• An interesting take on abstract art. The latter portrays the beauty of the blur and superpostition of exquisite color. This italian artist is ahead of her time by using color and the uncertaintity to portray elemts of our everyday life.
  • Blend Cota Hand Signed Oil on Canvas Framed - 24 x 36 Fire Treated Resin Finish
    Store:  BCota
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  • "Blend Cota Hand Signed Oil on Canvas 48x60 Fire Treated Resin Finish 3" Black Shadow Box with Metallic Finish Certificate of Authenticity Ready to Hang Blend Cota's painting is a combination of aggressive brushstroke textures with soft details that merges into a vibrant movement of colorful expression.This unique Blend Cota original has undergone a proprietary fire treated resin finish, that gives this work of art a vibrancy where colors and the subject come to life. Disclaimer: This is a photo of the one and only Blend Cota physical original painting, displayed here for viewing purposes."
  • 20" x 24" oil painting Contact us for the price. 1-888-383-4858 info@newportbrushstrokes.com
  • Artist: Redina Tili Medium: Oil on Canvas Size: 20x24 Year: 2017 Series: XIX
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  • Artist: Redina Tili Medium: Oil on Canvas Size: 20"/24" Year Created: 2017 Edition: XX *The artwork includes a certificate of authenticity (COA).*
    Store:  DAVWATTS
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  • This symbolistic painting is a self-portrait executed in 1872 by the Swiss symbolist artist Arnold Böcklin. He first exhibited at the Kunstverein München in the same year, establishing his reputation in Munich’s artistic community. It is now in the Alte Nationalgalerie in Berlin. 

    Painted in Munich, the painting depicts a bearded Böcklin stalked by a personification of death playing a single-stringed violin in an intimation of his mortality. Death and mortality are a repeating theme in several of Böcklin’s works, including Plague, two versions of War, and five versions of Isle of the Dead.

    According to Alma Mahler, the wife of the composer Gustav Mahler, her husband was “under the spell” of Böcklin’s self-portrait when writing the scherzo movement of his Fourth Symphony.

  • Judith Beheading Holofernes is a baroque-style painting of the biblical episode by Caravaggio, in which the widow Judith stayed with the Assyrian general Holofernes in his tent after a banquet and then decapitated him after he passed out drunk. The exhibition catalog (Skira, 2018, p88) also cites biographer artist Giovanni Baglione’s account that Genoa banker Ottavio Costa commissioned the work.

    The deuterocanonical Book of Judith tells how Judith served her people by seducing and pleasuring Holofernes, the Syrian General. Judith gets Holofernes drunk, then seizes her sword and slays him: “Approaching to his bed, she took hold of the hair of his head” (Judith 13:7–8).

    Currently located at the Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Antica at Palazzo Barberini, Rome, the artwork is the most pivotal part of the Book of Judith. It depicts a socially liberated woman who punishes masculine wrongdoing.”

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