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Sixty Famous Artists

List of Artists

Click on a name to find out a little about the artist.
Josef Albers
Thomas Hart Benton
Gian Lorenzo Bernini
Umberto Boccioni
Sandro Botticelli
Rosa Bonheur
Mary Cassatt
Paul Cézanne
John Constable
Gustave Courbet
Salvador Dalí
Jaques-Louis David
Eugène Delacroix
Donatello
Albrecht Dürer
M. C. Escher
Etienne Maurice Falconet
Daniel Chester French
Casper David Friedrich
Buckminster Fuller
Frank Gehry
Francisco Goya
Christian Jank
Thomas Jefferson
Wassily Kandinsky
Koko the Gorilla
Leonardo da Vinci
Kazimir Malevich
Edouard Manet
Henri Matisse
Michelangelo
Robert Mills
Piet Mondrian
Claude Monet
Henry Moore
Edvard Munch
Isamu Noguchi
Georgia O'Keefe
Frederick Law Olmsted
Pablo Picasso
Jackson Pollock
Raphael
Rembrandt van Rijn
Frederic Remington
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Norman Rockwell
Auguste Rodin
Peter Paul Rubens
John Singer Sargent
Georges Seurat
J. M. W. Turner
Jørn Utzon
Vincent van Gogh
Diego Velázquez
Andy Warhol
Jean-Antoine Watteau
James McNeill Whistler
Grant Wood
Christopher Wren
Frank Lloyd Wright


Josef Albers 1888-1976

Albers was a Modern Non-Objective painter who spent most of his time painting colored squares, one inside another.
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Thomas Hart Benton 1889-1975

One of the most famous modern American painters, Benton produced vivid murals of Midwestern life that still adorn some public buildings.
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Gian Lorenzo Bernini 1598-1680

Bernini was a Baroque painter, sculptor, and architect. He was renowned for his expressive statues of people in action, including saints and mythological figures.
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Umberto Boccioni 1882-1916

One of the most important Futurists, Boccioni was a painter and sculptor. His abstract artwork portrayed a strange, fast-paced future where machines and people are sometimes hard to tell apart.
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Sandro Botticelli 1445-1510

Botticelli was a famous Renaissance painter who often painted scenes from Greco-Roman mythology. His works have the serenity typical of the Renaissance, but lack the sense of depth that many other Renaissance paintings have.
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Rosa Bonheur 1822-1899

Bonheur was one of very few women to make a living at painting before the twentieth century. When she painted a picture of a horse show, she had to dress up as a man to get in! Bonheur often worked with animals, which she painted in realistic detail.
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Mary Cassatt 1844-1926

Mary Cassatt was an American painter who settled in Paris and became life long friends with the Impressionist painter Edward Degas, who strongly influenced her work. She is well known for her paintings of children and domestic scenes.
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Paul Cézanne 1839-1906

Like the Impressionists, Cézanne painted mostly calm, realistic scenes with blurry details and vivid colors. Because he painted sharper outlines than the Impressionists, and slightly distorted shapes, he is considered a Post-Impressionist painter.
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John Constable 1776-1837

Constable is best known for his attractive, realistic paintings of landscapes and clouds.
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Gustave Courbet 1819-1877

Usually considered the founder of Realist painting, Courbet believed that painting should honestly reflect what the artist really saw - not just the appearance of a scene, but its feeling as well. He was frequently accused of being arrogant and cynical.
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Salvador Dalí 1904-1989

Dali was the best known Surrealist artist. He painted, and sometimes sculpted, bizarre dreamlike images. The most famous one is sometimes called "Melting Clocks".
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Jaques-Louis David 1748-1825

David was by far the most important of the Neo-Classical painters. His paintings brought back the Renaissance ideals of clarity, balance, and sharp perspective, and added dramatic action and bright color. David supported the French Revolution, and his artwork included both Classical and political themes. He was the founder of the pompous Empire style of art.
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Eugène Delacroix 1798-1863

Another politically inspired French painter was Delacroix. His paintings were darker and more chaotic than David's, and showed explicit violence and suffering.
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Donatello 1386-1466

An important sculptor and artist of the early Renaissance, Donatello became famous for his graceful statue of David and also for making one of the first equestrian (horse with rider) statues since Roman times.
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Albrecht Dürer 1471-1528

Dürer was a versatile artist of the Northern Renaissance who produced a great number of woodcuts, engravings, drawings, and paintings in both color and black and white. In addition to portraits, landscapes, religious subjects, and animals, he created some bizarre images that look like a mixture of the Middle Ages and science fiction.
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Maurits Cornelis Escher 1898-1972

Escher was a graphic artist who specialized in creating optical illusions and impossible perspectives. Most of his works were black-and-white woodcuts or lithographs.
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Etienne Maurice Falconet 1716-1791

A famous French Rococo sculptor, Falconet was perhaps best known for his bronze statue of Peter the Great on a rearing horse. Many of his other works were destroyed during the French Revolution.
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Daniel Chester French 1850-1931

This American sculptor is famous for the statue of Abraham Lincoln at the Lincoln Memorial.
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Casper David Friedrich 1774-1840

Friedrich was one of the leading Romantic painters. His landscapes were not charming, but rather awe-inspiring, and often showed human figures as insignificant against the majesty and power of nature.
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Buckminster Fuller 1895-1983

As one of the most original thinkers of the Twentieth Century, Buckminster Fuller invented three-wheeled cars, a new way of mapping the globe, and new kinds of buildings, including the geodesic dome. He also wrote many books and was one of the first proponents of recycling.
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Frank Gehry 1929-?

Among architect Frank Gehry's many strange, twisted-looking buildings, the most famous is the Guggenheim Bilbao Museum in Spain, which looks a little bit like a huge metal boat.
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Francisco Goya 1746-1828

Unlike many other Romantic painters, Goya painted few landscapes (though he painted many portraits). Many of his paintings were dark and morbid, depicting such things as executions.
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Christian Jank 1833-1888

An otherwise obscure architect, Jank designed a famous castle in the Alps for Mad King Ludwig of Bavaria. That castle would later serve as a model for many "fairy tale" castles in movies and fiction.
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Thomas Jefferson 1743-1826

Although better known for his political achievements, Jefferson was also a skillful Neoclassical architect who designed several well-known buildings in a modified Greco-Roman style.
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Wassily Kandinsky 1866-1944

Kandinsky was one of the pioneers of Non-Objective art. His canvases were colorful, energetic, and sometimes complex but usually contained no recognizable images.
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Koko the Gorilla 1971-?

Koko is a captive gorilla who has been taught to use sign language and to paint. Her works are simple splashes of color - a little like those of some human painters.
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Leonardo da Vinci 1452-1519

One of the great minds of the Renaissance, da Vinci was an inventor, architect, sculptor, anatomist, astronomer, writer, musician, and engineer, but he is perhaps best remembered for his paintings. Orderly, graceful, and realistic, these are a fine example of high Renaissance art. One of them, "The Last Supper", is badly deteriorated because da Vinci used an experimental kind of paint that he had invented.
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Kazimir Malevich 1878-1935

The pioneer of geometric abstract art, he is best known for his use of sharp, straight lines and angles - some of his paintings contained nothing but geometric shapes.
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Edouard Manet 1832-1883

Manet generally painted images of ordinary scenes with realistic proportions, lighting and color, but with a slightly soft-focused technique similar to the Impressionists who followed him.
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Henri Matisse 1869-1954

The leading Fauvist painter, Matisse produced distorted, strangely colored images of ordinary subjects, without much detail or perspective.
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Michelangelo 1475-1564

In addition to being the most famous sculptor of the Renaissance, Michelangelo was a talented painter and architect. His paintings of Biblical scenes on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, his statue of David, the dome of St. Peter's Basilica, and the Pietà - a statue of Mary holding Jesus' dead body - are among his most famous creations.
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Robert Mills 1781-1855

American Neoclassical architect Mills is best known for designing the Washington Monument. Along with Thomas Jefferson he was one of the most important leaders of the dignified Federal style in architecture.
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Piet Mondrian 1872-1944

Although Mondrian painted in many different Objective styles in the early part of his career, he is mainly known for his later works which consist entirely of simple red, yellow, and blue shapes (usually squares) in an irregular grid of straight lines (usually black) on a white background.
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Claude Monet 1840-1926

Monet was the founder of Impressionism. His paintings, mostly of landscapes and tranquil outdoor scenes, have a soft-focused look with blurry outlines, gentle lighting, and harmonious colors.
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Henry Moore 1898-1986

Moore's many large statues have a rounded, half-melted look to them. Not all of them are truly Non-Objective but none have much detail. Many have holes and hollow spaces, which were intended as part of the visual effect.
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Edvard Munch 1863-1944

J
Munch's paintings are mostly morbid, such as the luridly-colored "The Scream" for which he is famous. They are Objective, but not very realistic, with forcefully painted, distorted figures, simple coloration, and little detail.
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Isamu Noguchi 1904-1988

A Japanese-American, Noguchi designed sculptures, parks, gardens, and even furniture in America, Japan, and elsewhere. His sculptures were elegant abstracts; one of them doubles as a playground slide!
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Georgia O'Keefe 1887-1986

Georgia O'Keefe was a famous Surrealist painter. Many of her paintings were of flowers, but they were painted in a flowing, dream-like way with brighter-than-life colors. She also painted other objects - often animal skulls, bones, and shells - with simple yet strange backgrounds.
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Frederick Law Olmsted 1822-1903

Landscape designer Olmsted was responsible for many parks in the United States, including Central Park in New York City, and also for many college campuses and the grounds of some private estates such as the Biltmore.
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Pablo Picasso 1881-1973

Picasso was the founder of Cubism, a style of art in which figures and objects are greatly distorted and broken up into geometrical components with sharp boundaries. Perspective is also distorted, and lighting and color are simplified. Cubism is still Objective art, though, because the figures and objects are still quite recognizable.
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Jackson Pollock 1912-1956

Like many Non-Objective painters, Pollock started off making Objective art (recognizable images of real things) but is known only for his purely Non-Objective paintings. His favorite technique was to drip the paint onto a canvas on the floor.
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Raphael 1483-1520

Raphael was the most famous Renaissance painter after Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo. His paintings show the balance, harmony, clarity, and realistic perspective that are characteristic of the Renaissance. One of the most famous depicts a fictional encounter between Plato and Aristotle in "The School of Athens".
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Rembrandt van Rijn 1607-1669

Dutch painter Rembrandt's style resembles that of the Renaissance, but with the dramatic lighting effects of the Baroque period and without the "posed" appearance of much Renaissance (and Neoclassical) art. Ironically, one of his best known pieces was kept for years in a smoky room and became so darkened with soot that people started calling it "The Night Watch" - even though the original scene was broad daylight. Yet Rembrandt's masterful use of lighting is still visible underneath the soot.
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Frederic Remington 1861-1909

In painting and sculpture, Remington depicted the Old West of America. His realistic artwork helped to shape twentieth century ideas about the legendary last decades of cowboys and Indians.
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Pierre-Auguste Renoir 1841-1919

Like his friend and fellow Impressionist Claude Monet, Renoir painted using soft outlines with expert use of color and lighting. Unlike many other Impressionists, Renoir usually included people in his paintings of ordinary scenes.
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Norman Rockwell 1894-1978

American painter Rockwell, an expert realistic painter, is famous for his many cover illustrations for The Saturday Evening Post, which portrayed everyday American life in a sentimental yet humorous way.
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Auguste Rodin 1840-1917

Perhaps the most important modern sculptor, Rodin created remarkably life-like images of human beings in natural, dynamic poses, charged with emotion. Even the seated statue "The Thinker" is powerfully expressive, conveying the sense of someone who is totally absorbed in thought but might leap into action at any instant.
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Peter Paul Rubens 1577-1640

Rubens was a Baroque painter known for the energy and drama of his paintings. His paintings of voluptuous women have given us the word "Rubenesque", but he also painted many religious, historical, and vigorous action scenes along with portraits and landscapes.
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John Singer Sargent 1856-1925

Sargent was a great Realistic portrait painter; some of his works can still be seen in the Biltmore in North Carolina.
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Georges Seurat 1859-1891

Seurat's paintings were somewhat similar to the Impressionists, but he developed the novel technique called "Pointillism" - painting with millions of tiny dots instead of brush strokes - which made them more precisely controlled and gave them a unique texture.
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Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775-1851

A Romantic painter, Turner created nautical scenes showing the immense power of the sea, as well as other impressive portrayals of nature's unpredictable strength.
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Jørn Utzon 1918-?

Utzon is the architect of the world-famous Sydney Opera House, with its unique superstructure that resembles sails full of wind.
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Vincent van Gogh 1853-1890

The later work of van Gogh, who was perhaps the best of the early Expressionist painters, is distinguished by his forceful brush strokes, vivid imagination, and often melancholy or sinister images. Even in his earlier Post-Impressionist period, van Gogh could make a vase of sunflowers look gloomy.
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Diego Velázquez 1599-1660

A typical and influential Baroque painter, Velázquez developed techniques to add a sense of spatiousness to his canvases. He painted many portraits, and went against the usual practice by not being any more flattering to royalty than to street bums.
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Andy Warhol 1928-1987

Warhol was one of the founders of Pop Art. He produced a great number of images of popular every day objects, such as soup cans, and even films. Once he made a movie which was simply eight hours of someone sleeping! He is famous for saying, "In the future everyone will be famous for 15 minutes."
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Jean-Antoine Watteau 1684-1721

Watteau painted charming imaginary scenes in a gentle, playful Rococo style with soft outlines and colors.
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James McNeill Whistler 1834-1903

Whistler was a Realist painter who specialized in scenes and portraits with what he considered harmonious combinations of colors, such as his famous portrait of his mother wearing a black dress in a gray room.
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Grant Wood 1891-1942

Although Wood created many images of Midwestern life, he is really known only for his painting "American Gothic", which is one of the most widely parodied images in American culture.
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Sir Christopher Wren 1632-1723

Wren designed a large number of English buildings, mostly churches, in a style that blended Renaissance and Gothic architecture.
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Frank Lloyd Wright 1867-1959

One of the most original American architects, Wright designed buildings with unusual shapes and very strong (often horizontal) lines; they were intended to fit harmoniously into their surroundings.
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