Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

  1. Anuncio

    relacionado con: Ambrose McEvoy
  2. We Carry a Wide Selection Of Posters To Complement Every Home and Decor Style. Enhance Your Space With Posters In Animal, Food, Love, Horror and More Themes.

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Arthur Ambrose McEvoy ARA (12 August 1877 – 4 January 1927) was an English artist. His early works are landscapes and interiors with figures, in a style influenced by James McNeill Whistler. Later he gained success as a portrait painter, mainly of women and often in watercolour.

  2. Arthur Ambrose McEvoy (12 August 1877 – 4 January 1927) was an English artist. His early works are landscapes and interiors with figures, in a style influenced by James McNeill Whistler. Later he gained success as a portrait painter, mainly of women and often in watercolour.

  3. Described as a modern Gainsborough and tenderly memorialised in The Times as ‘a painter of mood and temperament’ the day after his death, Ambrose McEvoy should have been remembered as one of the most successful British portrait painters of the early twentieth century.

  4. Ambrose McEvoy. Nació en en Crudwell, Wiltshire, Reino Unido, el 12 agosto 1878. Sus primeras obras fueron fundamentalmente paisajes e interiores con figuras, aunque a partir de 1910, se dedicó casi en exclusiva al retrato, siendo uno de los grandes maestros británicos de dicha especialidad. Practicó el óleo y la acuarela.

  5. Arthur Ambrose McEvoy (12 August 1877 – 4 January 1927) was an English artist. His early works are landscapes and interiors with figures, in a style influenced by James McNeill Whistler. Later he gained success as a portrait painter, mainly of women and often in watercolour. ID: 1846089

  6. 13 de nov. de 2020 · Divine People: first biography of Ambrose McEvoy reveals how portrait artist became a darling of London and New York society a century ago. The typescript of Eric Chilston's book, based on...

  7. Ambrose McEvoy (1878-1927) was a British painter of landscapes, interiors and portraits, and a member of the New English Art Club. He also sat for several portraits by his contemporaries, including Augustus John and William Orpen.