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
  • Art,  Art Exhibition,  English

    Why the Soul of Surrealism is in India

    July 23, 2013 / 2 Comments

    If all the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players, then where do the Surrealists sit? According to my imagined global map of where art movements should be located, the Impressionists are based in the South of France, the Blaue Reiter in Germany, the Nabis in Stockholm, Cubism in Iceland, the Old Masters (da Vinci, Raphael, Michelangelo, etc.) in Italy, Aestheticism in Decorative Arts in Shanghai, Digital Art in Oslo, and Lyrical Abstraction in Tokyo. Of course, this is entirely subjective, but I think that certain countries, or cities, really do go hand in hand with the style or ideals that various art movements represent.

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    Parkstone International

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    Happy New Year 2021

    December 31, 2020
    Historic maritime maps

    Maritime Maps through Time: Navigating history’s great voyages

    December 24, 2024
    La Toilette

    [Part 2/3] Cubism: The Bermuda Triangle

    October 10, 2017
  • Art Exhibition,  English

    Getting to Know Glart

    May 16, 2013 / 0 Comments

    Here’s a fun fact for you: Glass has been around since around about 3000 BC (in the Bronze Age), and glassblowing was created in Syria, in the 1st century BC. You may be wondering what that has to do with the price of fish – well, let me explain. Glass is immensely important in our society. And, the fact that it was developed so early on in our history means that it has been incredibly important for our ancestors’ society, and their ancestors’ society… for thousands of years. Again, you may be asking what the point of this is. Well, fine you got me, I guess there isn’t a point…

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    Parkstone International

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    Abend auf der Karl-Johann-Straße, 1892

    Edvard Munch, der Meister der psychologischen, emotionalen und spirituellen Wahrnehmung

    September 15, 2022
    African Art 2

    African Art

    June 7, 2018

    Caillebotte

    October 9, 2012
  • Art Exhibition,  English

    To Live and Die by Mount Vesuvius

    May 8, 2013 / 0 Comments

    There is something tragically romantic about Pompeii and her fellow seaside town Herculaneum, both destroyed by the villainous Vesuvius in 79 CE. Ironically, the volcano, initially merely thought of as a mere mountain, erupted on 24 August, the day after Vulcanalia – the festival of the Roman god of fire.

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    KLEE: A Contrapunctal (e) Motion

    November 19, 2018

    World War I and the Visual Arts

    October 30, 2017

    William Morris: A Pattern is either right or wrong…It is no stronger than its weakest point

    March 12, 2018
  • Art Exhibition,  English

    Bernini: The Beauty and The Beast

    October 25, 2012 / 0 Comments

    Rome is the city of light, certainly, but it is also the city of water. Tourists may visit for the city’s celebrated history and architecture, but they leave entranced by the babbling fountains which dot the city like stars. What most don’t realize is that most of those fountains were designed by the same man: the astoundingly talented Gian Lorenzo Bernini. Immortalized in countless great works of cinema, from Frederico Felini’s La Dolce Vita to Woody Allen’s To Rome With Love, Bernini’s fountains are essential to the character of this most romantic of cities. His Fontana della Barcaccia on the Spanish Steps even provided the backdrop for Gregory Peck and…

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    Parkstone International

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    Les Préraphaélites: La Fraternité Révolutionnaire: Retour au Moyen Age

    February 28, 2018
    J.M.W. Turner, Le Dernier Voyage du Téméraire, 1838. Huile sur toile. National Gallery, Londres.

    Turner, encore et encore

    September 15, 2014

    触摸抽象

    October 19, 2017
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