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Olga and Sergey Kamennoy


Sergey ed Olga sono la coppia di artisti che lavorano insieme sotto lo pseudonimo di "KAMU Sergey and Olga" per più di 15 anni.
- Sergey Kamennoy / Сергей Каменной è nato nel 1959 a Kharkov, Ucraina.
Ha studiato alla scuola d'arte, frequentando l'Accademia di Belle Arti di Kharkov dal 1978-1983.
E' membro dell'Unione degli Artisti di Ucraina dal 1988.
Durante gli studi si rese conto che era daltonico, anche se lui eccelso in disegno e incisione.
Ha costruito una carriera di successo nella stesura.

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Dora Meeson (1869-1955)

Dora Meeson was an Australian artist and an elected member of the Royal Institute of Oil Painters in London, England.
She was a member of the British Artists' Suffrage League.
Although born in Melbourne, Dora Meeson moved with her family to London as a child, and commenced her art studies at the Slade School.
In 1895 she returned to the antipodes and spent two years at Melbourne's National Gallery School, where she met her future husband, George Coates, before returning again to Europe just as Coates won the Travelling Scholarship.


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Raoul Dufy | Still Life


Raoul Dufy (1877-1953) was a French Fauvist painter, brother of Jean Dufy.
He developed a colorful, decorative style that became fashionable for designs of ceramics and textiles, as well as decorative schemes for public buildings.
He is noted for scenes of open-air social events.
He was also a draftsman, printmaker, book illustrator, scenic designer, a designer of furniture, and a planner of public spaces.

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Fatima Tomaeva-Gabellini, 1967 | Figurative painter


Born in the city of Vladikavkaz, Russia, Fatima Tomaeva-Gabellini / Фатима Томаева - is a talented Osetinian artist.
From 1986-1991 she studied and graduated from the Art School of Vladikavkaz. Later she studied art in Italy.
Since 1998 Tomaeva Gabellini lives and works in Italy.
Multifaceted talent, ranging from fifteenth-century Russian Orthodox iconography to more modern shapes of the female body in the most diverse attitudes and plastic movements.

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The Ladies of the Renaissance

Although women artists have been involved in the making of art throughout history, their work, when compared to that of their male counterparts, has been often obfuscated, overlooked and undervalued.
Many of their works have been wrongly attributed to men artists.
Renaissance Europe was not a promising place for female artists to emerge. Women were expected to marry and have children, and those who did work were not welcomed into male-dominated professions.
In fact women were unable to even receive formal art training (a cornerstone of which was the study of the figure).


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Plautilla Nelli | The first Woman painter of Florence

Sister Plautilla Nelli (1524-1588) was a self-taught nun-artist and the first-known female Renaissance painter of Florence.
She was a nun of the Dominican convent of St. Catherine of Siena located in Piazza San Marco, Florence, and was heavily influenced by the teachings of Savonarola and by the artwork of Fra Bartolomeo.

Plautilla Nelli | The Last Supper, 1570 (detail) | Museo di Santa Maria Novella, Florence

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Fatima Ronquillo, 1976 | Magic realism painter


Fatima Ronquillo is a self-taught painter who combines old master techniques with a playful modern sensibility to create a world where art history meets with imagined characters from literature, theatre and opera.

Biography
Born in Pampanga, Philippines, Fatima Ronquillo emigrated as a child to the United States in 1987 where her family settled in San Antonio, Texas.
She began exhibiting her work from the age of fifteen and is now widely collected in the United States and internationally.

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Levina Teerlinc (1510-1576) | Renaissance miniaturist


Levina Teerlinc was a Flemish Renaissance miniaturist who served as a painter to the English court of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth I.
She was the most important miniaturist at the English court between Hans Holbein the Younger and Nicholas Hilliard.
Her father, Simon Bening was a renowned book illuminator and miniature painter of the Ghent-Bruges school and probably trained her as a manuscript painter. She may have worked in her father's workshop before her marriage.