Abstract Expressionism
Piet Mondriaan
Franz Kline

Helen Frankenthaler
Jackson Pollock
Mark Rothko
Willem DeKooning


AMERICAN ART
Andrew Wyeth
Arthur Dove
Charles Demuth
Charles Sheeler

Damien Hirst

Edward Hopper
Frederick Remington
Georgia O'Keefe
Grant Wood
James Whistler
John Singer Sargent
Norman Rockwell
Verner
Winslow Homer

ART NOUVEAU
Alphonse Mucha
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec


BAROQUE ART
Caravaggio
Peter Paul Rubens
Rembrandt


BAUHAUS
Paul Klee
Wassily Kandinsky

CONSTRUCTIVISM
Kasimir Malevich


CUBISM
Fernand Leger
George Braque
Juan Gris
Pablo Picasso


DADA - SURREALISM
Henri Rousseau
Man Ray

Marc Chagall
Marcel Duchamp
Max Ernst
Rene Magritte
Salvador Dali


OTHERS

Alexander Calder
Amedeo Modigliani
Ando Hiroshige

Andre Derain
Arthur John
Elsley
Arthur Hughes
Canaletto
Diego Rivera
Eric Waugh
Emily Carr
Frank Stella
Giovanni Piranesi
Giuseppe Arcimboldo
Henri Matisse
Howard Hodgkin
H.R. Giger
James Tissot
Jan Vermeer
Jean Millet
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Joaquin Bastida
John Atkinson Grimshaw
John Constable
Josef Albers
Joseph Turner
Jules Breton
JW Waterhouse
Katsushika Hokusai
Lawrence Alma-Tadema
M.C. Escher

Pierre Bonnard
Robert Delaunay
Raoul Dufy
William A.
Bouguereau



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At the height of his career, Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) was regarded as the greatest sculptor since Michelangelo. Straying from nineteenth-century academic conventions, Rodin created his own sense of personal artistic expressions that focused on the vitality of the human spirit. His modeling techniques captured the movement and depth of emotion of his subjects by altering traditional poses and gestures. His pioneering work has been a critical link between traditional and modern figurative sculpture.



Controversial and celebrated within his own lifetime, Rodin broke new aesthetic ground with his raw, vigorous sculptures of the human form in all of its varied manifestations. Auguste Rodin's genius at capturing the essence of human experience, whether erotic, tortured, melancholy or heroic, provided inspiration for a host of successors such as Henri Matisse, Aristide Maillol, Constantin Brancusi and Henry Moore. His purposely fragmented sculptures, appreciated largely after his death, prefigure the innovations typically identified with 20th century artists. For Rodin, beauty in art consisted in the truthful representation of inner states, and to this end he often subtly distorted anatomy. His sculpture, in bronze and marble, falls generally into two styles. The more characteristic style reveals a deliberate roughness of form and a painstaking surface modeling; the other is marked by a polished surface and delicacy of form.



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