Kirk said in an interview for a 1985 New York Times article about industrial music. So we started using tape recorders and various pieces of junk and gradually learned to play instruments ... More |
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Cézanne's love letter to a coastal French paradise | Christie's
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More News | Solo exhibition of works by Anthony Akinbola opens at Carbon 12 DUBAI.- Carbon 12 opened a solo exhibition of Anthony Akinbola, Thanks A Million. Anthony Akinbola is a Nigerian-American artist whose work is fundamentally built upon the philosophy of the readymade and investigation into his relationships with these same objects. Akinbolas series of textile paintings focuses on the culturally and historically charged Du-rag; a garment used in the maintenance of African hair, as a primary means to explore and navigate a dialogue that is concerned with the intricacies and complexities of semiotics within American culture. Upon parsing the readymade object, Akinbola examines the intimate narrative of our individual and collective cultural associations to these objects, amplifying their seminal and perpetual role in the fragile construction of who we are. Akinbola continues to dissect the multi-faceted aspect of the Du-rag, as observed in similar ... More Over the Influence opens an exhibition of works by South Korean artist Hyangmok Baik LOS ANGELES, CA.- Over the Influence is presenting South Korean artist Hyangmok Baiks debut show the Garden of Eden with the Los Angeles gallery. The new series of artworks are inspired by Genesis 2-3 in the Bible that details the Garden of Eden, also known as the Garden of God and the Terrestrial Paradise. The exhibition is on view from 2 October to 7 November 2021. Often, Garden of Eden is a utopia and the hometown for the first generation of the human race. The world is suffering from the pandemic. People are hurting each other because of their skin color. Pure hate and violence are prevalent because of different backgrounds and value standards. Hyangmoks version of Paradise is one where viewers can escape to a more pastoral and peaceful time- Essentially a utopia of their own personal manifestation within the framework and inspiration of their own minds. The ... More Casino Luxembourg opens an exhibition of works by Karolina Markiewicz and Pascal Piron LUXEMBOURG.- The exhibition Stronger than memory and weaker than dewdrops by Karolina Markiewicz and Pascal Piron brings together never previously shown works and new productions around recurring themes in their artistic partnership: identity and otherness in a constantly changing world, the meeting and confrontation of cultures and populations, the repetition and transmission of history and histories. To enter the exhibition is to enter a universe where reality meets myth and politics merge with poetry. Borders materialise and dissolve, articulating a space between constraint and freedom the freedom of visitors creating their own associations or writing their own stories as they progress through the exhibition. The title is a verse from the poem If I Were Another by Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish (1941-2008). At times, the exhibition is inhabited by a special ... More Harpies, Hybrids, and Hidden Worlds: Bender Gallery opens an exhibition of works by Laine Bachman ASHEVILLE, NC.- Bender Gallery is presenting Harpies, Hybrids, and Hidden Worlds, a solo exhibition of extraordinary paintings by Columbus, Ohio based artist Laine Bachman. Inspired by myths, folklore, and nature, Bachman infuses the colorful worlds she creates with lush foliage, archetypal imagery, underlying themes, exotic fauna, and meticulous detail. The exhibition runs from October 2 through October 31 during the gallerys regular business hours. Laine Bachman was a very inquisitive child growing up the rust belt of Ohio. Her mother is an avid gardener and Bachman loved exploring the plant life in her yard and in the woods and the creek nearby her home. Ever curious, she enjoyed peering behind the obvious, such as turning over rocks to discover the hidden worms and insects beneath them. Bachman showed an interest in art at an early age and participated in private ... More Augmented Reality artworks by renowned contemporary artists appear at Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh EDINBURGH.- Seeing the Invisible features works by a dozen international artists such as Ai Weiwei, Refik Anadol, El Anatsui, Mohammed Kazem, Sigalit Landau, Sarah Meyohas, Pamela Rosenkranz, and Timur Si-Qinincluding several artists first work in AR. Visitors will engage with Seeing the Invisible via an app designed for the exhibition downloadable to smartphones and tablets. Forging new links between botanical gardens located in diverse biomes around the globe, the exhibition fosters collaboration between institutions, artists, and audiences, highlighting the power of art to connect people around the world. The first exhibition of its kind to be developed as a collaboration among botanical gardens around the world, Seeing the Invisible was initiated by the Jerusalem Botanical Gardens and Outset Contemporary Art Fund, and is co-curated by Hadas Maor and Tal Michael ... More Ultimate 007 collectable expected to fetch up to £25,000 at Ewbank's WOKING.- Its the ultimate 007 collectable and now Surrey auctioneers Ewbanks expect it to fetch up to £25,000 in their dedicated James Bond sale on October 8. The From Russia With Love Official Attaché Case Replica, created under licence by S.D. Studios is one of only 100 ever made and is numbered 008. When the original first appeared in the 1963 film it also marked the screen debut of Desmond Llewellyn as the definitive Q. An ordinary black leather case, he tells Bond in Ms office, with 20 rounds of ammunition here and here, he adds, pointing to the corners. Further buttons conceal flat throwing knives, while packed away inside the case is a snipers rifle and 50 Gold Sovereigns, together with what looks like a talcum powder tin which turns the briefcase into an explosive dispenser for teargas. The limited edition official replica at Ewbanks includes replicas of all ... More Christie's announces highlights included in its Paris Avant-Garde sale PARIS.- Christie's will present the Paris Avant-Garde sale, dedicated to 20th century masterpieces, on 21 October during the FIAC. The sale will feature over 40 lots with an overall estimate of between 14 and 20 million. Antoine Lebouteiller and Paul Nyzam, co-directors of the sale: "We are particularly honoured to present a selection of exceptional works for this sixth edition of the Paris Avant-Garde sale. The works we have chosen, often unseen on the market, are from prestigious sources and demonstrate the key role played by Paris in the history of 20th century art. We look forward to welcoming collectors to one of the most important weeks in the market and to the opening of our new exhibition space on Avenue Matignon." Paris Avant-Garde highlights the great masters of the 20th century who were far ahead of their time. Not relying on a predefined model of beauty, the work of ... More Exhibition explores the work of a generation of artists who helped shape New York into the art center it is today NEW YORK, NY.- Americas Society presents This Must Be the Place: Latin American Artists in New York, 19651975, a two-part group exhibition that explores the artworks, performances, and experimental practices of this generation of artists, as well as their involvement in the local art scene. Diversifying the citys artistic life, these artists helped shape New York into the global art center it is today. The artworks presented in this exhibition are central to understanding the social and political landscape in the Americas and the tensions and bridges between north and south, exploring issues of migration, identity, politics, exile, and nostalgia. The show features over 40 artists from Latin America and the Caribbean. Additionally, the exhibition highlights the important ... More Chrysler Museum of Art exhibition follows the career of architect Pier Luigi Nervi NORFOLK, VA.- This year marks the 50th anniversary of the opening of Scope Arena, one of Norfolks most distinctive buildings and arguably its finest piece of modern architecture. The Chrysler Museum of Art celebrates this occasion with Pier Luigi Nervi: The Art and Science of Building, on view Oct. 1, 2021Feb. 27, 2022. The exhibition highlights the work of Scopes internationally famous architect who built UNESCO world headquarters in Paris, skyscrapers in Turin and Paris and the Papal audience hall in the Vatican. It was one of Nervis two Olympic arenas in Rome that caught the eye of Norfolks visionary mayor Roy B. Martin, Jr. during a televised Olympic event. We're thrilled to present this exhibition on Nervi and highlight Norfolk's greatest work of modern architecture. He brought art and science together and created beauty out of necessity, inspiring us all, said Lloyd ... More Northwestern's Block Museum marks 40th anniversary by asking 'Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts'? EVANSTON, ILL.- How do artists, artworks and museums shape and challenge our understanding of the past? The Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University celebrates its 40th anniversary and the full reopening of its galleries with the fall 2021 exhibition Who Says, Who Shows, What Counts: Thinking about History with The Blocks Collection. The exhibition will be on view until Dec. 5 at The Block Museum, 40 Arts Circle Drive on the Evanston campus. Highlighting more than 80 modern and contemporary artworks recently acquired by The Block Museum of Art, the exhibition considers its constantly changing understanding of the past through the lens of artistic practice. The museum-wide exhibition and accompanying publication with Northwestern University Press marks the culmination of a major multi-year initiative to acquire works of art that ... More DRIFT debut new work in New York at The Shed NEW YORK, NY.- Using sound, movement, and film by the multidisciplinary Amsterdam-based artists DRIFT, Fragile Future transforms The Shed's galleries with experiential multi-sensory installations that suggest alternative solutions for a positive future. Marking DRIFT's first New York solo presentation and featuring a soundtrack created by ANOHNI, the monumental exhibition and series of special performances builds on DRIFT's practice of creating experiences that inspire a reconnection to our planet and its natural processes, as well as empathy towards anthropomorphic non-living objects. On view September 29 through December 19, 2021, Fragile Future is presented by Superblue, the ground-breaking new venture dedicated to producing, presenting, and engaging audiences with experiential art, and The Shed, the innovative new arts center on Manhattan's west side. ... More Gandy gallery presents a new installation by Marysia Lewandowska BRATISLAVA.- For the first solo exhibition at Gandy gallery Marysia Lewandowska presents The Faculty of Longing, a new installation including photographs, architectural intervention and video. References originating from recently completed research projects serve as starting points. These new photographic works reimagine the legal labour, while signalling the instability of images used as evidence hovering on the side of truth. Material deterioration of magnetic tape cancels the ability of playback, placing the irretrievable sound at the centre of speculation. Marysia Lewandowska is Polish born (1955) London-based artist who has been exploring the public functions of archives, museums and exhibitions. She has initiated projects involving the property of others to create new relations between forms of knowledge and ownership, activating reflections on the social and immaterial ... More Damiani publishes a spectacular sequel to Brad Wilson's bestselling book Wild Life NEW YORK, NY.- Featuring new photographs by Brad Wilson in a stunning landscape format design, plus an introduction by Wilson about his philosophy and process, and an essay by Dan Flores, author of the New York Times bestseller Coyote America, The Other World: Animal Portraits is a dazzling work of wildlife photography. Although he shoots in the studio, Wilson is inspired by the notion of the authentic encounter, that is, allowing the animal to reveal itself to us rather than imposing our subjective notions on it or on the portrait. Wilson works in cooperation with zoos and wildlife sanctuaries who bring the animals into a studio, where he photographs them against a black background. This makes the animals appear grounded and three-dimensionalmagnificent, approachable, yet inherently mysterious. He describes the situation as a kind of controlled chaos, but in the end it ... More |
| PhotoGalleries Ho Kan: Geometric Calligraphy Alison Elizabeth Taylor Tacita Dean Met Gala 2021 Flashback On a day like today, French painter Jean-François Millet was born October 04, 1814. Jean-François Millet (October 4, 1814 - January 20, 1875) was a French painter and one of the founders of the Barbizon school in rural France. Millet is noted for his scenes of peasant farmers; he can be categorized as part of the Realism art movement. The exhibition "Jean-François Millet: Sowing the Seeds of Modern ArtJean-François Millet: Sowing the Seeds of Modern Art" opens today at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. In this image: Jean-François Millet, 'The Angelus', 1857-1859, Musée d'Orsay, Paris (bequest of Alfred Chauchard, 1910).
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