You are likely to find exactly the mary san angelo you’re looking for on 1stDibs, as there is a broad range for sale. You can easily find an example made in the
contemporary style, while we also have 2
contemporary versions to choose from as well. Making the right choice when shopping for a mary san angelo may mean carefully reviewing examples of this item dating from different eras — you can find an early iteration of this piece from the 20th Century and a newer version made as recently as the 20th Century. On 1stDibs, the right mary san angelo is waiting for you and the choices span a range of colors that includes
blue,
brown,
gray and
orange. Finding an appealing mary san angelo — no matter the origin — is easy, but
Robert Beauchamp,
Lyle Ashton Harris,
Dwight Holmes,
Kelly Fearing and
Angelo Savelli each produced popular versions that are worth a look. Artworks like these — often created in
oil paint,
paint and
paper — can elevate any room of your home.
Mary San Angelo was born in 1915 in Port Arthur, TX. She was a student of Chester Snowden and studied at the Art League Houston in 1967. In 1971, she also studied at the Lowell Collins Art School in Houston. She has been a professional artist in Houston since 1968.
(Biography provided by
Reeves Antiques)
Emerging in 19th-century France, Impressionist art embraced loose brushwork and plein-air painting to respond to the movement of daily life. Although the pioneers of the Impressionist movement — Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Paul Cézanne, Berthe Morisot, Camille Pissarro, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir — are now household names, their work was a radical break with an art scene led and shaped by academic traditions for around two centuries. These academies had oversight of a curriculum that emphasized formal drawing, painting and sculpting techniques and historical themes.
The French Impressionists were influenced by a group of artists known as the Barbizon School, who painted what they witnessed in nature. The rejection of pieces by these artists and the later Impressionists from the salons culminated in a watershed 1874 exhibition in Paris that was staged outside of the juried systems. After a work of Monet’s was derided by a critic as an unfinished “impression,” the term was taken as a celebration of their shared interest in capturing fleeting moments as subject matter, whether the shifting weather on rural landscapes or the frenzy of an urban crowd. Rather than the exacting realism of the academic tradition, Impressionist paintings, sculptures, prints and drawings represented how an artist saw a world in motion.
Many Impressionist painters were inspired by the perspectives in imported Japanese prints alongside these shifts in European painting — Édouard Manet drew on ukiyo-e woodblock prints and depicted Japanese design in his Portrait of Émile Zola, for example. American artists such as Mary Cassatt and William Merritt Chase, who studied abroad, were impacted by the work of the French artists, and by the late 19th century American Impressionism had its own distinct aesthetics with painters responding to the rapid modernization of cities through quickly created works that were vivid with color and light.
Find a collection of authentic Impressionist art on 1stDibs.