Curator's Corner

Filter

Recent Tags

women artists miscellaneous arts realism linear perspective cobalt blue ancient Rome Micmac porcupine Native American basketry birch bark Mi'kmaq quillwork Maine Nova Scotia Northern Renaissance goldsmith Flanders impressionist palette American realism landscape high key color mountain early American modernism decorative surface Neo-Impressionism non-local color Marsden Hartley printmaking manuscript illumination backstrap loom fiber arts burial objects Paracas warp and weft weaving ancient Peru Andean art Fourteenth Street School fourth of July contrast patriotism social realism lithography Great Depression value Kyra Markham Americana tenebrism Arts and Crafts Movement side chair chair Brutalism lacquered wood Italian design furniture industrial design cabinetmakers design Heian period calligraphy cursive love poetry line bunjin tanka Immortals of Poetry Ike no Taiga Japanese poets literati elements of art Ono no Komachi Edo Period sosho Japanese art portrait bust portraiture Roman Republic terra cotta sculpture portrait head modernization Showa period Taish_ period color lithography Art Moderne Osaka advertising signage Meiji period postcard Art Deco western influence First Nations marbleizing bowl mosaic glass mold form glass blowing glass making Mesoamerican art First Nations art Jan van Eyck Henry Ossawa Tanner Native American art African American art ancient Americas Interaction of Text and Image poetry Flemish art Flemish Renaissance Renaissance art Japanese modernism Japanese printmaking American holidays

Popular Tags

Curator's Corner

Poetry as Visual Art: Iko no Taiga

Monday, July 13, 2009 | Karl Cole

I’ve written before in this blog about my fascination with LINE, one of the Elements of Art. I’ve pointed out that when it comes to calligraphy, line is not only defining the shapes of a w ...

Read More
Curator's Corner

4th of July: Kyra Markham

Monday, July 6, 2009 | Karl Cole

What better way to celebrate the 4th of July (I know I’m late) than by presenting a classic work of American realism? I’ve always had a soft spot for the realism that dominated art during ...

Read More
Curator's Corner

Modern Furniture Design: Vico Magistretti

Friday, June 26, 2009 | Karl Cole

When I was in graduate school, I was extremely fortunate to be a TA (teaching assistant) to the Furniture art historian. What a learning experience that was! As an art history major, I tended to think ...

Read More
Curator's Corner

Native American Quillwork: Micmac Culture

Monday, June 22, 2009 | Karl Cole

When I was in grade school, one of our art projects was to collect used wooden matches and then create geometric patterns with them, gluing them side by side on cardboard. It did create an interesting ...

Read More
Curator's Corner

Postcards and Modernization in Japan

Monday, June 15, 2009 | Karl Cole

When we in the West think of a “postcard,” we usually think of a note from Aunt Suzie on her vacation in Atlantic City or a card with a picture of a church my brother visited while going a ...

Read More
Curator's Corner

Ancient Roman Realism

Monday, June 8, 2009 | Karl Cole

While when we think of the art of ancient Rome we tend to connect it to the influence of Greek art, there was a strong naturalistic trend in Roman art that would have appalled Greek artists. ...

Read More
Curator's Corner

What Is Realism? Jan van Eyck and Henry O. Tanner

Monday, June 1, 2009 | Karl Cole

American art has always been characterized by a strong reverence for realism, from the early colonial portraits by artists such as John Singleton Copley, through the Hudson River School, and into the ...

Read More
Curator's Corner

Ancient Roman Cast Glass

Tuesday, May 26, 2009 | Karl Cole

When I was in graduate school, I was privileged to be able to visit Venice and subsequently the island of Murano, famous for its glass-making. I was fascinated watching glass-blowing and instantly wan ...

Read More
Curator's Corner

Pioneer American Modernist: Marsden Hartley

Tuesday, May 19, 2009 | Karl Cole

Every now and then my landscape painter alter-ego forces me to focus on a painter who is renowned for his or her landscapes. One of my all-time favorites in that department is Marsden Hartley. I espec ...

Read More
Curator's Corner

Ancient Peruvian Fiber Art: Paracas Culture

Monday, May 11, 2009 | Karl Cole

Over the years, I have gone through periods of intense fascination for a variety of art forms. Have you ever found yourself thinking, “If I weren’t a painter, I’d be a glass artist&r ...

Read More

Always Stay in the Loop

Want to know what’s new from Davis? Subscribe to our mailing list for periodic updates on new products, contests, free stuff, and great content.

Back to top