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September 20, 2010

American Impressionist Landscape Oil Paintings by George Gardner Symons

Filed under: Art News, Van Gogh Sunflowers — Tags: — admin @ 4:24 pm

George Gardner Symons (1863-1930), a landscape and marine artist, was one of America’s more noted plein-air painters who combined styles of impressionism and realism. His works are cited for their energy and simplicity, and he often did panoramic views. He was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1861, with the name of George Gardner Simon, but he changed his last name to Symons when he returned from study in England because of concern about anti-semitism. Not much is known about his early life. He first studied at the Chicago Art Institute where he became a close, life-long friend of William Wendt. They painted together in California and then in Cornwall, England in 1898. He also studied in Paris, and Munich and London, and joining a colony of artists at St. Ives, adopted the plein-air techniques of Julius Olsson, Adrian Stokes, and Rudolph Hellwag. He worked in Chicago as a commercial artist, and about 1903 returned to California with Wendt and built a studio in Laguna Beach and became active in western art societies including the California Art Club. He returned often, but maintained his primary studio in Brooklyn, New York, and also did a lot of painting in Colerain, Massachusetts. Among the collections where his work can be found are the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences; the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Fleischer Museum in Scottsdale, Arizona. Associations he was a member of include the National Academy of Design, the National Arts Club, the Institute of Arts and Letters, the Lotos, Century, and Salmagundi Clubs. He was also a member of the Royal Society of British Artists and the Union Internationale des Beaux Arts et des Lettres. He painted entirely out-of-doors, frequently working in Arizona, doing desert landscape and the Grand Canyon views, which were well received, (Dawdy 424), but he is best known for his New England snow scenes, especially of the Berkshire Mountains. He died in Hillside, New Jersey in 1930.

Impressionist Landscape Oil Paintings

Houses At The Base Of Snow Capped Mountains

Houses At The Base Of Snow Capped Mountains

Landscape With Houses

Landscape With Houses

New England Landscape

New England Landscape

River In Winter

River In Winter

The First Snowfall

The First Snowfall

Winter Scene Canal Near New Hope Pennsylvania

Winter Scene Canal Near New Hope Pennsylvania

A Southern Maine

A Southern Maine

March 30, 2009

Vincent van Gogh Three Sunflowers in a Vase

Filed under: Van Gogh Sunflowers — Tags: — admin @ 8:39 pm

Vincent van Gogh Three Sunflowers in a Vase

Painting: Three Sunflowers in a Vase

Artist: Vincent van Gogh

Style: Post-Impressionism

Subject: Floral Still Life

Medium: Oil on Canvas

Original Location: Arles

Year: August, 1888

F453, JH1559

Museum: United States, Private Collection

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Vincent Van Gogh Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers

Vincent van Gogh The Sunflowers

Vincent van Gogh The Sunflowers

Painting: Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers

Artist: Vincent van Gogh

Style: Post-Impressionism

Subject: Floral Still Life

Medium: Oil on Canvas

Size: 93.0 x 73.0 cm

Original Location: Arles

Year: August, 1888

F454, JH1562

Museum: London, National Gallery

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Vincent van Gogh Still Life: Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers

Van Gogh Sunflowers

Painting: Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers

Artist: Vincent van Gogh

Style: Post-Impressionism

Subject: Floral Still Life

Medium: Oil on Canvas

Size: 95.0 x 73.0 cm

Original Location: Arles

Year: January 1889

F458, JH1667

Museum: Amsterdam,Van Gogh Museum

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Vincent van Gogh Still Life: Vase with Twelve Sunflowers

Vincent van Gogh - The Sunflowers 4

Painting: Still Life: Vase with Twelve Sunflowers

Artist: Vincent van Gogh

Style: Post-Impressionism

Subject: Floral Still Life

Medium: Oil on Canvas

Size: 91.0 x 72.0 cm

Original Location: Arles

F456, JH1561

Museum: Munich, Bayerische Staatsgemaldesammlungen, Neue Pinakothek

Vincent van Gogh Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers

Van Gogh Sunflowers

Van Gogh Sunflowers

Painting: Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers

Artist: Vincent van Gogh

Style: Post-Impressionism

Subject: Floral Still Life

Medium: Oil on Canvas

Size: 100.5 x 76.5 cm

Original Location: Arles

Year: January 1889

Museum: Tokyo, Sompo Japan Museum of Art

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Vincent van Gogh Four Cut Sunflowers

Four Cut Sunflowers by Van Gogh

Four Cut Sunflowers by Van Gogh

Painting: Four Cut Sunflowers

Artist: Vincent van Gogh

Style: Post-Impressionism

Subject: Flowers

Original Location: Paris

Size: 60.0 x 100.0 cm

Year: August-September, 1887

F452, JH1330

Museum: Otterlo, Kröller-Müller Museum

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Vincent van Gogh Two Cut Sunflowers

Van Gogh Two Cut Sunflowers

Van Gogh Two Cut Sunflowers

Painting: Two Cut Sunflowers

Artist: Vincent van Gogh

Style: Post-Impressionism

Subject: Flowers

Original Location: Paris

Year: August-September, 1887

F337, JH1328

Museum: Amsterdam, Van Gogh Museum

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March 19, 2009

Why Van Gogh Painted Sunflowers?

Filed under: Van Gogh Sunflowers — admin @ 1:21 am

‘I am working with the enthusiasm of a man from Marseilles eating bouillabaisse , which shouldn’t come as a surprise to you because I am busy painting huge sunflowers.’ It was August, the sunflowers were blooming, and Van Gogh desperately wanted to capture them in a series of 12 pictures. Because the flowers wilted so quickly, he worked on his canvases every day.

He painted the series to decorate the room where Paul Gauguin would stay when he arrived in Arles. He chose this subject because his friend had previously admired his paintings of sunflowers run to seed.

In the end, Vincent executed four sunflower still lifes; however, he felt only two were good enough to hang in Gauguin’s bedroom. He was later to paint three copies of them.

March 18, 2009

Van Gogh Sunflowers

Filed under: Van Gogh Sunflowers — admin @ 12:16 pm
van gogh sunflowers

Vincent van Gogh painted these sunflowers after leaving his native Holland for the south of France with the dream of starting an artistic community. He began to paint sunflowers to decorate a bedroom for his friend Paul Gauguin.

The series of paintings was made possible by the innovations in manufactured pigments in the 19th Century. Without the vibrancy of the new colours, such as chrome yellow, Van Gogh may never have achieved the intensity of Sunflowers.

These most famous of all sunflowers in art hold at their heart a simple parable about the brevity of life; they are at varying stages in the life cycle, from withered and wilting to vibrant full bloom.

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