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
  • Audiobooks
  • Hardcover Book Shop
  • Platforms List
  • Languages
    • English
    • Deutsch
    • Français
    • Español
    • Italiano
    • 中文
  • Art,  Ebook,  English

    The Reinvention of Black

    September 17, 2015 / 0 Comments

    As the means of creating the color black have changed, so have the subjects it represents. Suddenly, black was everywhere. It caked the flesh of miners and ironworkers; it streaked the walls and windows of industrial towns; it thickened the smoky air above. Proprietors donned black clothing to indicate their status and respectability. New black dyes and pigments created in factories and chemical laboratories entered painters’ studios, enabling a new expression for the new themes of the industrial age: factory work and revolt, technology and warfare, urbanity and pollution, and a rejection of the old status quo. A new class of citizen, later to be dubbed the “proletariat,” began to…

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    Parkstone International

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    Nicholas Roerich

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    May 14, 2024
    Nosferatu destroyed by sunlight in Nosferatu the vampire, 1922, Vampire

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    July 5, 2022
    Thomas Couture, Les Romains de la décadence, 1847

    Le romantisme – Pas seulement une histoire d’amour

    April 14, 2023
  • Art,  Art and Design,  Art Exhibition,  Artist,  Ebook,  English

    The future is black!

    August 14, 2014 / 0 Comments

    A simple black square by Russian artist Kazimir Malevich was first presented to the public in 1915. What a sensation! At the same time the image caused both incomprehension and rejection – the viewer could neither make out representational features nor see shapes or lines in this composition. While the First World War was already raging in Europe, Malevich had created an unprecedented painting implying a dark premonition of the future. Today Black Suprematic Square by Malevich is an icon of modern painting mentioned in countless books about 20th-century art. During his life the artist himself referred to his masterpiece several times in his work, just like in his self-portrait…

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    Parkstone International

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    ¿En qué piensa el mar?

    March 6, 2014

    500 Jahre europäische Kunst

    March 4, 2014
    Ivan Shishkin, Hiver, 1890

    La culture et l’art des anciennes tribus de Sibérie

    January 20, 2023
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Top Posts & Pages

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    Edward Hopper: The Man, The Mystery, The Muse

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