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Elizabeth Street 10b is a stunning example of the Jugendstil style for which the buildings designed by Mikhail Eisenstein are known. The façade of this apartment building is built of brown stone…
Contributor:
Mikhail Eisenstein
Places:
Riga, Russian Empire (Riga, Latvia)
Date:
1903
Subjects:
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New York exemplifies the precisionist, futurist style favored by Lozowick in the 1920s. Like works by other precisionist artists, this lithograph reduces the elements of a cityscape into simple…
Contributor:
Louis Lozowick
Places:
New York City, United States of America
Date:
1925–1926
Categories:
Public Access
Image
The Church of St. Elizabeth, located in Bratislava (today in Slovakia), was designed by Ödön Lechner in the Hungarian Secession (art nouveau) style. It is called the Blue Church because of its blue…
Contributor:
Ödön Lechner
Places:
Bratislava, Austro-Hungarian Empire (Bratislava, Slovakia)
Date:
1913
Subjects:
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Late in his career, Guston turned from abstract expressionism to figurative art, creating iconoclastic, allegorical paintings. Moon is a combination of still-life, self-portrait, and landscape. In the…
Contributor:
Philip Guston
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1979
Categories:
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Freed deliberately designed the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum to create a sense of disorientation and alienation, even terror, in keeping with the museum’s subject matter. Though it is not based on a…
Contributor:
James Ingo Freed
Places:
Washington, United States of America
Date:
1993
Categories:
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This scene in a bomb shelter during World War I is characterized by the empathy and intimacy with which many of Amy Julia Drucker’s London paintings were imbued. The children stand out amid the masses…
Contributor:
Amy Julia Drucker
Places:
London, United Kingdom
Date:
1916