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Kay Boyce | Figurative painter

British painter and illustrator Kay Boyce was born in Sheffield.
As a child she would often spend hours at a time drawing on rolls of wallpaper; this was the beginning of her passion for art.
Kay studied illustration at Wrexham College before working as a freelance illustrator. She produced editorial work for Women s Weekly, Bella, My Weekly, Sunday Express and Woman's Own.
Her illustration work has carried her through to major book publishers such as Hodder and Staughton, Wadsworth Romantics, Mills and Boon and Mandarin.

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Izumi Kogahara / 古河原泉, 1979 | Abstract painter

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Izumi Kogahara / 川原泉 is an Japanese painter🎨, born in Utsunomiya, Tochigi Prefecture, Japan. In 2000 she obtained her artistic diploma from the University with honors.
Artist statement
"I would like to describe human beings’ original and complex inner mind with my own “words” (the way of presentation) by feeling energy from them.
Either they are objective way or abstract way, I continue to describe them with same belief".

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Vincent van Gogh | Our life is a pilgrim's progress | The Letters

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The Letters of Vincent van Gogh🎨 refers to a collection of 903 surviving letters written (820) or received (83) by Vincent van Gogh.
More than 650 of these were from Vincent to his brother Theo.
The collection also includes letters van Gogh wrote to his sister Wil and other relatives, as well as between artists such as Paul Gauguin, Anthon van Rappard and Émile Bernard.

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B. Prabha (1933-2001) | Abstract / Figurative painter

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B. Prabha was a major Indian artist who worked mainly in oil, in an instantly recognizable style. She is best known for graceful elongated figures of pensive rural women, with each canvas in a single dominant color. By the time of her death, her work had been shown in over 50 exhibitions, and is in some important collections, including India's National Gallery of Modern Art.
Prabha started working at a time when India had few women artists. She was deeply inspired by the work of seminal modernist Amrita Shergil. Prabha was moved by the lives of rural women, and over time, they became the main theme of her work.

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Hamish Blakely, 1968 | Flamenco Dancers

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The British painter Hamish Blakely explains: "Art in any form, in any media, can be so many things that it can be in danger of being too many.
It can be intellectual, conceptual and political, but I am steadfast in believing that Art is at its best when simply emotional. You see something and you are moved.
Before analysis or a full understanding, the viewer can just enjoy the emotional sensation".

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Henri Fantin-Latour | Still lifes

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Alongside his work as a portrait painter, Ignace Henri Jean Fantin-Latour (1836-1904) produced a large number of still lifes.
In the 1860s, these even played a major role in his career.
It was in fact in England, which he visited regularly, that Fantin-Latour found many enthusiasts for his paintings of flowers and fruit.
Purchases and commissions then followed, ensuring commercial success for the painter, which, until then, his other work had not provided.

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Hamish Blakely, 1968 | Figurative painter

British painter Hamish Blakely was born in Canterbury and developed an interest in art from an early age.
He recalls: "I was approximately seventeen and seeing the paintings up close, noticing the luxuriant, sometimes messy concoction of paint, the washes, the texture and nuance, spoke to me in a way that I found sacred and spellbinding. I just wanted to use paint and see where it would take me".

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Anton Dieffenbach (1831-1914) | Genre painter

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Anton Heinrich Dieffenbach was a German🎨 genre and landscape painter, noted for his portrayals of cute children.
He moved to Straßburg with his parents in 1840 and took lessons from a local artist named Charles Duhamel.
With Duhamel's recommendation, he was able to go to Paris and study with the sculptor James Pradier🎨.