Whistler’s work can be divided into four periods. The first was a research period in which the artist was influenced by the Realism of Gustave Courbet and by Japanese art. Whistler then discovered his own originality in the Nocturnes and the Cremorne Gardens series, thereby coming into conflict with the academics who wanted a work of art to tell a story. When he painted the portrait of his mother, Whistler entitled it Arrangement in Gray and Black, and this is symbolic of his aesthetic theories.
Amedeo Modigliani
Klaus H. Carl, Frances Alexander, Jane Rogoyska, Guillaume Apollinaire
bookWassily Kandinsky and artworks
Mikhaïl Guerman
bookPablo Picasso and artworks
Victoria Charles
bookPicasso
Jp. A. Calosse
bookRembrandt
Klaus Carl
bookPollock
Donald Wigal
bookJames McNeill Whistler
Patrick Chaleyssin
bookTamara de Lempicka: Grandi Maestri
Gerry Souter
bookPaul Cézanne 1839-1906
Anna Barskaya, Yevgenia Georgievskaya
bookGeorgia O'Keeffe
Janet Souter
bookMiguel Ángel
Eugène Müntz
bookAnthony van Dyck
Victoria Charles
book