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Fig. 3.1: This 1909 ``Still Life, Red'' by German Expressionist painter Gabriele Munter has an American flag as its focal point, and relates to the artist's visits to relatives in the United States. The painting is in ``Gabriele Munter: The Years of Expressionism, 1903-1920'' at the Milwaukee Art Museum. (AP Photo/Courtesy Galerie Thomas, copyright 1997 Artists Rights Society). |
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Fig. 3.2 A mask from British Columbia, circa 1845, is seen at the exhibition entitled Native American Art, Uncommon Legacies, at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Mass., Monday, Sept. 15, 2003, during an exhibit installation preview. The exhibition will be on view from Sept. 19 through Dec. 14, 2003. The exhibition, drawn from the collection of the Peabody Essex Museum, presents a view of Native American culture from 1750 through 1850. (AP Photo/Chitose Suzuki) |
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Fig. 3.3 Ansel Adams' photo "El Capitan, Merced River, Against Sun, Yosemite Valley, California," circa 1950, is part of the exhibit "Ansel Adams at 100" running from Friday, July 11,2003, to November 3, 2003 at the Museum of Modern Art's temporary location in Queens, New York. (AP Photo/Museum of Modern Art) |
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Fig. 3.4 "Grandmother's Dinner," a 1992 oil and collage painting by Benny Andrews, is among the art works that will be displayed in the new Ogden Museum of Southern Art when it opens in New Orleans on Aug. 23, 2003. (AP Photo/Ogden Museum of Art) |
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Fig. 3.5 Giotto Florentine's, Madonna and Child, a tempera on panel, part of an exhibit at the National Gallery of Art in Washington. The National Gallery of Art has mounted on its Web site: 24 works, all from its own collection, to show how Islam influenced European art over 600 years. Viewers can enlarge the images to see details. "Artistic Exchange: Europe and the Islamic World," can be seen as an exhibit only on the Internet. The gallery has not assembled the paintings and other objects in one place. To lure visitors into its rich permanent collections, it is putting out a map to indicate where each can be found. (AP Photo/National Gallery of Art) |
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Fig. 3.6 An undated file photo released by the Kimbell Art Museum, shows a terra-cotta portrait bust by Renaissance sculptor Gian Cristoforo Romano that is thought to depict Isabella d'Este, a well-known Renaissance patroness. This and an other Italian sculpture by Baroque master Gian Lorenzo Bernini, "Fountain of the Moor," are new acquisitions of the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas, and are estimated to be worth millions of dollars. Museum officials plan to place both on exhibit today. (AP Photo/Kimbell Art Museum, Ho) |
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Fig. 3.7 This 1934 painting by Pablo Picasso entitled "The Painter," part of an exhibit at The Phillips Collection in Washington. One artist claimed to have been hatched from an egg in an eagle's nest, another is known for painting a flexible watch wrapped around a tree branch. The show of painters who were pushing the envelope in the troubled Europe of the mid-1900s opens at the Phillips, Washington's first museum of modern art. Some of them came to America and helped shift the world's art capital from Paris to New York. (AP Photo/Phillips Collection) |
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