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AskMen.com July 2, 2003 William Sutton |
How To: Become An Art Connoisseur - Part II Find out who's responsible for defacing the Mona Lisa, who was seeing spots, who liked canned soup a little too much, and more. |
AskMen.com Nick Clarke |
Top 10: Art Museums Standing as shrines to the works that helped shape our society, art museums can be found in every major city around the globe. |
Smithsonian December 2006 Stephanie Dickey |
Rembrandt at 400 Astonishing brushwork, wrinkles-and-all honesty, deep compassion. What's the secret of his enduring genius? |
AskMen.com January 16, 2003 Peter Fueller |
Top 10: Museums Of The World There are thousands of museums around the world, many of which are worth visiting. However, you probably don't want to spend your entire vacation looking through endless collections of paintings and sculptures, created by artists you've never even heard of. You want the famous stuff, right? |
Reason August 2002 Charles Paul Freund |
Traces of Genius Is art sullied by technology? |
Smithsonian March 2007 Courtney Jordan |
Artists Behaving Badly Caravaggio isn't the only artist with a checkered past. Artists throughout history have led lives worthy of tabloid headlines: Benvenuto Cellini... Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec... Raphael... Paul Gauguin... etc. |
Smithsonian June 2006 Henry Adams |
Wyeth's World After seven decades, critics still differ over Andrew Wyeth's stature as an artist. A new exhibition stirs the debate. |
Smithsonian April 2006 Owen Edwards |
Refined Palette A palette thought to have been owned by James McNeill Whistler, the 19th-century American expatriate master, has been an object of special interest to scholars. |
Chemistry World September 30, 2015 Wei-lun Toh |
A veneer of Vermeer The woman taken in adultery was thought to have been painted by Johann Vermeer before scientific testing revealed it as a forgery. |
Chemistry World June 19, 2014 |
The colorful science Chemists and artists have been inspiring each other to more colorful heights for centuries. Philip Ball traces the development of paints and pigments. |
Smithsonian April 2007 William Zinsser |
Two Men and a Portrait One wondered how an artist brings paint to life. The American portrait painter Thomas S. Buechner showed him. |
Smithsonian January 2007 Arthur Lubow |
Americans in Paris In the late 19th century, the City of Light beckoned Whistler, Sargent, Cassatt and other young artists. As a new exhibition makes clear, what they experienced would transform American art. |
Smithsonian April 2007 Courtney Jordan |
Artist on the Rise Contemporary artist Maggie Michael shakes up abstract painting by giving control a chance. |
Wild West October 2007 Johnny D. Boggs |
Thomas Captures Osages In War Paint, Also Painted Hickok Vs. Tutt Missouri artist Andy Thomas has a way of making history come alive on his canvases, particularly the history of his own state. |
Reason July 2002 Charles Paul Freund |
This Magic Mona The medieval appeal of a modern icon. |
Chemistry World February 13, 2007 Henry Nicholls |
Raphael Revealed by Raman Spectroscopy Forensic and chemical scrutiny of flecks of paint from an unattributed painting lends weight to the idea it was a mock-up for one of Raphael's most famous Renaissance creations. |
Chemistry World September 4, 2014 Hayley Simon |
Lead 'soaps' behind iconic artwork damage uncovered Lead stannate, Pb 2SnO 4, has been identified as the culprit responsible for disfiguring masterpieces by Rembrandt, John Singer Sargent and Johannes Vermeer. |
Macworld September 17, 2007 Lesa Snider King |
Painter X Corel's Painter X (version 10.1) is truly the digital equivalent of a traditional art studio, and nowhere is that more apparent than in the new RealBristle Painting System -- a technology that allows you to see the bristles of each brush. |
Searcher Nov/Dec 2004 David Mattison |
Looking for Good Art Part 3: Glorious National Collections With an unimaginable wealth of art digitally accessible and preserved for us and future generations by art history institutions outside the U.S., the international Web of the Western art world is truly one of the most remarkable achievements of our digital age. Here links to directories and guides. |
Searcher September 2001 Mary Colette Wallace |
The Science and Art of Online Research in the Fine Arts: A Process Approach The optimum process requires understanding the function of the needed and given information before taking action... |
The Motley Fool April 15, 2005 Tim Hanson |
The da Vinci Investment Code Leonardo da Vinci often didn't finish his paintings or build the inventions he designed, but his vision was appreciated. |
Smithsonian October 2006 Peter Chew |
The Painter Who Hated Picasso Sporting artist Alfred Munnings loved horses, the English countryside and a good stiff drink. What he didn't like was modern art. |
Wired December 2005 Bijal P. Trivedi |
The Rembrandt Code Identifying true old masters - and spotting the fake paintings - is a rarefied art. Dan Rockmore wants to make it a science. |
Macworld January 17, 2006 Jeffery Battersby |
Painter Essentials 3.0 Entry-level painting application makes fine-art creation easy for amateurs. |
IDB America May 2003 Roger Hamilton |
Dreaming Mexico A new exhibit at the IDB explores a uniquely Mexican world of fantasy and illusion |
AskMen.com August 8, 2006 Ryan Weatherill |
Keep Up In A Contemporary Art Conversation Art is one of the more interesting status symbols around. Theoretically, it's made by poor individuals yearning to express themselves, and purchased by wealthy individuals. |
Science News May 13, 2006 |
Science Safari: The Mind of Leonardo This stunning online exhibit from the Institute and Museum of the History of Science in Florence, Italy, features the life and work of Leonardo da Vinci. |
Chemistry World September 7, 2011 Ned Stafford |
Analytical Techniques Employed in Art Forgery Case The trial of four people accused of running one of the biggest art forgery rings in post-war Germany has begun, with prosecutors expected to rely heavily on science-based testimony to make their case. |
Financial Advisor June 2012 Karen DeMasters |
A Different Attack Stephen P. O'Donnell is a martial arts visionary, a Marine and a newly born abstract painter. By profession, he's a financial planner. |
ifeminists June 16, 2009 Manfred F. Schieder |
Degrading Art "The art of any given period or culture is a faithful mirror of that culture's philosophy." |
ifeminists August 18, 2007 Julia Cuthbert |
When the Vanquished Paint the Pictures The same wars are portrayed very differently in these two books, Gardner's Art Through the Ages, and America: A Narrative History. One looks from a historical perspective, and the other from an art historical one. |
AskMen.com Stephanie Eldred |
Fine Living: Young Artists To Invest In Art can be one of the most enjoyable ways to invest your money. Here are some ground rules for art investment and artists to look out for. |
Wired July 20, 2009 Sonia Zjawinski |
Swank Up Your Facebook Page With a Hand-Painted Portrait What started as a painter's quest to hone his portrait skills quickly turned into a Facebook phenomenon. |
Smithsonian September 2005 Lawrence M. Small |
From the Secretary - New Faces of 2006 Artists, emerging and renowned alike, will vie to display their works in the National Portrait Gallery when it reopens next July. |
BusinessWeek June 5, 2006 Frederik Balfour |
China: Cultural Evolution Prices for contemporary works by Chinese artists have been skyrocketing as connoisseurs both domestically and abroad have been snapping them up. |
Chemistry World March 29, 2012 Philip Robinson |
X-ray vision uncovers hidden self portrait Scientists and art historians in Australia have uncovered a lost work of art by one of the country's most famous artists. But rather than lying neglected in a dusty attic, this work was hidden under nothing more than a layer of paint. |
Real Travel Adventures June 2006 Linda Fasteson |
Oosterdam Mediterranean Cruise This sun drenched playground of the rich and famous has been the setting for commerce, explorations, cultural exchange and conflict from ancient times. |
Reason November 2001 Charles Paul Freund |
Holding Water Technology gives creators new tools even as it reconfigures the eye of their beholders. We read images and their details differently... |
Salon.com February 11, 2002 John Glassie |
Oldest living surrealist tells all Dorothea Tanning, painter, sculptor, writer and wife of Max Ernst, counsels young artists: "Keep your eye on your inner world and keep away from ads, idiots and movie stars"... |
Smithsonian April 2006 Tessa DeCarlo |
A Gibson Girl in New Guinea Two Seattle women have retraced the intrepid travels of model and portrait artist Caroline Mytinger, who journeyed to the South Sea islands in the 1920s to capture "vanishing primitives" on canvas. |
Smithsonian March 2005 Kurt Repanshek |
Traces of a Lost People Who roamed the Colorado Plateau thousands of years ago? And what do their stunning paintings signify? |
Smithsonian July 2007 Cate Lineberry |
For Hire: Fine Art Appraiser Former Sotheby's paintings appraiser Nan Chisholm discusses her career. |