The Florentine sculptor Pasquale Romanelli achieved an international reputation for his finely carved mythological and biblical marble figures. Romanelli began his training at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence under Luigi Pampaloni but was soon taught by the foremost Tuscan neoclassical sculptor, Lorenzo Bartolini. Remaining in Bartolini’s favour, he went on to become his collaborator and, upon the master’s death in 1850, the successor of his studio. Romanelli’s mythological and allegorical compositions were highly prized by a cosmopolitan clientele, and he exhibited select models in Paris.
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Pasquale Romanelli | Ruth
Denise Henley | Portrait painter
Born in Guyana, South America, Denise Henley first realized her artistic passion at the tender age of eight. She spent much of her young life immersed in drawing.
As an adolescent, she moved to the United States to study art and after obtaining a B.A in Visual Arts, went on to pursue a career as an artist.
While she works in several mediums and subject-matters, her passion lies in capturing the beauty of the human figure. A constituent of realism, she continuously strives to perfect her drawing skills, believing it to be the backbone of the portrait process.
Balthus | Modern painter
Balthus, pseudonym of Balthazar Klossowski, also spelled Balthasar Klossowsky (born February 29, 1908, Paris, France - died February 18, 2001, La Rossinière, Switzerland), reclusive French painter who, in the midst of 20th-century avant-gardism, explored the traditional categories of European painting: the landscape, the still life, the subject painting, and the portrait.
He is best known for his controversial depictions of adolescent girls.
Eduard Gordeev | Impressionist Cityscape photographer
Eduard Gordeev /Эдуард Гордеев is a talented photographer who lives and works in St. Petersburg, Russia.
He creates artistic landscape photo series of his beloved city St. Petersburg.
These magnificent cityscape images look impressive and atmospheric with a bit of effect of acrylic paintings.
These urban streets seem drenched in mystery and rain.
His captures look as if they were acrylic paintings.
The reflections of city lights and all melting colors turn them into extraordinary pieces of art.
Vatican Light Show Calls Attention to Climate Change
Pope Francis inaugurated a special year of Mercy at the Vatican on Tuesday but fears of terrorism meant that the crowds in St Peter’s Square were much more modest than expected.
The Vatican had hoped that up to 100,000 people would take part in an open-air Mass in the huge Renaissance piazza, but in the end an estimated 40,000 people attended.
Pope Francis inaugurates special Year of Mercy.
Cornelia Hernes, 1979 | Classical Realist painter
Cornelia Hernes was born and raised in Norway until the age of twelve when her family moved to Africa where Cornelia went to boarding schools in Kenya and Tanzania. Much of her fascination with exploring the human condition through her paintings can be attributed to her early exposure to different cultures. Her work is centered on portraying and evoking a large scope of emotions, ultimately with the aim of celebrating life.
Maggie Taylor, 1961 | Digital Surrealist /Visionary painter
Maggie Taylor (born in Cleveland, Ohio) is an artist who works with digital images. She won the Santa Fe Center for Photography's Project Competition in 2004. Her work has been widely exhibited in the United States and Europe and is represented within the permanent collections of several galleries and museums. She is the third wife of American photographer, Jerry Uelsmann.
She produces prints by scanning objects into a computer using a flatbed scanner, then layering and manipulating these images using Adobe Photoshop into a surrealistic montage.
Julius Olsson | Seascape painter
Albert Julius Olsson (1 February 1864 - 7 September 1942) was a British maritime artist and keen yachtsman.
He was born in Islington, London, to a Swedish father and an English mother. Olsson cruised with his yacht most summers, and The Studio (an illustrated fine arts and decorative arts magazine published in London from 1893 until 1964) commented: 'He knows the way from the Scillies to the Isle of Wight as most men know their way to the nearest railway station'.
He exhibited a painting of Newlyn in 1887, and sold a painting at Newlyn in 1897.
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