#modernart #arthistory #pointillism #postimpressionism #artgallery #artmuseum #potterdayart #divisionism
I don’t about you, but if you’re going to say lust is a crime, this looks more like an enticement than a deterrent. The Punishment of Lust, by Giovanni Segantini.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Segantini#/media/File%3AGiovanni_Segantini_-_The_Punishment_of_Lust_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
#arthistory
#segantini
#divisionism
#divisionist
#painting
#italianart
#lust
Paul Signac: portrait of the anarchist art critic, gallery director and writer Félix Fénéon (1890)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C3%A9lix_F%C3%A9n%C3%A9on
#art #French #pointillism neo-/post-#impressionism #neoimpressionism #postimpressionism #divisionism #urban #landscape #Normandy #France #MontSaintMichel #anarchist #autodidact #anarchism #painter
Paul Signac, 'Mont Saint-Michel, setting sun' (1897)
#art #French #pointillism neo-/post-#impressionism #neoimpressionism #postimpressionism #divisionism #urban #landscape #Normandy #France #MontSaintMichel #anarchist #autodidact #anarchism #painter
Italian divisionists don’t get the attention that is lavished on French artists who used many of the same techniques, but I could stare at this stunning painting by Gaetano Previati (1852-1920) all day long. Dance of the Hours, 1899.
https://www.arcadiandreams.org/previati-dance-of-the-hours/#:~:text=Milan%2C%20Fondazione%2DCariplo,performed%20in%20Milan%20in%201876.
#arthistory
#divisionism
#divisionists
#previati
#italianart
#ItalianPainting
Gaetano Previati: The Dance of the Hours – 1899 Milan, Fondazione-Cariplo The immediate inspiration for the painting was a short ballet *The Dance of the Hours* which appeared at the end of the third act of the opera La Gioconda, composed by Amilcare Ponchielli. It was first performed in Milan in 1876. But the iconography […]