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
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  • Catalogue
  • Audiobooks
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  • Languages
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  • English

    The Art of Utamaro

    February 3, 2021 / 0 Comments

    The text below is the excerpt from the book Utamaro (ASIN: B016XN18LC), written by Edmond de Goncourt, published by Parkstone International. To leaf through albums of Japanese prints is truly to experience a new awakening, during which one is struck in particular by the splendour of Utamaro. His sumptuous plates seize the imagination through his love of women, whom he wraps so voluptuously in grand Japanese fabrics, in folds, contours, cascades and colours so finely chosen that the heart grows faint looking at them, imagining what exquisite thrills they represented for the artist. For women’s clothing reveals a nation’s concept of love, and this love itself is but a form of lofty thought crystallised…

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    Parkstone International

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    Wassily Kandinsky

    Abstract world of Wassily Kandinsky and the sound of painting

    January 20, 2026

    Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec: The clubfoot who loved promiscuous women

    June 16, 2017

    Shelley’s Art Musings – The Follies of the ‘Sand’ Louvre, which acquired the Leonardo da Vinci painting at $450 million

    May 17, 2021
  • English

    Art of Vietnam

    January 27, 2021 / 0 Comments

    The text below is the excerpt from the book Art of Vietnam (ASIN: B07C2JLY7X), written by Catherine Noppe and Jean-François Hubert, published by Parkstone International. Situated on the eastern extremity of what is known as Southeast Asia, Vietnam finds itself at the confluence of two worlds. With China to the north and Laos and Combodia to the west, Vietnam has long been subject to a double-influence; one nicely captured by the French term, first introduced in the 1840s , “Indochine” (Indo—China). Endowed with a coastline more than two thousand kilometers long, Vietnam’s eastern seaboard gives it access not only to the Philippines and Indonesia, but also to China and Japan, commercial opportunities that were…

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    Parkstone International

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    Art Under Attack

    November 22, 2013

    Getting to Know Glart

    May 16, 2013
    Anastasis, 14th century, Icons

    A representative selection of ICONS from the 11th century to the late Baroque period

    April 12, 2022
  • English

    Epiphany – Three Kings’ Day Celebration

    January 6, 2021 / 0 Comments

    The text below is the excerpt from the book Christ in Art, written by Ernest Renan, published by Parkstone International. Jesus was born in Nazareth, a small town in Galilee, which before him was unknown. All his life he was designated by the name of “Nazarene,” and it is only by an awkward detour that the legend succeeds in fixing his birth at Bethlehem. We shall further on see the motive of this supposition and how it was the necessary consequence of the Messianic character attributed to Jesus. The precise date of his birth is unknown. It occurred under the reign of Augustus, towards the year 750 of Rome, probably sometime in the…

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    Parkstone International

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    A Byzantine Secret worth Billions

    July 10, 2013

    Camille Pissarro: Penetration to what is essential

    May 8, 2017
    Art nouvaeu 1

    Art Nouveau

    July 16, 2018
  • English,  Shelley’s Art Musings

    Shelley’s art Musings – Spotlight on William Blake

    December 22, 2020 / 0 Comments

    When I think about William Blake, I instantly think of the film “Red Dragon” – you know the one where the character Francis Dolarhyde is obsessed with the painting and kills his family to try and gain the same strength as the creature depicted.  The film was inspired by the book “Red Dragon” by Thomas Harris and was a lead into the Hannibal Lector stories.  While this is where the majority of us will recognise the work from, Blake was more than just a painter, he was also a poet and a printmaker, who turned his back on formalised religion and created his own personal complex mythology.  Blake was largely…

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    Parkstone International

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    Utamaro

    Kitagawa Utamaro, the Master of Ukiyo-e and his Pioneering Portraits of Edo

    February 6, 2024
    Going-Nowhere-Fast

    Shelley’s Art Musings – Spotlight on D*Face

    July 13, 2020

    Star Wars: the fashion is strong with this one

    November 10, 2016
  • English,  Shelley’s Art Musings

    Shelley’s Art Musings – Spotlight on Auguste Rodin

    December 7, 2020 / 0 Comments

    There are many historical events that have happened in November, on the 12th November 1944, 32 British Lancaster bombers finally sank the German battleship, the Tirpitz after 2 years of trying.  On the same day in 1946 the first drive through bank was opened in the USA.  Also, on this day in 1840 Auguste Rodin was born and would change the face of sculpture for those who would be set to follow. The founder of modern sculpture was born in Paris and was largely self-educated until he attended the Petite Ecole at the 14.  He had started to teach himself to draw at the age of 10, which held him…

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    Parkstone International

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    Ukiyo-E

    Ukiyo-E: Exploring the themes of Japan’s floating world

    January 21, 2025
    Michelangelo Buonarotti, Study for the Head of Leda, c. 1530. Red pencil on paper, 35.4 x 26.9 cm. Casa Buonarroti, Florence.

    Michelangelo, the Head of Leda and a Royal Evildoer

    January 14, 2016

    From Medieval to Naive Artists: A Similar Approach?

    August 16, 2022
  • English

    Spotlight on Chaïm Soutine

    September 4, 2020 / 0 Comments

    The text below is the excerpt from the book Chaïm Soutine, written by Klaus H. Carl, published by Parkstone International. Chaïm Soutine was born in 1893 (some biographies cite his year of birth as sometime after 1894) in Smilavichy, a village near the city of Minsk in the current state of Belarus, inhabited at that time by less than a thousand residents. Smilavichy lies in the former Principality of Polotsk, an urban area of the East Slavic Dregowitschi and Kriwitzen that had joined forces with other ethnic groups in the 9th century. This area formed the basis of the Old Russian state of Kievan Rus’, and belonged from the 14th-16th century to…

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    Parkstone International

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    African art

    Understanding Religion and Spirit in the art of Africa

    January 13, 2026

    Castiglione: Lost and Found – An Italian baroque master resurfaces from oblivion

    September 14, 2015
    Liu Xiling (1848?1923), Rustic Cuisine, 19th-century.

    A Matter of Taste: Savouring Chinese Art

    October 13, 2015
  • English

    Paul Gauguin and the Impressionists (part 2)

    August 18, 2020 / 0 Comments

    You can read part 1 here. The text below is the excerpt from the book Paul Gauguin, written by Anna Barskaya, published by Parkstone International. Gauguin’s deviation from Impressionism first manifested itself during his stay in Rouen. It is particularly evident in his plastic works, a case in point being the carving of a small wooden jewellery box. The decor of the external sides ornamented with theatrical masks and ballet dancers in tutus (a design borrowed from Degas) is in striking contrast with the corpse-like figure in the bottom of the box, which is reminiscent of a Peruvian mummy. This clash of motifs – worldly amusements and death – leaves no doubt as…

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    Parkstone International

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    Art of the 20th century

    The art of the 20th Century: A century of innovation and change

    November 18, 2025

    Mantegna and the Concept of Total Illusion

    March 26, 2018
    Halloween books

    It’s Halloween Time: Embrace the Spooky Fun!

    October 24, 2023
  • Michelangelo-The last judgment
    English

    Michelangelo – The agony and ecstasy of a Genius

    August 7, 2020 / 0 Comments

    The agony and ecstasy of a Genius

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    Parkstone International

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    claude-monet-exhibition

    Monet – Clemenceau

    October 24, 2018
    Jean Cocteau: Les Voleurs d’enfants

    Alfred Sisley: Colouring landscapes by emotions

    May 5, 2017
    Valentine-banner

    Artworks of Vallotton

    March 23, 2020
  • Art of war 2
    Ebook,  English,  History

    For Memorial Day: The Art of War

    May 28, 2020 / 0 Comments

    The text below is the excerpt from the book The Art of War, written by Sun Tzu and Victoria Charles, published by Parkstone International. “The art of war” – the first association people have with this term, has, not surprisingly, nothing to do with art but everything to do with war: the ancient military treatise The Art of War. Generally attributed to Chinese general Sun Tzu (depending on transliteration also Sun Wu or Sunzi), the book was written in feudal China, roughly 400 to 200 years before Christ. On a side note, depending on the scholarly point of view, the writings – which already had garnered a certain reputation by the time of…

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    Parkstone International

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    kandinsky-Exotic-birds

    Wassily Kandinsky 

    April 26, 2019

    52 Must-read Religious Art and Gothic Art Books for Easter

    March 23, 2018

    Voyages au Royaume de Perse

    August 13, 2014
  • English-painting-7
    English

    English Painting

    May 15, 2020 / 0 Comments

    The text below is the excerpt from the book English Painting, written by Ernest Chesneau , published by Parkstone International. Is there an English school of painting at all? Strictly speaking, the word school applies only in a very imperfect manner to the growth of painting in England. Generally it is used to designate a special collection of traditions and processes, a particular method, a peculiar style in design, and an equally peculiar taste in colouring – all contributing to the representation of a national ideal existing in the minds of the artists of the same country at the same time. In this sense, we speak of the Flemish school, the Dutch school, the…

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    Parkstone International

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    Rubens: The Spiritual Father of Botero

    January 10, 2018

    [Part 4/6] The Bridge Die Brücke, le pont – Bridging Two Worlds

    August 10, 2017
    Le Jardin Animé, The Great History of Russian Ballet

    The Birth of the Russian Ballet – From its beginnings to the early nineteenth century

    June 27, 2022
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