Painting (Series: Euro - 539)
Euro ( Still_Life_Fruit_Food )
Other paintings available ( Still_Life_Fruit_Food 540, 631, 635, 636 ):
- Still_Life_Fruit_Food 540
- Still_Life_Fruit_Food 631
- Still_Life_Fruit_Food 635
- Still_Life_Fruit_Food 636
Vin as modernisme; in Austria as Sezessionstil (secession style); and in Germany as Jugendstil (youth style). These diverse names reflect the widespread adoption of the movement, which had centers in major cities all over Europe—Paris and Nancy in France; Darmstadt and Munich in Germany; Brussels, Belgium; Glasgow, Scotland; Barcelona, Spain; Vienna, Austria; Prague, Czech Republic; and Budapest, Hungary. Art nouveau in Britain evolved opainted in flat, bright colors that shows a traditionally clothed Israeli family at home, set against a landscape of fields and trees. Later work is more freely executed, as exemplified by In Galilee (1971, Collection of House Rubin, Israel), in which a deeper and more luminous landscape gives a sense of mystery and calm. Impressionism.
Ividers between panes of glass), doors, and fences use ironwork in an elegant linear or geometric manner. This seemingly simple design offers a strong contrast to the ornate architecture based on past styles that was typical of the time. Art nouveau architecture in Brussels flourished in the work of Belgian designers Victor Horta and Henry van de Velde. As did Mackintosh in Glasgow, these Belgian designers sought to create a new stygn to all aspects of living—from architecture to silverware to painting. In this integrated approach art nouveau had its deepest influence. A variety of ensuing movements continued to explore integrated design, including De Stijl, a Dutch design movement in the 1920s, and the German Bauhaus school in the 1920s and 1930s. Although the stylistic element.
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