Painting
Best Artwork by Franz Marc
German expressionist artist Franz Marc was born in Munich, Germany, the son of a professional landscape painter. He studies at the Academy of Fine Arts. He lived in Paris, France, in the early 20th century, drawing inspiration from the artworks of Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh. Marc became the co-founder of Der Blaue Reiter with Russian artist Wassily Kandinsky. This journal features some of Marc’s colorful paintings inspired by Cubism and Futurism.
By Rasma Raisters24 days ago in Art
Ca$imuz art gallery
I have done alot of designs and illustrations and drawings and together i curated my entire collection and work into an online art gallery as well as a coffee table book. I am very happy with the way that the gallery came out and i hope that you enjoy the collection as much as i had creating it for so long.
By Revista Miko:XCI 25 days ago in Art
Bad experience at the Dali Museum
I remember when my cousin and I went to the Dali Museum in Florida. We were about to pay when this punk cashier took our tickets and gave them to other people. The employee who did this insulted the name and legacy of the great Salvador Dali. I was really looking forward to seeing the works of the great Dali as well. Salvador Dali is a master of Spanish art, of Cubism and Surrealism. He is the master known for the artwork of the melting clocks. Maybe in the future my cousin and I can finally see the museum.
By Revista Miko:XCI 25 days ago in Art
Echoes of Place and Feeling: The Art of Ida Shaghoian. AI-Generated.
Painting can be many things at once: a record of what the eye sees, a trace of what the heart remembers, and a mirror for the inner life of the viewer. In the work of Ida Shaghoian, landscape becomes a vessel for emotion rather than a literal description of terrain. Her paintings feel suspended between recognition and reverie, offering spaces that suggest hills, water, and sky while remaining open enough to hold personal meaning. What emerges is a body of work that invites contemplation, asking viewers not simply to look, but to feel.
By Ida Shaghoian27 days ago in Art
Best Artwork by Egon Schiele
Austrian artist Egon Schiele rose to popularity as a key figure in Austrian Expressionism. The figures he created were usually distorted and exposed and explored problems of sexuality, identity, and mortality with an unrelenting gaze that captivated and occasionally surprised his colleagues.
By Rasma Raisters27 days ago in Art
The Paintings of Bouchra Belghali
By Brian D’Ambrosio To stand before a painting by Bouchra Belghali is to experience something closer to listening than looking. It unfolds the way music does—not by telling a story or depicting a recognizable scene, but by setting color into motion, allowing it to vibrate, collide and resolve into feeling. Like a melody unburdened by lyrics, it bypasses explanation and goes straight to sensation.
By Brian D'Ambrosio 29 days ago in Art
Best Artwork by Wassily Kandinsky
Russian artist Wassily Kandinsky pursued a career in art after moving to Munich in 1896. He enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts, one of the oldest and most prestigious art schools in Germany. Before the outbreak of WWI, the artist co-founded Der Blaue Reiter with German artists Franz Marc and August Macke. He is known as one of the founding fathers of abstract art.
By Rasma Raistersabout a month ago in Art
Actor Andreas Szakacs on AI Cinema as Szakacs Films Prepares Echoes of Tomorrow for May 2026
Szakacs Films is stepping further onto the international stage with the announcement of several new global projects, led by the upcoming feature film Echoes of Tomorrow, currently targeting a May 2026 release. The announcement reflects a broader creative shift for the company, signaling a deliberate move toward future-focused storytelling that engages with emerging technologies and contemporary cultural questions.
By Andreas Szakacsabout a month ago in Art
Impressive Artwork by Andre Derain
French Fauvist artist Andre Derain was an avant-garde painter who worked together with other aspiring artists like Henri Matisse and Maurice de Vlamink. These three artists were founders of Les Fauves, an art movement using bold and unnatural colors. In 1954, the artist was hit by a car and died in Garches, Hauts-de-Seine, in Ile-de-France.
By Rasma Raistersabout a month ago in Art











