DALMAU, Lluis The Transfiguration On the Road Hill at L-Hermitage,Pontoise Coteau de L St.john the Baptist in the Wilderness Laura Battiferri dd Memphis landscape snow Jeune femme voilee -40- Morada Nature morte,pommes,bouteille et dossier Autumnal Sunset The Lion Hunter View of Delft sr Harriet Howard, Duchess of Sutherland Yawning Apprentice Riverbank Sherman The Flute Player Dancer with a Fan View of Naples from the Heights of Vesuv Market Woman with Fruits, Vegetables and Unwelcome Confidence -23- Merrillville Detail of Cupid with eyes bandaged,shoot The Virgin - Child Surrounded by Four An Mountainburg figural art Pastoral Landscape -17- Cabaret performers Marguerite Gachet in the Garden -nn04- Portrait of the Merchant Georg Gisze Griggsville The Adoration of the Shepherds Woman with Porcelain Vase The Lute Player ghjgy Dessau Dedham life object still Congerville
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Percy Gray:
1869-1952
was an American painter. Gray was born into a San Francisco family endowed with a broad literary and artistic background. He studied under Arthur Frank Mathews at the San Francisco School of Design and later under William Merritt Chase. While he had some early Impressionistic tendencies, his primary expression was under the Tonalism Mathews had brought back from Paris. He is known for his extraction of beauty from the Northern California landscape. Alexander Gray, Percy's father, was born in England, but found his way to a successful insurance business in San Francisco. As the byproduct of a childhood illness, Percy realized he had talents in art. From 1886 to 1888 he attended the California School of Design, then led by Mathews. From there he went on to become a newspaper illustrator, obtaining a job with the New York Journal. In New York he also studied at the Art Students League. He was dispatched from New York to cover the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, but decided to remain in his native city where he would then take up his painting career. Gray's first pieces, headland seascapes, were exhibited in 1907; soon thereafter he addressed in watercolor eucalyptus groves and fields of California wildflowers. These subjects would become signatures of his work. Originally Gray's works were oils; however, he eventually developed an allergy to oil paints, and therefore switched to using watercolors as his primary medium. [1] From early on the critics marvelled at his ability to infuse realistic depictions of nature with a mystical and poetic quality. He was clearly applying the precepts of his mentor William Merritt Chase in exaggeration of light and color. From 1912 to 1923 Gray lived in Burlingame, California about twenty miles south of San Francisco, while keeping his studio in the city itself. At the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition he won a bronze medal for his watercolor Out of the Desert, Oregon. Having been a bachelor for 53 years, Gray surprised his friends by marrying. He and his bride moved to the Bonificio Adobe in Monterey, where seascapes and cypress dominated his later works.
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