• The Making of a Masterpiece: Vincent van Gogh’s Starry Night
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    The Making of a Masterpiece: Vincent van Gogh’s Starry Night

    The Starry Night is considered to be Vincent van Gogh’s masterpiece, painted while he was a patient in a mental asylum at Saint-Rémy-de-Provence. The swirling composition of the sky and the melancholic blue color palette, coupled with Van Gogh’s tragic history, have caused the artwork to become one of the most recognizable paintings of all time. There is so much…

  • The Story Behind Roy Lichtenstein’s Brushstrokes Series
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    The Story Behind Roy Lichtenstein’s Brushstrokes Series

    Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein’s Brushstrokes series was a subversive, sly nod at the abstract expressionism movement, as well as a tribute to artists such as Jackson Pollock. The first piece of the series, Brushstrokes, took its inspiration from a panel in a comic book, like many of Lichtenstein’s artworks. Lichtenstein explained, “You think it’s a picture of a brush stroke.…

  • New York Style in Piet Mondrian’s Broadway Boogie Woogie
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    New York Style in Piet Mondrian’s Broadway Boogie Woogie

    Abstract artist Piet Mondrian didn’t visit New York until he was 68 years old, but his love for the city infused his art with new life and took it beyond the simplistic lines and forms of his previous compositions. Broadway Boogie Woogie may adhere to the primary colors and rectangular shapes that Mondrian is known for, but the fast-paced, exciting…

  • Pablo Picasso’s Blue Period and The Old Guitarist
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    Pablo Picasso’s Blue Period and The Old Guitarist

    The Old Guitarist is one of the most haunting pieces created during Pablo Picasso’s blue period. Depicting a haggard, blind guitar player, the piece encompasses Picasso’s fascination with the societal outcasts he saw when traveling through Spain. Picasso’s blue period was heralded as a turning point in his career, demonstrating his capability of capturing raw emotion and preserving it on…

  • The Story Behind Renoir’s La Parisienne
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    The Story Behind Renoir’s La Parisienne

    La Parisienne is an 1874 portrait by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. Although it may appear to be a rather traditional portrait, featuring actress Henriette Henriot, it was in fact a nod to the burgeoning modernity of Paris’s cultural scene. Critics praised Renoir for his technical detail, particularly in Henriot’s dress. Singulart explores the reaction to La Parisienne, as well as the artwork’s…

  • Behind Frida Kahlo’s Self Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird
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    Behind Frida Kahlo’s Self Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird

    Self Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird is among Frida Kahlo’s most celebrated self-portraits. Kahlo was well known for the autobiographical elements in her work, and Self Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird is rich with symbols from her Mexican heritage. Singulart reveals the symbolism portrayed in this iconic work, as well as exploring Kahlo’s self portraits and how her…

  • The Water Lily Pond of Claude Monet
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    The Water Lily Pond of Claude Monet

    The Water Lily Pond is part of Claude Monet’s much loved Water Lilies series. Painted over a thirty year period, The Water Lily Pond features the idyllic Giverny countryside that inspired Monet to paint up until just before his death, even when both his eyes were severely affected by cataracts. The series encapsulates the open air environment that Monet made…

  • Paul Klee’s Red Balloon, the Bauhaus, and Degenerate Art
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    Paul Klee’s Red Balloon, the Bauhaus, and Degenerate Art

    Paul Klee is one of the most influential artists in the modern art movement. While he took inspiration from cubism, expressionism and surrealism, his art cannot be confined to any one genre. Red Balloon is one of his most well-known pieces: a whimsical, geometric painting which displays Klee’s talent for color theory. Singulart investigates Red Balloon as an example of…

  • Rembrandt’s Night Watch and The Dutch Golden Age
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    Rembrandt’s Night Watch and The Dutch Golden Age

    The Night Watch is one of the most celebrated works of Dutch artist Rembrandt van Rijn. The colossal piece, measuring approximately twelve feet by fourteen feet, is one of the most famous pieces from the Dutch Golden Age. The complex artwork is a masterpiece of chiaroscuro, the use of strong contrasts between light and dark, depicting a group of civic…

  • The Son of Man: Magritte’s Famous Contribution to Surrealism
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    The Son of Man: Magritte’s Famous Contribution to Surrealism

    The Son of Man is a 1964 surrealist self-portrait by Belgian artist René Magritte. As one of the most recognizable paintings of the surrealist movement, the painting is both simplistic and ambiguous, with the meaning left to the interpretation of the viewer. Singulart will be exploring the theories behind the meaning of The Son of Man, Magritte’s history with surrealism,…