148 search results for “The Owsley Moment”
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S02 E37 – William Henry Jackson – Marshall Pass, West Side – about 1881
This photographer used a process that required him to haul around dangerous chemicals and heavy cameras.
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S01 E27 – William James Glackens – Woman in Blue Dress – 1936
French Impressionism and urban realism combine to influence this vibrant American painting.
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S01 E26 – Thomas Eakins – Shad Fishing at Gloucester on the Delaware River – 1881
Technology and industry informs both subject matter and method in this work, created in the 1880s.
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S01 E25 – William Merritt Chase – Portrait of Mme. E. H. Bensel – 1912
A Hoosier art teacher manages to incorporate his love for travel with teaching.
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S01 E24 – George Inness – Golden Glow – 1880
Landscapes are more than just pretty pictures to hang in your living room; this painting shows their incredible ability to portray and evoke emotion.
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S01 E23 – Kurt Seligmann – Migrants – 1955
A work influenced by first-hand experience, often leaving a deep, direct effect on the creator’s inspiration and subject matter.
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S01 E22 – Lee Krasner – Right Bird Left – 1965
A break down of the composition of this enormous 70 x 136 inch rainbow of a painting.
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S01 E21 – Thomas Cole – Storm King of the Hudson – 1825-1827
Why and how this painter used art to express his concerns on the industrialization of the 19th century.
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S01 E20 – Harriet Whitney Frishmuth – Joy of the Waters – 1920 – & – Crest of the Wave – 1929
A look at a joyous sculpture created by one of the most recognizable members of the Philadelphia Ten.
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S01 E19 – Gorham Manufacturing Co – Ice Bowl and Spoon – designed 1870 made 1871
This work features an arctic scene so realistic, you can almost see your own breath.
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S01 E18 – Walter Dorwin Teague Sr. & Chester W. Crumrine (designers) produced by Eastman Kodak Co. – “Bantam Special” Camera – 1936
This early, easy to use, portable camera was so skillfully designed, it stands as a work of art in its own right.
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S01 E17 – Theodore Roszak – Invocation Variation #3 – 1959
A work that shows us how history and culture can influence such imposing and unique art.
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S01 E16 – Edgar Levy – Still Life (Self Portrait?) – 1939
An exploration of what happens when you blur the lines of genre in art, and the sorts of influences that might inspire such experimentation.
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S01 E15 – Frank Stella – Swan Engraving IV – 1982
This relief print from 1982 shows that you don’t need color to show multiple dimensions.
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S01 E14 – John Ottis Adams – In Poppyland – 1901
A look at a distinctively Hoosier impressionistic painting and a little insight about a group of Indiana painters who celebrated the beauty of their home state.
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S01 E13 – Julian Stanczak – Seeping Light II – 1972
DOMA remembers the life and career of Julian Stanczak, a master of Op Art who recently passed away.
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S01 E12 – Muncie Pottery – Tall Flower Vase – 1927-39
A look at the history of the local Muncie company that manufactured this vase and what makes each handmade version unique.
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S01 E11 – Robert Henri – Jimmie in Blue Jumper – 1920
New York in the ’20s, Urban Realism, The Ashcan School, and the rejection of academic technique — all that this week, in less than 90 seconds.
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S01 E10 – Vaclav Vytlacil – Still Life – 1939
We break down this abstract painting and learn about its creator’s influential art advocacy efforts.
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S01 E09 – Norman Bluhm – Oz – 1961
We’ll hear about what goes in to creating such a colossal and expressive painting as this one.