Parkstone Art

This is an interactive art blog in multi languages, you will find new articles on artists, art history, exhibitions, etc. Contributions welcome.

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  • About us
  • Our Sites
    • Parkstone main website
    • Ebook Gallery
    • Image-bar
  • Catalogue
  • Art Book List
  • Hardcover Book Shop
  • Platforms List
  • Languages
    • English
    • Deutsch
    • Français
    • Español
    • Italiano
    • 中文
  • New World Schoolteacher, 1928
    Art,  Art Exhibition,  English

    From Murals to Masterpieces: The Legacy of Diego Rivera

    April 25, 2023 / 0 Comments

    Diego Rivera was born into a Mexico that consisted of a class-tiered society dependent on blood lines and political affiliations. The period was called the Porfiriato after the administration of autocratic President Don Porfirio Díaz.

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    Parkstone International

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    Gustave Moreau

    The Symbolist Magic of Gustave Moreau

    April 7, 2026

    Arcimboldo: La Grande “ABBUFFATA”: Une Tradition Italienne D’Arcimboldo à Marc Ferrari

    November 17, 2017

    Hans Holbein : la beauté à l’épreuve de la réalité

    February 21, 2014
  • NC Wyeth, On the Isle of Erraid. 1913. Oil on canvas, 101.5 x 81.2 cm. Private collection
    Art

    The Wyeths: The only family who didn’t fight at Christmas

    November 13, 2015 / 0 Comments

    Such a family imbued by fame and public praise could only have lively and refined discussions at the table during Christmas, right? That’s how I imagine them at least. Holding glasses of wine while lifting their little fingers, fondling the mustaches they probably didn't have, and taking turns to offer their aesthetically cultured opinions. Or, they could just be like the rest of us: tipsy at holiday parties and slightly aggressive with each other at family gatherings.

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    Parkstone International

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    Mantegna et le concept d’illusion totale

    March 26, 2018
    The Madonna in art

    The Madonna in 18th and 19th-century art: Tradition meets modernity

    December 17, 2024
    Pin-up in einem hellblauen Bikini sich neben einem Telefon räkelnd

    Sonne, Sand und Stil: Die Entwicklung des Bikinis

    June 8, 2023
  • Art,  Art Exhibition

    Jackson Pollock: Instinct vs. Reason

    November 12, 2015 / 1 Comment

    It’s a complete mess. Loops of color tangled together and running rampant energize nearly every inch of the composition. Far from the reaches of common sense or common experience, we cannot be sure what exactly we are looking at, or how we should feel. However when facing down Jackson Pollock’s seventeen foot monster One: Number 31 (1950), there is an unshakable feeling that this grand piece was no accident. The lyricism behind his movements—a web of flicks, dribbles, drips—is a lot like life, a mixture of uncontrollable and controllable factors. Maybe it’s not such a mess, as much as it simply elicits the response: What the f$&k? Even Pollock himself…

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    Flowers

    When you take flowers in your hand, it is your world for a moment

    June 28, 2022

    Exhibition: IN FLORENCE Together with la Biennale Internazionale d’Antiquariato

    October 20, 2017

    Ruskin – Modigliani: El Escándalo Del Vello Púbico

    December 4, 2017
  • Art,  Art Exhibition,  English

    What Boston Loves

    March 4, 2014 / 0 Comments

    In an attempt to manipulate the power of the Internet, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston used crowdsourcing to select pieces for its ongoing exhibition, Boston Loves Impressionism. During the month of January, the MFA held an online vote every week, garnering up to 41,000 votes. This exhibition explores the predominating artistic taste of Bostonians.   It neither focuses on the Impressionist movement nor on the individual artists, but rather highlights the connection Boston feels towards each piece. The top three selected works are undeniable favorites. Van Gogh’s Houses at Auvers received the most votes, surpassing Claude Monet’s Water Lilies by at least 1,000 total votes. The only sculpture in…

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    Edward-Burne-Jones-exhibition

    Edward Burne-Jones

    September 21, 2018

    Van Gogh : de Hollywood au festival de Cannes

    May 14, 2014

    Il s’agit de Mimèsis, Mesdames.

    October 14, 2013
  • Art,  Art Exhibition,  English

    The Venetian (Beach) School

    January 25, 2014 / 0 Comments

    Before Arnold Schwarzenegger made it to Sacramento, or even to Hollywood, he could be found lifting weights at Muscle Beach in Venice. Very much like its Italian namesake, Venice Beach in Los Angeles is home to the artistic and the creative. But unlike the artists from the original Venice, those of the Los Angeles beach town paint beyond the canvas, and onto the streets. Amongst the street art found along the walls is Homage to Starry Night. The large mural replicating Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh, occasionally the ‘tagged’ over, is found on the side of an apartment building, behind a ‘No Parking’ street sign. The treatment and placement…

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    Paul Cézanne

    Color and Form Unveiled: The Genius of Paul Cézanne

    January 16, 2024
    Chamane, Sibérie

    Les tambours du Grand Nord : Chamanisme et les Chamanes sibériens

    February 13, 2026

    毕加索-劳特累克画展

    September 30, 2017
  • Art,  Art Exhibition,  English

    No Room in Hollywood

    October 22, 2013 / 0 Comments

    There is no doubt that Hollywood dominates the global film industry. Occasionally, popular films from other countries gain international notoriety like the French film Amélie or the Swedish film Let the Right One In, but those are rare instances. While the United States dominates the film industry, the rest of the world, mainly Europe, dominates in art. The U.S. does have renowned artists but not as renowned as Europe.  Even as an American, I find it difficult to name fellow artistic countrymen, but I can easily rattle off several European artists. Edward Hopper, painter of the Nighthawks, is a celebrated American painter, but his international repute is an iota of…

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    Porcelaine, L'art de la Chine

    De l’argile à la clarté : l’art de la porcelaine chinoise

    February 6, 2026

    Peintures Portrait et dessins d’atelier

    October 2, 2018
    Turner-self-portrait

    J.M.W. Turner

    July 9, 2018
  • Art Exhibition,  English

    Diamonds in the Rough

    February 8, 2013 / 0 Comments

    Arabian nights, like Arabian days, more often than not are hotter than hot in a lot of good ways. The Arab culture has gone from gross underrepresentation in television, art, and film to an intense misrepresentation over the past twenty years or so. While film directors and screen writers are helping the media plague the minds of the public about the Middle East, it’s far less often that I experience outward hatefulness from the group of people whom are relentlessly demonised as threatening, violent, and dangerous. Children are brought up with quirky yet adorable “street-rat” Aladdin, who steals to eat and falls in love well outside of his league. We’re…

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    Frau Antje lädt zum Kunstgenuss

    June 18, 2013

    Die Rache des Kaisers

    January 28, 2014

    Exhibition: American Visionary: John F. Kennedy’s Life and Times

    September 28, 2017
  • Art Exhibition,  English

    Re-learning Patriotism Through Jasper Johns

    August 14, 2012 / 0 Comments

    I will only admit this to a group of viral strangers once, and maybe this will cause outrage and disowning or maybe you’re sitting there nodding your head in disappointed agreement, but I’m originally from the USA. Not only do I despise calling it “the USA”, I’m also exhausted to the core of defending calling myself “American”. It is not my fault that my country never established some other name that could end in -ish, -i, -ese, -ian, -ic, etc., etc. Further, Canada = Canadians, Mexico = Mexicans, and don’t even get me started on the many, many countries within South and Central America that have their own suffixes. Having…

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    Goya, der Visionär menschlicher Albträume

    December 13, 2013

    Why We Owe Spain a Big “Gracias”

    May 28, 2013

    Toulouse-Lautrec und die französische Can-Can

    February 26, 2018
  • Art Exhibition,  English

    Hopper: drudgery and dysthymia

    July 13, 2012 / 0 Comments

    Edward Hopper is being celebrated with an exhibition dedicated to his life and works in the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza in Madrid, amassing an impressive 73 out of his 366 canvases. He would have hated this. Bitter as he was about the late recognition of his art, he avoided his own exhibitions, using them as a platform to get his paintings sold, in order to carry on living his simple and reclusive lifestyle. Hopper has to be the least fitting name for an artist as misanthropic as he. He was an introvert with a wry sense of humour, who would fall into great periods of melancholy, pierced on occasion by flashes of…

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    Le-Massacre-des-Innocents

    Les Brueghel

    October 16, 2018

    Gallé: La fragilité du temps

    January 31, 2018

    APOLOGÍA DEL ERASMUS

    January 23, 2014
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