Painting
Impressive Artwork by Paul Gauguin
French post-impressionist artist Paul Gauguin experimented with colors and the Synthetist style, setting his paintings apart from Impressionism, but was not recognized for this until after his death. Toward the end of his life, Gauguin spent time in French Polynesia and created artworks of the people and landscapes. He formed a friendship with Dutch artists Vincent and Theo Van Gogh. The artist had an impact on the French avant-garde and contemporary art, and as a painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramist, and writer, Gauguin played a significant role in the Symbolism movement, which followed post-impressionism.
By Rasma Raisters16 days ago in Art
The Day the Silence Learned to Speak
On the edge of a quiet town called Marrowell stood a clock tower that had not spoken in twelve years. People still checked the time by it, of course. The hands moved faithfully, circling the face with stubborn loyalty, but the bell—once the town’s heartbeat—had gone silent after a storm cracked its iron tongue. The mayor promised repairs. The years promised forgetting. And forgetting, as it often does, won.
By Yasir khan16 days ago in Art
Some Christmas Cards Don't Show the Correct Story of Jesus' Birth
If you want to know the real story about the birth of Jesus, read what is in the Bible, specifically in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke. Do not rely on what you see on some Christmas cards. Card companies mix and match scenes surrounding Jesus' birth and put them all on the same card. Some people were not with Jesus when He was a baby in a manger, as is shown on the Nativity scene on some Christmas cards.
By Margaret Minnicks21 days ago in Art
Best Artwork by Edgar Degas
French Impressionist artist Hilaire-Germain-Edgar de Gas was born in Paris and is popularly known as Edgar Degas. He was fascinated with dancers and dance classes and created artworks depicting these. Throughout his career the artist created about 626 works of art.
By Rasma Raisters24 days ago in Art
William Rotsaert
By Brian D'Ambrosio From Bruges to Santa Fe, a painter translates memory, motion, and myth through color and curiosity. William Rotsaert paints in the language of color — heatwaves and highways, red-orange skies that shimmer with motion, and the flicker of gasoline flames under a 1957 Chevy Bel Air. His canvases pulse between abstraction and realism, fusing the discipline of the old Flemish masters with the freedom of the American West.
By Brian D'Ambrosio 25 days ago in Art
A Modern African Tarot
The sixth card in A Modern African Tarot shifts the journey from personal authority to public influence. Where IV EMPEROR represents legacy and leadership, V PASTOR explores spiritual power in the modern age—how faith, charisma, and community converge in one figure. This card reimagines the traditional Hierophant through the lens of African religious life, media visibility, and social aspiration.
By Vongani Bandi27 days ago in Art
Best Artwork by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
French Impressionist artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir was one of the most prominent painters of the Impressionist art movement. The artist learned a lot viewing the paintings of artists Camille Pissarro and Edouard Manet. He was one of the founding members of the annual Impressionist exhibition.
By Rasma Raisters27 days ago in Art











