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It's starting to get warm out so the seaside's on my mind! In the latest episode we visit Appledore on the Isles of Shoals with American painter Childe Hassam. This group of islands off the coast of New Hampshire and Maine was a long-time vacation fave for this Boston artist. We'll find out how he fused the color and energy of artists like Claude Monet and Camille Pissaro with uniquely American settings like this stunning rocky New England shoreline. And the ruckus he and some of his fellow painters started to create a brand-new kind of American art! Transcript is available at https://alonglookpodcast.com/appledore
Smuttynose Island is home to a horrible double murder that took place long ago. Surrounding islands also have their own haunted tales and resident spirits as well! EPISODE CREDITS AND LINKS: The cover photo for this episode is not my own image. I found it on Wikimedia Commons. Childe Hassam's painting Poppies, Isles of Shoals, from 1891. Hanging at the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. Childe Hassam This file is licensed under the Creative CommonsAttribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unportedlicense. Public domain Intro song courtesy of the my friend, the lovely Bobby Mackey PIXIBAY COPYRIGHT FREE SOUNDS AND MUSIC: Snake Moon Ominous Padded Tension 2 Burn Down This Evil House - Epic Dark Horror Soundtrack Six Feet Under - Dark Ambient Music Suspense | Detective | Horror Time's Up Ghost Town Nightmares
In today's Word Power episode, we'll talk about one of the most powerful artistic collaborations in American history between Celia Thaxter and Childe Hassam, and we're going to learn 10 new words in context. Practice and make sure you make the words you're going to learn part of your active vocabulary bank on https://englishpluspodcast.com/celia-thaxter-and-childe-hassam-word-power/Access all the exclusive premium episodes and content on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/dannyballanThe Potter Discussion: Harry Potter, Fantastic Beasts and the Wizarding World FandomThe Potter Discussion is the ultimate Harry Potter podcast, giving you weekly...Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the show
Carmen Abad, profesora de la Universidad de Zaragoza, comenta algunas de las obras 'desayunológicas' más importantes del siglo XX. En esta segunda parte trata el color y las formas de Fernando Botero, el realismo frío de Dale Kennington, el deje decimonónico de Childe Hassam y la maestría de Vari Caramés al captar figuras desenfocadas. Un reportaje de la sección 'Desayunología' del programa 'De buenas a primeras'.
Carmen Abad, profesora de la Universidad de Zaragoza, comenta algunas de las obras 'desayunológicas' más importantes del siglo XX. En esta segunda parte trata el color y las formas de Fernando Botero, el realismo frío de Dale Kennington, el deje decimonónico de Childe Hassam y la maestría de Vari Caramés al captar figuras desenfocadas. Un reportaje de la sección 'Desayunología' del programa 'De buenas a primeras'.
TERcets is a literary podcast by The Ekphrastic Review. Listen to your host, Brian Salmons, read three pieces selected from our website, ekphrastic.net. This episode features poetry by three of our Fantastic Ekhrastic awardees: Ryan Rowland, Jean L. Kreiling, and Ruth Bavetta. The Ekphrastic Review is an online journal devoted entirely to writing inspired by visual art. Our objective is to promote ekphrastic writing, promote art appreciation, and experience how the two strengthen each other and bring enrichment to every facet of life. We want to inspire more ekphrastic writing and promote the best in ekphrasis far and wide. Theme music is by Judadi - https://soundcloud.com/judadi - specifically, songs from his "Earlyworks" - https://archive.org/search.php?query=farr+earlyworks. The other music is from the Dole, The Aperion Project, and Mister Drey. The cover art is "A New Year's Nocturne" by Childe Hassam (1892)
A prolific painter and a foremost American Impressionist, Childe Hassam may be most important in his role as a bridge between American art and the Impressionist art of Europe. He was a leader in introducing Impressionism to America and remained committed to it. Artist Victoria Chick discusses the life and work of American impressionist Childe Hassam (1859-1935). Read her article on him here: https://blendradioandtv.com/listing/american-impressionist-childe-hassam/Music on this episode is ‘Clouds in Advance' from the ‘Parting Is' album by guitarist Jon Durant. www.JonDurant.com
January 19, 2016 at the Boston Athenæum. In this talk, leading American art specialist Erica E. Hirshler will share excerpts of her vivid account of one of Boston's best-loved paintings, Childe Hassam’s “At Dusk (Boston Common at Twilight)”. She will discuss with audience members the context of Childe Hassam's 1880s city scene. With its rosy rust tones, intimate familial vignette, and quiet expanse of snow-laden park, today “At Dusk” seems to encourage reflection and represent a decidedly old-fashioned city. Yet Hirshler will reveal the ways in which the painting visually signaled the emerging modern city, from subtleties about women's place in the urban landscape to the uproarious clang of the streetcars that would have been heard on the busiest block in Boston. She will discuss her carefully researched and elegantly presented book, which offers a new perspective to those already acquainted with the painting as well as an evocative look at a singular moment in Boston history.
Broadcast originally aired June, 2013.Rockland County has a strong connection to the event that brought avant-garde art to New York in 1913 - The Armory Show. Clare Sheridan interviews Marilyn Kushner about the the importance of the Armory show and the roles that Rocklanders played in organizing the original Armory exhibition. Marilyn Kushner, PhD is co-curator of the exhibition at the New York Historical Society entitled: The Armory Show at 100.In addition to being the co-curator of this exhibition, Dr. Marilyn Kushner is Curator and Head of the Department of Prints, Photographs and Architectural Collections at the New York Historical Society in Manhattan. Her Co-Curator for the Armory Show at 100 is Kimberly Orcutt, Curator of American Art at the Henry Luce Foundation.The 1913 Armory Show, held in New York City, introduced the American public to European avant-garde painting and sculpture and the public sensation and the responses to the show represented a watershed in the history of American art. The 1913 Armory exhibition included works by such well-known European modernists as Paul Cezanne, Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso and Paul Gauguin, as well as leaders of American art such as Davies, Childe Hassam, along with the early work by such budding modernists as Charles Sheeler, Marsden Hartley and Stuart Davis.To learn more about the upcoming exhibition at the New York Historical Society which opens October 11, 2013 and will extend until February 23, 2014 visit nyhistory.org/exhibitions/armory-show-at-100The interview originally aired 6/17/13.Listen to Crossroads of Rockland History locally on the third Monday of every month on WRCR 1300AM or stream it on your computer at www.WRCR.com.www.RocklandHistory.org
From Homer to Hopper: American Watercolor Masterworks from the Currier Museum of Art
From Homer to Hopper: American Watercolor Masterworks from the Currier Museum of Art
Portrait of Mrs. Robert Henri August 1914 Size: 24 in. x 20 in. (60.9 cm x 50.8 cm) Gift of Mrs. George Heyneman, 1959:7 Robert Henri, 1865–1929 Robert Henri studied at both the Académie Julian and the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris and at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Though Thomas Eakins was no longer teaching at the Academy when Henri arrived, Eakins was immensely influential for Henri, who regarded him as the superior portrait painter in the United States and followed Eakins’s bluntly realist style. This painting of Robert Henri’s second wife, Marjorie Organ Henri, was given by the artist to Alice Klauber, who studied with Henri in Spain in 1907. Klauber invited Henri to San Diego in 1914, and he assisted her with the organization of an exhibition of American painting for the 1915 Panama-California Exposition, which was held in what became Balboa Park. The exhibition brought the work of George Bellows, William Glackens, Childe Hassam, John Sloan, and Henri to San Diego.
Exhibition curator Susan Behrends Frank highlights Washington Arch, Spring by painter Childe Hassam.
Exhibition curator Susan Behrends Frank highlights Washington Arch, Spring by painter Childe Hassam.