• The Son of Man: Magritte’s Famous Contribution to Surrealism
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    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,…

  • Address Book: London
    Art news • Cities • Featured
    Address Book: London

    With the Affordable Art Fair Battersea starting next week, Singulart presents you with the best art in London, highlighting the city’s top museums rich in art and culture and known for their free or low cost entry. Come meet Singulart at Booth 16 at the fair and then discover the city’s renowned artistic treasures. From the works of modern mavericks…

  • 5 Minutes with Uzma Sultan
    Artists • Featured
    5 Minutes with Uzma Sultan

    In anticipation of her live painting session with Singulart at the Affordable Art Fair Battersea, we took five minutes with Pakistani artist Uzma Sultan to discover her multicultural influences and artistic practice. After growing up in Karachi, Pakistan, Sultan moved to London to study art and has since lived between London and Berlin, always returning to her home country to…

  • 5 Minutes with Alessandra Carloni
    Artists • Featured
    5 Minutes with Alessandra Carloni

    Alessandra Carloni is an emerging Italian painter from Rome whose love for comics and illustration as a kid inspired her to create her own imaginative and dreamlike paintings. On canvases and walls,  Carloni transports the viewer into new worlds through deep colors, rigid lines, and curious characters. Her acrylic and oil paintings range from figuration to surrealism, each scene rich…

  • Spatialism and The Slashed Canvases of Lucio Fontana
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured • Movements and techniques
    Spatialism and The Slashed Canvases of Lucio Fontana

    Lucio Fontana’s minimalist modern art has delighted and confused critics since he started producing his infamous slashed canvases in the 1940s. One of his most celebrated works Spatial Concept: Waiting consists of a single cut on a warm, brown-hued canvas. As the father of the spatialism concept, Fontana was at the helm of important developments in the modern art movement.…

  • Textile Art: From Ancient Tapestries to Modern Politics
    Art History • Movements and techniques
    Textile Art: From Ancient Tapestries to Modern Politics

    This week, Frieze art fair in London is featuring a series called Woven: a special exhibition that explores “textiles, weaving, and the legacies of colonialism” through the work of eight international textile-based artists. Textiles often are categorized somewhere between art and craft, and this has led to debates on its aesthetic value for centuries. To give you a brief history…

  • The Garden of Earthly Delights: 15th Century Surrealism of Hieronymus Bosch
    Art History • Artworks under the lens • Featured
    The Garden of Earthly Delights: 15th Century Surrealism of Hieronymus Bosch

    The Garden of Earthly Delights is a stunningly detailed triptych by Dutch artist Hieronymus Bosch. Fascinating, complex, and terrifying, The Garden of Earthly Delights is considered Bosch’s seminal piece. Singulart will be examining each panel of the triptych, as well as Bosch’s history and the various interpretations of his work.   Who was Hieronymus Bosch? Not much is known about Hieronymus…

  • Woman with a Hat: Matisse’s Transition to Fauvism
    Art History • Artworks under the lens
    Woman with a Hat: Matisse’s Transition to Fauvism

    Henri Matisse’s Woman with a Hat marks his stylistic transition to Fauvism and is an exemplary masterpiece of the movement. In this article, Singulart discusses the Woman with a Hat in the context of the Modern Master’s life and Fauvist period.  Who was Henri Matisse? Henri Matisse (1869-1954) was a French artist, renowned as a draughtsman, printmaker, sculptor and painter.…

  • Blue Nudes Series and the Last Stage of Matisse’s Career
    Art History • Artworks under the lens
    Blue Nudes Series and the Last Stage of Matisse’s Career

    Henri Matisse’s Blue Nudes is a series of four lithographs of nude female figures made using his cut-out technique in blue painted paper. The Blue Nudes exemplify the last stage of Matisse’s life and the culmination of his life-long artistic quest. In this article, Singulart examines the Blue Nudes and Matisse’s revolutionary cut-out technique and takes a closer look into…

  • Realism Art and Style: Everything You Need to Know
    Art History • Movements and techniques
    Realism Art and Style: Everything You Need to Know

    Realism art is traditionally used to describe the 19th century movement that used everyday scenes and people as subject matter, depicting them in a naturalistic style. Today the term is also used to describe works of art that are painted so realistically that they resemble a photograph. Realism Art: Origins in 19th Century France Realism as an artistic movement first…