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Henri Matisse (French, 1869–1954)
Purple Robe and Anemones, 1937
Although classically trained at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, Henri Matisse (1869–1954) quickly rejected traditional illusionistic representation in favor of flat areas of vivid col
Charley Harper (American, 1922–2007)
Isle Royale National Park, Michigan, 1979
Before Charley Harper (American, 1922–2007) had painted animals of all kinds, from all continents, he was exploring the foothills near his family’s farm in rural West Virgi
Charley Harper (American, 1922–2007)
The Sierra Range, 1990
Charley Harper (American, 1922—2007) designed more than fifty posters for various natural areas, parks, and conservation organizations, each colorful work celebrating a special part of our na
Detroit Industry, north wall (mural detail), 1932–1933, by Diego Rivera (Mexican, 1886–1957)
After years of rubbing elbows with the artistic avant-garde of Montparnasse, Diego Rivera returned to Mexico soon after a very different encounter with the Ren
The Alpine Northwest by Charley Harper (American, 1922–2007)
Charley Harper (1922–2007) has delighted art and animal lovers with his engaging paintings for more than sixty years. His distinctive use of simple shapes, geometric patterns, and vivid color
A Resounding Success, 2012
Festooned with felines, this sweet scene is the sort of quirky, happy art Pat Scott is known for. Her paintings often feature our furry or feathered companions, whether in quaint domestic portraits or fanciful creations, such
Trochilidae – Kolibris, from Kunstformen der Natur (Leipzig and Vienna: Bibliographisches Institut, 1904), plate 99
When German biologist Ernst Haeckel published Art Forms in Nature, it encapsulated his response to Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Spe
Sailboats on the Seine at Petit-Gennevilliers, 1874
In the latter part of the nineteenth century, Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926) was one of a daring group of French painters who turned away from academic tradition and developed a fresh, spontaneous s
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (French, 1841–1919) is one of the most well-loved painters in the history of modern art. After exhibiting with the Impressionists in the 1870s and early 1880s, Renoir went on to paint for three more decades, focusing on the bucolic l
Vincent van Gogh painted over seventy-five works of art in the last three months of his life, in the rural French town of Auvers-sur-Oise. Though much of his time there was spent capturing the countryside’s hills and wheat fields, Bank of the Oise at Auve
A lone butterfly is attracted to the hot colors of summer blooms in Pat Scott’s bright floral painting. Her artworks often feature flora and fauna imagined with a gentle touch.
Scott attended Ealing Art College in London and earned a degree in Fine Art a
Intensity of color is a hallmark of Rosalind Wise’s artworks. Here, pink echinacea and yellow black-eyed Susans stand out in a meadow of blue and green foliage and wild grasses. The inspiration for this large oil painting came from a prairie meadow at the
While it is clear that artist Robert Bissell (American, b. England 1952) derives his inspiration from the animal world, his paintings are not simply portraits of bears and other creatures. They are allegories for the challenges and discoveries all living
Robert Bissell grew up on a farm in England, surrounded by the beauty and magic of the natural world. In his paintings, he loves to playfully imagine the lives and experiences of wild animals, such as the gentle encounter portrayed here. When he isn’t pai
Surely you can see the saluki, but can you spot the shuttlecock, the stein, or the sifaka? Mike Wilks writes, “There is a sketch of a squinch, a selection of shells (not all from the sea), a siamang settled on a seat, a sponge to be studied, and sundry st
Eric Wert’s Arrangement is an elegant floral riot, a hyperrealistic cascade of texture, shadow, and saturated color. It represents what the painter is best known for: visually intense, sensually charged still lifes that are anything but still.
Wert beg
Monet began to paint the lily pond in his garden at Giverny while he was completing his series of Rouen Cathedral. In the last decades of his life, his prized water garden and the footbridge he built over it became his most important—and eventually only—s
Alfred Joseph Casson (Canadian, 1898–1992) began his art career as a freelance commercial designer in Toronto, where he met and worked with Franklin Carmichael. The two shared an interest in watercolours and went on sketching trips together, and would lat
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