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Betty Ball Art

American
Betty Ball received her BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and has been working as a designer and fine artist ever since. She brings her design influences to work in fine art compositions capturing light and color in the world around her. Light is a key element of her work, and she creates art that is “observational, beautiful, sensuous and open to interpretation.” According to Ball, “Light defines what we see. Light’s purity and transcendent qualities are at the heart of my work.” Her artwork has been exhibited and collected throughout the US and Internationally in Hong Kong, Germany, Ireland, Spain and Denmark
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Artist: Betty Ball
Across Five Mile, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting
Across Five Mile, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting

Across Five Mile, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

Across Five Mile by Betty Ball is part of her Land and Sea series. It is Oil on Linen, 30x30. It is framed to 31.5 x 31.5 It is $2,675. It is a beautiful landscape and waterscape ...

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

Marguerite, Painting, White Flowers, Yellow, Mothers Day, Vase, Oil painting
Marguerite, Painting, White Flowers, Yellow, Mothers Day, Vase, Oil painting

Marguerite, Painting, White Flowers, Yellow, Mothers Day, Vase, Oil painting

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

Marguerite by Betty Ball is part of her Flower series. It is Oil on Linen, 12x12. It is framed to 13.5 x 13.5 It is $875. It is a beautiful group of flowers in a vase with water....

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

LA NOVA

Betty BallLA NOVA, 1949

$650Sale Price|48% Off

LA NOVA

By Betty Ball

Located in Los Angeles, CA

BETTY BALL "LA NOVA" PASTEL, SIGNED AMERICAN, DATED 1949 18 x 14 Inches

Category

1940s Futurist Betty Ball Art

Materials

Paper, Pastel

By The Water's Edge, Waterscape, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting
By The Water's Edge, Waterscape, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting

By The Water's Edge, Waterscape, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

By the Water's Edge by Betty Ball is part of her Land and Sea series. It is Oil on Linen, 36x36. It is framed to 37.5 x 37.5 It is $3.050. It is a beautiful landscape and watersc...

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

Anemone Spring, Oil Painting, White,  Flowers, Red, pink, Purple, Mothers Day
Anemone Spring, Oil Painting, White,  Flowers, Red, pink, Purple, Mothers Day

Anemone Spring, Oil Painting, White, Flowers, Red, pink, Purple, Mothers Day

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

Anemone Spring by Betty Ball is part of her Flower series. It is Oil on Linen, 12x12. It is framed to 13.5 x 13.5 It is $875. It is a beautiful group of colorful flowers in a vas...

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

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Antonio Mancini Italian 1920s Archived Pastel
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Important and very rare pastel drawing by one of the greatest Italian artists of the 20th century Antonio Mancini. It depicts in a "futurist" style a smiling young woman wrapped in a...

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"Wanderer 10" Architectural Assemblage in Collage Paper Textures and Paint Drips
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This piece, titled "Wanderer 10" is an original artwork by Seth Clark as part of his newest solo exhibition, "Passing Through" is made of collage, charcoal, pastel, acrylic, and gra...

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Artist: André Bertounesque (1937-2005) French Title: "Cut Iris Flower on A Windowsill" Medium: oil on board Size: 106cm x 85cm inclusive of frame Notes: Born in Saint Livrarde Franc...

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"The Meeting 30" Stylized House Painting with Chalk Detail by Seth Clark
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This piece, titled "The Meeting 30" is an original artwork by Seth Clark as part of his newest solo exhibition, "Passing Through". made of ink transfer, charcoal, pastel, acrylic, a...

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Home- 21st Century Contemporary Dutch Flower Still-life Painting with Roses
Home- 21st Century Contemporary Dutch Flower Still-life Painting with Roses

Home- 21st Century Contemporary Dutch Flower Still-life Painting with Roses

By Keimpe van der Kooi

Located in Nuenen, Noord Brabant

Keimpe van der Kooi Home 49 x 41 cm Framed: 54x 46 cm ( This frame is included) Oil on wood panel This Painting is made by Dutch Artist Keimpe van der Kooi. He likes to paint still...

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2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

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Bromeliad
Bromeliad

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$39,500

H 54 in W 78 in D 2 in

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By Hunt Slonem

Located in Lexington, KY

This early Hunt Slonem interior piece was painted in 1977. In 1980, they published an edition of 250 serigraphs of this painting. The large scale is a perfect focal point for any roo...

Category

1970s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

Arezzo Garden Square - Yellow Red Chrysanthemum Flowers Fruit Still Life, 2019
Arezzo Garden Square - Yellow Red Chrysanthemum Flowers Fruit Still Life, 2019

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By Melanie Parke

Located in Kent, CT

In this contemporary still life painting in oil on canvas, a clear glass vase holds bright lush chrysanthemum blossoms in coral red and pink beside orange and yellow fruits in a frui...

Category

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Materials

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Pepperonia

Alejandro RubioPepperonia, 2021

$1,400

H 20 in W 16 in

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Located in San Francisco, CA

Alejandro Rubio Pepperonia, 2021 Oil on canvas 20 x 16 inches Inspired by Uruguayan artist Joaquín Torres García, Alejandro Rubio’s meticulous attention to the formal elements of pa...

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"Musical Conductor" Amy Londoner, Ashcan School, Figurative Concert Scene
"Musical Conductor" Amy Londoner, Ashcan School, Figurative Concert Scene

"Musical Conductor" Amy Londoner, Ashcan School, Figurative Concert Scene

By Amy Londoner

Located in New York, NY

Amy Londoner Musical Conductor, 1922 Signed and dated lower right Pastel on paper Sight 18 x 23 inches Amy Londoner (April 12, 1875 – 1951) was an American painter who exhibited at the 1913 Armory Show. One of the first students of the Henri School of Art in 1909. Prior to the Armory Show of 1913, Amy Londoner and her classmates studied with "Ashcan" painter Robert Henri at the Henri School of Art in New York, N.Y. One notable oil painting, 'The Vase', was painted by both Henri and Londoner. Londoner was born in Lexington, Missouri on April 12, 1875. Her parents were Moses and Rebecca Londoner, who moved to Leadville, Colorado, by 1880. In 1899, Amy took responsibility for her father who had come to Los Angeles from Leadville and had mental issues. By 1900, Amy was living with her parents and sister, Blanche, in the vicinity of Leadville, Denver, Colorado. While little was written about her early life, Denver City directories indicated that nineteenth-century members of the family were merchants, with family ties to New York, N.Y. The family had a male servant. Londoner traveled with her mother to England in 1907 then shortly later, both returned to New York in 1909. Londoner was 34 years old at the time, and, according to standards of the day, should have married and raised a family long before. Instead, she enrolled as one of the first students at the Henri School of Art in 1909. At the Henri School, Londoner established friendships with Carl Sprinchorn (1887-1971), a young Swedish immigrant, and Edith Reynolds (1883-1964), daughter of wealthy industrialist family from Wilkes-Barre, PA. Londoner's correspondence, which often included references to Blanche, listed the sisters' primary address as the Hotel Endicott at 81st Street and Columbus Avenue, NYC. Other correspondence also reached Londoner in the city via Mrs. Theodore Bernstein at 252 West 74th Street; 102 West 73rd Street; and the Independent School of Art at 1947 Broadway. In 1911, Londoner vacationed at the Hotel Trexler in Atlantic City, NJ. As indicated by an undated photograph, Londoner also spent time with Edith Reynolds and Robert Henri at 'The Pines', the Reynolds family estate in Bear Creek, PA. Through her connections with the Henri School, Londoner entered progressive social and professional circles. Henri's admonition, phrased in the vocabulary of his historical time period, that one must become a "man" first and an artist second, attracted both male and female students to classes where development of unique personal styles, tailored to convey individual insights and experiences, was prized above the mastery of standardized, technical skill. Far from being dilettantes, women students at the Henri School were daring individuals willing to challenge tradition. As noted by former student Helen Appleton Read, "it was a mark of defiance,to join the radical Henri group." As Henri offered educational alternatives for women artists, he initiated exhibition opportunities for them as well. Troubled by the exclusion of work by younger artists from annual exhibitions at the National Academy of Design, Henri was instrumental in organizing the no-jury, no-prize Exhibition of Independent Artists in 1910. About half of the 103 artists included in the exhibition were or had been Henri students, while twenty of the twenty-six women exhibiting had studied with Henri. Among the exhibition's 631 pieces, nine were by Amy Londoner, including the notorious 'Lady with a Headache'. Similarly, fourteen of Henri's women students exhibited in the groundbreaking Armory Show of 1913, forming about eight percent of the American exhibitors and one-third of American women exhibitors. Of the nine documented works submitted by Londoner, five were rejected, while four pastels of Atlantic City beach scenes, including 'The Beach Umbrellas' now in the Remington Collection, were displayed. Following Henri's example, Londoner served as an art instructor for younger students at the Modern School, whose only requirement was to genuinely draw what they pleased. The work of dancer Isadora Duncan, another artist devoted to the ideals of a liberal education, was also lauded by the Modern School. Henri, who long admired Duncan and invited members of her troupe to model for his classes, wrote an appreciation of her for the Modern School journal in 1915. She was also the subject of Londoner's pastel Isadora Duncan and the Children: Praise Ye the Lord with Dance. In 1914, Londoner traveled to France to spend summer abroad, living at 99 rue Notre Dames des Champs, Paris, France. As the tenets of European modernism spread throughout the United States, Londoner showed regularly at venues which a new generation of artists considered increasingly passe, including the annual Society of Independent Artists' exhibitions between 1918 and 1934, and the Salons of America exhibition in 1922. Londoner also exhibited at the Morton Gallery, Opportunity Gallery, Leonard Clayton Gallery and Brownell-Lambertson Galleries in NYC. Her painting of a 'Blond Girl' was one of two works included in the College Art Associations Traveling Exhibition of 1929, which toured colleges across the country to broad acclaim. Londoner later in life suffered from illnesses then suffered a stroke which resulted in medical bills significantly mounting over the years that her old friends from the Henri School, including Carl Sprinchorn, Florence Dreyfous, Florence Barley, and Josephine Nivison Hopper, scrambled to raise funds and find suitable long-term care facilities for Londoner. Londoner later joined Reynolds in Bear Creek, PA. Always known for her keen wit, Londoner retained her humor and concern for her works even during her illness, noting that "if anything happens to the Endicott, I guess they will just throw them out." Sprinchorn and Reynolds, however, did not allow this to happen. In 1960, Londoner's paintings 'Amsterdam Avenue at 74th Street' and 'The Builders' were loaned by Reynolds to a show commemorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Exhibition of Independent Artists in 1910, presented at the Delaware Art Center, Wilmington, DE. In the late 80's, Francis William Remington, 'Bill Remington', of Bear Creek Village PA, along with his neighbor and artist Frances Anstett Brennan, both had profound admiration for Amy Londoner's art work and accomplishments as a woman who played a significant role in the Ashcan movement. Remington acquired a significant number of Londoner's artwork along with Frances Anstett Brenan that later was part of an exhibition of Londoner's artwork in April 15 of 2007, at the Hope Horn...

Category

1920s Ashcan School Betty Ball Art

Materials

Paper, Pastel

"Beach at Atlantic City, New Jersey" Amy Londoner, Ashcan School, Figurative
"Beach at Atlantic City, New Jersey" Amy Londoner, Ashcan School, Figurative

"Beach at Atlantic City, New Jersey" Amy Londoner, Ashcan School, Figurative

By Amy Londoner

Located in New York, NY

Amy Londoner Beach at Atlantic City, circa 1922 Signed lower right Pastel on paper Sight 23 x 18 inches Amy Londoner (April 12, 1875 – 1951) was an American painter who exhibited at the 1913 Armory Show. One of the first students of the Henri School of Art in 1909. Prior to the Armory Show of 1913, Amy Londoner and her classmates studied with "Ashcan" painter Robert Henri at the Henri School of Art in New York, N.Y. One notable oil painting, 'The Vase', was painted by both Henri and Londoner. Londoner was born in Lexington, Missouri on April 12, 1875. Her parents were Moses and Rebecca Londoner, who moved to Leadville, Colorado, by 1880. In 1899, Amy took responsibility for her father who had come to Los Angeles from Leadville and had mental issues. By 1900, Amy was living with her parents and sister, Blanche, in the vicinity of Leadville, Denver, Colorado. While little was written about her early life, Denver City directories indicated that nineteenth-century members of the family were merchants, with family ties to New York, N.Y. The family had a male servant. Londoner traveled with her mother to England in 1907 then shortly later, both returned to New York in 1909. Londoner was 34 years old at the time, and, according to standards of the day, should have married and raised a family long before. Instead, she enrolled as one of the first students at the Henri School of Art in 1909. At the Henri School, Londoner established friendships with Carl Sprinchorn (1887-1971), a young Swedish immigrant, and Edith Reynolds (1883-1964), daughter of wealthy industrialist family from Wilkes-Barre, PA. Londoner's correspondence, which often included references to Blanche, listed the sisters' primary address as the Hotel Endicott at 81st Street and Columbus Avenue, NYC. Other correspondence also reached Londoner in the city via Mrs. Theodore Bernstein at 252 West 74th Street; 102 West 73rd Street; and the Independent School of Art at 1947 Broadway. In 1911, Londoner vacationed at the Hotel Trexler in Atlantic City, NJ. As indicated by an undated photograph, Londoner also spent time with Edith Reynolds and Robert Henri at 'The Pines', the Reynolds family estate in Bear Creek, PA. Through her connections with the Henri School, Londoner entered progressive social and professional circles. Henri's admonition, phrased in the vocabulary of his historical time period, that one must become a "man" first and an artist second, attracted both male and female students to classes where development of unique personal styles, tailored to convey individual insights and experiences, was prized above the mastery of standardized, technical skill. Far from being dilettantes, women students at the Henri School were daring individuals willing to challenge tradition. As noted by former student Helen Appleton Read, "it was a mark of defiance,to join the radical Henri group." As Henri offered educational alternatives for women artists, he initiated exhibition opportunities for them as well. Troubled by the exclusion of work by younger artists from annual exhibitions at the National Academy of Design, Henri was instrumental in organizing the no-jury, no-prize Exhibition of Independent Artists in 1910. About half of the 103 artists included in the exhibition were or had been Henri students, while twenty of the twenty-six women exhibiting had studied with Henri. Among the exhibition's 631 pieces, nine were by Amy Londoner, including the notorious 'Lady with a Headache'. Similarly, fourteen of Henri's women students exhibited in the groundbreaking Armory Show of 1913, forming about eight percent of the American exhibitors and one-third of American women exhibitors. Of the nine documented works submitted by Londoner, five were rejected, while four pastels of Atlantic City beach scenes, including 'The Beach Umbrellas' now in the Remington Collection, were displayed. Following Henri's example, Londoner served as an art instructor for younger students at the Modern School, whose only requirement was to genuinely draw what they pleased. The work of dancer Isadora Duncan, another artist devoted to the ideals of a liberal education, was also lauded by the Modern School. Henri, who long admired Duncan and invited members of her troupe to model for his classes, wrote an appreciation of her for the Modern School journal in 1915. She was also the subject of Londoner's pastel Isadora Duncan and the Children: Praise Ye the Lord with Dance. In 1914, Londoner traveled to France to spend summer abroad, living at 99 rue Notre Dames des Champs, Paris, France. As the tenets of European modernism spread throughout the United States, Londoner showed regularly at venues which a new generation of artists considered increasingly passe, including the annual Society of Independent Artists' exhibitions between 1918 and 1934, and the Salons of America exhibition in 1922. Londoner also exhibited at the Morton Gallery, Opportunity Gallery, Leonard Clayton Gallery and Brownell-Lambertson Galleries in NYC. Her painting of a 'Blond Girl' was one of two works included in the College Art Associations Traveling Exhibition of 1929, which toured colleges across the country to broad acclaim. Londoner later in life suffered from illnesses then suffered a stroke which resulted in medical bills significantly mounting over the years that her old friends from the Henri School, including Carl Sprinchorn, Florence Dreyfous, Florence Barley, and Josephine Nivison Hopper, scrambled to raise funds and find suitable long-term care facilities for Londoner. Londoner later joined Reynolds in Bear Creek, PA. Always known for her keen wit, Londoner retained her humor and concern for her works even during her illness, noting that "if anything happens to the Endicott, I guess they will just throw them out." Sprinchorn and Reynolds, however, did not allow this to happen. In 1960, Londoner's paintings 'Amsterdam Avenue at 74th Street' and 'The Builders' were loaned by Reynolds to a show commemorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Exhibition of Independent Artists in 1910, presented at the Delaware Art Center, Wilmington, DE. In the late 80's, Francis William Remington, 'Bill Remington', of Bear Creek Village PA, along with his neighbor and artist Frances Anstett Brennan, both had profound admiration for Amy Londoner's art work and accomplishments as a woman who played a significant role in the Ashcan movement. Remington acquired a significant number of Londoner's artwork along with Frances Anstett Brenan that later was part of an exhibition of Londoner's artwork in April 15 of 2007, at the Hope Horn...

Category

1920s Ashcan School Betty Ball Art

Materials

Paper, Pastel

Watervale Yellow - Contemporary Still Life Red Flowers Kitchen Window, 2024
Watervale Yellow - Contemporary Still Life Red Flowers Kitchen Window, 2024

Watervale Yellow - Contemporary Still Life Red Flowers Kitchen Window, 2024

By Melanie Parke

Located in Kent, CT

In this contemporary painting in oil on canvas, a bright and inviting interior scene is set with a still life arrangement of red and yellow flowers in a green glass vase, beside a pa...

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Previously Available Items
I Hear The Oyster Catcher Again, Reflection, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting
I Hear The Oyster Catcher Again, Reflection, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting

I Hear The Oyster Catcher Again, Reflection, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

I Hear the Oyster Catcher Again by Betty Ball is part of her Land and Sea series. It is Oil on Linen, 30x30. It is framed to 31.5 x 31.5 It is $2,750. It is a beautiful landscape ...

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

That Pink, Flowers, Pink, Painting, Floral, Mothers Day, Vase, Oil painting
That Pink, Flowers, Pink, Painting, Floral, Mothers Day, Vase, Oil painting

That Pink, Flowers, Pink, Painting, Floral, Mothers Day, Vase, Oil painting

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

Think Pink by Betty Ball is part of her Flower series. It is Oil on Linen, 12x12. It is framed to 13.5 x 13.5 It is $875. It is a beautiful group of flowers in a vase with water....

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

Across the Inlet, Waterscape, Reflection, Blue, Water, Landscape Scene, painting
Across the Inlet, Waterscape, Reflection, Blue, Water, Landscape Scene, painting

Across the Inlet, Waterscape, Reflection, Blue, Water, Landscape Scene, painting

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

Across the Inlet by Betty Ball is part of her Land and Sea series. It is Oil on Canvas, 30x30. It is framed to 31.5 x 31.5 It is $2,675. It is a beautiful landscape and waterscap...

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

June on The Cove, Landscape, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Horizontal
June on The Cove, Landscape, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Horizontal

June on The Cove, Landscape, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Horizontal

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

June On The Cove by Betty Ball is part of her Land and Sea series. It is Oil on Linen, 24x48. It has a white float frame. Framed size is 25.5 x 49.5. It is $2,895. It is a beaut...

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

Meet Me at The Cove, Landscape, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Horizontal
Meet Me at The Cove, Landscape, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Horizontal

Meet Me at The Cove, Landscape, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Horizontal

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

Meet Me at The Cove by Betty Ball is part of her Land and Sea series. It is Oil on Canvas, 24x48. It has a white float frame. It is $2,895. It is a beautiful landscape and waters...

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2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

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Oil

Across Farm Creek, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting

Across Farm Creek, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Landscape, painting

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

Across Farm Creek by Betty Ball is part of her Land and Sea series. It is Oil on Canvas, 30x30. It is framed to 31.5 x 31.5 It is $2,675. It is a beautiful landscape and waterscap...

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

Across the Cove, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Landscape Scene, painting
Across the Cove, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Landscape Scene, painting

Across the Cove, Waterscape, Reflections, Blue, Water, Landscape Scene, painting

By Betty Ball

Located in Riverdale, NY

Across the Cove by Betty Ball is part of her Land and Sea series. It is Oil on Canvas, 30x30. It is framed with a white frame to 31.5 x 31.5 It is $2,675. It is a beautiful landsc...

Category

2010s Contemporary Betty Ball Art

Materials

Oil

Betty Ball art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Betty Ball art available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Betty Ball in crayon, paper, pastel and more. Not every interior allows for large Betty Ball art, so small editions measuring 14 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of and Fortunato Depero. Betty Ball art prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $650 and tops out at $650, while the average work can sell for $650.