Sarah Anne Johnson, "WWSOSR" pigment print with oil paint, 2020 📸+🎨
More about her work:
https://museemagazine.com/features/2020/10/27/exhibition-review-sarah-anne-johnson-at-yossi-milo
Sarah Anne Johnson, "WWSOSR" pigment print with oil paint, 2020 📸+🎨
More about her work:
https://museemagazine.com/features/2020/10/27/exhibition-review-sarah-anne-johnson-at-yossi-milo
Sarah Anne Johnson, "WWSOSR" pigment print with oil paint, 2020 📸+🎨
More about her work:
https://museemagazine.com/features/2020/10/27/exhibition-review-sarah-anne-johnson-at-yossi-milo
Rebecca Aldernet (b.1974) "In the Quiet Dark"
Oil, acrylics, collage, mixed media, pencil crayon on canvas
30 x 40 in
Japanese artist Mariko Kusumoto creates delicate fabric sculptures influenced by natural forms
https://mymodernmet.com/mariko-kusumoto-textile-sculpture/
#WomensArt 🇯🇵
Artist Helga Stentzel's clothesline animals #WomensArt 🐄
Artist Helga Stentzel's clothesline animals #WomensArt 🐄
Japanese artist Mariko Kusumoto creates delicate fabric sculptures influenced by natural forms
https://mymodernmet.com/mariko-kusumoto-textile-sculpture/
#WomensArt 🇯🇵
East Window, St Martin-in-the-Field, London, 2008 by Iranian artist Shirazeh Houshiary
East Window, St Martin-in-the-Field, London, 2008 by Iranian artist Shirazeh Houshiary
Laurie Campbell "Woman in Red Coat" Canadian urban landscape artist (oil on canvas, 2023) 🇨🇦
Laurie Campbell "Woman in Red Coat" Canadian urban landscape artist (oil on canvas, 2023) 🇨🇦
"Everything changes, nothing is lost". Ephemeral artwork; a stone mandala and photography by land artist Katie Griesar.
📷 Long Cove Point, Chamberlain, Maine
"Everything changes, nothing is lost". Ephemeral artwork; a stone mandala and photography by land artist Katie Griesar.
📷 Long Cove Point, Chamberlain, Maine
"Little Owl' by Harriet Mead, English wildlife artist specialising in metal sculptures #WomensArt #owl 🦉
"Little Owl' by Harriet Mead, English wildlife artist specialising in metal sculptures #WomensArt #owl 🦉
"As happened to the artworks of many historic female artists, this work by French painter Marie-Denise Villers -Young Woman Drawing, 1801 - was attributed to a male artist before being truely recognised..."
The work was initially misattributed to Jacques-Louis David, a renowned male artist of the time, highlighting historical biases in the art world.