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Hindu Art | Ancient Origins


Hinduism, one of the great religions of the world, has a long and rich history of depicting the divine in art. Originating in India in remote antiquity, it is a polytheistic system with a myriad of gods and goddesses.
The challenge for artists was not a shortage of subject matter, but rather how to give form to beings that by their very natures are formless. Relying mainly on sacred religious texts wherein the exploits of the gods and goddesses are told and retold, certain tales and episodes became favorites for illustration, and standard iconographies were established for specific deities.

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Antoine Bourdelle | Expressionist sculptor


Antoine Bourdelle (30 October 1861 - 1 October 1929), born Émile-Antoine Bordelles, was an influential and prolific French sculptor**, painter and teacher.
His studio became the Musée Bourdelle, an art museum dedicated to his work, located at 18, rue Antoine Bourdelle, in the 15th arrondissement of Paris, France.
Bourdelle was born at Montauban, Tarn-et-Garonne. He left school at the age of 13 to work as a wood carver in his father's cabinet making shop.

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Jan Steen | Baroque Era painter


Jan Steen, in full Jan Havickszoon Steen, (born c. 1625, Leiden, Netherlands - died February 3, 1679, Leiden), Dutch painter** of genre, or everyday, scenes, often lively interiors bearing a moralizing theme.
Steen is unique among leading 17th-century Dutch painters** for his humour; he has often been compared to the French comic playwright Molière, his contemporary, and indeed both men treated life as a vast comedy of manners.

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John Arthur Lomax | Genre painter


John Arthur Lomax was an British** genre painter, born in Manchester. He studied in Stuttgart and at the Munich Academy, but returned to Manchester and later relocated to London.
The artist’s subjects were mainly historical genre of the 17th and 18th Centuries, especially of the Civil War period, often with a dramatic or sentimental theme.
Titles at the Royal Academy include “Thoughts of Christmas”, “An Old Master” and “Flaw in the Title”.

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Remy Daza Rojas, 1955 | Figurative painter

Remy Daza Rojas is a Bolivian painter, born in Cochabamba, Bolivia. From 1978-1981 he studied at the Ernesto de la Cárcova School of Fine Arts in Buenos Aires, Argentina and practiced painting from a young age, along with Gíldaro Antezana, Ricardo Pérez Alcalá, and Vladimir Rojas.
His paintings are made with a skillful technical handling, in realism in which the human figure becomes the protagonist.
The color and, above all, the light are worked very skillfully creating expressive forms, full of harmonious sensuality and that tend to touch certain symbolism or incorporate surreal elements.

Remy Daza Rojas | Bolivian Figurative painter

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Quinten Massys | Northern Renaissance painter

Quinten Massys, Massys also spelled Matsys, Metsys, or Messys, (born c. 1465/66, Leuven, Brabant [now in Belgium] - died 1530, Antwerp), Flemish artist, the first important painter of the Antwerp school.
Trained as a blacksmith in his native Leuven, Massys is said to have studied painting after falling in love with an artist’s daughter. In 1491 he went to Antwerp and was admitted into the painters’ guild.


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Wolfgang Kossuth (1947-2009) | Figurative sculptor


Wolfgang Alexander Kossuth was born in Pfronten, Germany. He is a painter, a sculptor, a violinist and an orchestra leader and he dedicated all hos life to art, join the passion for the music with the figurative arts one.
His artworks portray important people of the musical, literally and ballet background. He prefers sculpture because with it he expresses himself better. The human being is always the centre of the composition.

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Pieter Brueghel the Elder

Pieter Bruegel the Elder, also spelled Brueghel or Breughel, (1525-1569), the greatest Flemish painter of the 16th century, whose landscapes and vigorous, often witty scenes of peasant life are particularly renowned.
Since Bruegel signed and dated many of his works, his artistic evolution can be traced from the early landscapes, in which he shows affinity with the Flemish 16th-century landscape tradition, to his last works, which are Italianate.


He exerted a strong influence on painting in the Low Countries, and through his sons Jan and Pieter he became the ancestor of a dynasty of painters that survived into the 18th century.