Art History

  • The Colorful Life of Frida Kahlo and the Story Behind The Wounded Deer
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    The Colorful Life of Frida Kahlo and the Story Behind The Wounded Deer

    Frida Kahlo’s name has become synonymous with her striking, bold self-portraits. A celebrated Mexican artist, Kahlo used her life as inspiration for her art, resulting in deeply personal pieces like The Wounded Deer. In this article, Singulart explores the colorful life of Frida Kahlo, as well as the interpretations surrounding The Wounded Deer.  Who was Frida Kahlo? Frida Kahlo was…

  • The Chaotic Life of Caravaggio, Chiaroscuro, and The Cardsharps
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    The Chaotic Life of Caravaggio, Chiaroscuro, and The Cardsharps

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio led a turbulent life, consisting of murder charges, ambushes by knights, and a death that is shrouded in mystery to this day. He poured his passion into his artwork, producing realistic high renaissance pieces that had an incredible amount of detail. His use of light and dark contrast, or chiaroscuro, was incredibly influential to fellow artists…

  • Guernica: The History Behind Pablo Picasso’s Seminal Work
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    Guernica: The History Behind Pablo Picasso’s Seminal Work

    Guernica is not only a masterpiece of Pablo Picasso’s cubism, but it is also an important political statement, perhaps the most iconic anti-war image of the twentieth century. After he was commissioned to paint a mural for the Paris World Fair, Picasso eschewed the prompt of ‘technology’ and instead chose to shine a spotlight on the aftermath of the Guernica…

  • The Life of Vincent Van Gogh and Self Portrait (1889) Explained
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    The Life of Vincent Van Gogh and Self Portrait (1889) Explained

    Vincent Van Gogh painted a number of portraits throughout his artistic career, but this 1889 version, painted only months before his death, is one of the greatest. The undulating background, contrasted with the fixed, rigid expression on Van Gogh’s face, provides a fascinating contradiction. In this article, Singulart examines the life of Van Gogh, his passion for painting self-portraits, and…

  • The Myth Behind Raphael’s Triumph of Galatea
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    The Myth Behind Raphael’s Triumph of Galatea

    The Triumph of Galatea is a fresco by renaissance artist Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino, also known as Raphael. It depicts the character of Galatea, who appears in Greek mythology as a sea-nymph in love with a mortal. Raphael has immortalized the moment of Galatea’s apotheosis, when she becomes a being of the most divine level. The fresco is a testament…

  • The History of Sleeping Venus by Giorgione and Titian
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    The History of Sleeping Venus by Giorgione and Titian

    Sleeping Venus is a sensual, sumptuous artwork that is attributed both to Venetian artist Titian and his teacher, Giorgione. One of the first full-length female nudes ever painted in Venice, this portrayal of Venus has been called one of the most beautiful reclining nudes in existence. In this article, Singulart explores the art trope of the reclining nude, explains why…

  • 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
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    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
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    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…

  • 5 Famous Artworks as Halloween Costumes
    Art History • Art news • Famous faces
    5 Famous Artworks as Halloween Costumes

    The Halloween season is upon us and art lovers around the world have gotten creative with their inventive costumes. If you’re looking to dress up as a famous painter, look towards icons such as Frida Kahlo or Andy Warhol whose signature style can easily be recreated for this festive occasion. If you want to take your disguise to the next…