The tradition of treating Henri Rousseau as someone who's lucky just to be here lives on—but the work speaks for itself.
A Painter’s Secrets,” a new exhibition at the Barnes Foundation, which with 18 paintings, owns the world’s largest collection ...
Self-taught artist Henri Rousseau is the subject of an exhibition at the Barnes Foundation, starring his famed painting The ...
Greatest amateur painter who ever lived, a retired French customs inspector named Henri Rousseau, had his biggest U.S. exhibition ever, at the Chicago Art Institute last fortnight. In Manhattan, 30 ...
One hundred years ago this spring, Henri Rousseau exhibited his paintings: Two of them were shown at the Salon des Champs-Elysees in Paris, where they promptly were slashed by visitors. People who had ...
In The Neverending Story: Part II, curated by Bob Colacello, the Vito Schnabel Gallery continues to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the movement launched in Paris in 1924, with the French poet ...
In 1898, Henri Rousseau, the so-called father of "naive art", wrote to the mayor of his home town, Laval, in north-west France, offering a gargantuan painting for sale. The Sleeping Gypsy, measuring 1 ...
He was once regarded as a bit of a joke. A self-taught "Sunday painter" who couldn't do hands and who was laughed at by other artists for his amateurish technique. But a century after he died ...
He was once regarded as a bit of a joke. A self-taught "Sunday painter" who couldn't do hands and who was laughed at by other artists for his amateurish technique. But a century after he died ...
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