Franz Marc (1880-1916) was one of the most important figures in the German Expressionist movement. He worked with vibrant colors and bold forms, and was heavily influenced by the Cubists and the Futurists.
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Janice Porter Marckstein explores a wide range of emotions and attitudes in paintings that reflect life's simplicity and complexity, while celebrating its joy and occasionally lamenting its sorrows.
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A former cake decorator, Olivia Maxweller enjoys the sweet life of a painter and sculptor. In addition to still life and natural studies, she paints bar and music scenes.
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Messinger's paintings mix serious ideas and icons with lighthearted techniques and imagery, and often are a collaboration with his 6-year-old son, Matthew. Messinger enjoys symbolism and can be inspired by anything from logos, advertisements and animals, something simple as a number, or as subtle as a texture.
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Michelangelo was the quintessential artist of the Italian High Renaissance. He is well known for his stunning frescos and entrancing sculptures.
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Modigliani (1884-1920) was a contemporary of the Cubists, revealed in the angular and sometimes abstracted features of his many portraits, but he was also heavily influenced by the Post-Impressionist attention to color, texture, and gesture.
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Monet applied the Impressionist movement's philosophy of exploring and expressing one's perceptions before nature, particularly in his well-known landscape paintings.
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Mucha's distinctive Art Nouveau posters and advertisements are notable for their creative use of color palettes, intricate gilding, and lettering.
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Munch’s evocative and emotionally tumultuous work is often associated with the birth of Symbolism and is seen an antecedent of the development of Expressionism.
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