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AskMen.com June 25, 2003 William Sutton |
How To: Become An Art Connoisseur A handy little guide to painting, from the Renaissance to the Postmodern Age |
AskMen.com August 8, 2006 Ryan Weatherill |
Keep Up In A Contemporary Art Conversation Art is one of the more interesting status symbols around. Theoretically, it's made by poor individuals yearning to express themselves, and purchased by wealthy individuals. |
AskMen.com Nick Clarke |
Top 10: Art Museums Standing as shrines to the works that helped shape our society, art museums can be found in every major city around the globe. |
Smithsonian January 2007 Arthur Lubow |
Americans in Paris In the late 19th century, the City of Light beckoned Whistler, Sargent, Cassatt and other young artists. As a new exhibition makes clear, what they experienced would transform American art. |
Smithsonian May 2006 Paul Trachtman |
Dada The art movement's last hurrah was sounded in Paris in the early 1920s, when Tzara, Ernst, Duchamp and other Dada pioneers took part in a series of exhibitions of provocative art, nude performances, rowdy stage productions and incomprehensible manifestoes. |
Salon.com February 11, 2002 John Glassie |
Oldest living surrealist tells all Dorothea Tanning, painter, sculptor, writer and wife of Max Ernst, counsels young artists: "Keep your eye on your inner world and keep away from ads, idiots and movie stars"... |
Salon.com November 28, 2000 Colin Stewart |
The art of innovation What Silicon Valley is trying to do now, Cezanne and Picasso achieved decades ago... |
AskMen.com May 30, 2002 Dennis O'Connell |
Top 10 Most Expensive Paintings Sold The following ten crafts are the paintings that have been sold for the highest amounts at auction. Surely many of these and others could fetch far more anonymously... |
Salon.com May 16, 2001 Gary Kamiya |
Loudmouths and legends The wild manifestos of modernism reveal the splendors and stupidities of the last moment when art mattered enough to hate... |
Chemistry World June 19, 2014 |
The colorful science Chemists and artists have been inspiring each other to more colorful heights for centuries. Philip Ball traces the development of paints and pigments. |
Chemistry World September 30, 2015 Wei-lun Toh |
A veneer of Vermeer The woman taken in adultery was thought to have been painted by Johann Vermeer before scientific testing revealed it as a forgery. |
Chemistry World September 7, 2011 Ned Stafford |
Analytical Techniques Employed in Art Forgery Case The trial of four people accused of running one of the biggest art forgery rings in post-war Germany has begun, with prosecutors expected to rely heavily on science-based testimony to make their case. |
Chemistry World March 29, 2012 Philip Robinson |
X-ray vision uncovers hidden self portrait Scientists and art historians in Australia have uncovered a lost work of art by one of the country's most famous artists. But rather than lying neglected in a dusty attic, this work was hidden under nothing more than a layer of paint. |
ifeminists August 18, 2007 Julia Cuthbert |
When the Vanquished Paint the Pictures The same wars are portrayed very differently in these two books, Gardner's Art Through the Ages, and America: A Narrative History. One looks from a historical perspective, and the other from an art historical one. |
Smithsonian April 2007 Courtney Jordan |
Artist on the Rise Contemporary artist Maggie Michael shakes up abstract painting by giving control a chance. |
ifeminists June 16, 2009 Manfred F. Schieder |
Degrading Art "The art of any given period or culture is a faithful mirror of that culture's philosophy." |
Chemistry World September 2011 |
Column: The crucible In the art world, chemistry continues to be a rich stimulus to the imagination, says Philip Ball |
Financial Advisor June 2012 Karen DeMasters |
A Different Attack Stephen P. O'Donnell is a martial arts visionary, a Marine and a newly born abstract painter. By profession, he's a financial planner. |
Chemistry World February 21, 2013 Jon Cartwright |
Synthetic ultramarine's recipe revealed Camille Pissarro's The Cote des Boeufs, Claude Monet's Gare Saint-Lazare and Pierre-Auguste Renoir's Les Parapluies all have one chemical constituent in common: synthetic ultramarine. |
AskMen.com Nick Kennedy |
Investing In The Art Exchange "If you can quickly list more titles produced by Van Halen than Van Gogh, then you probably don't have the background to be a successful art collector." |
Salon.com August 14, 2000 Barry Raine |
The one-eared bandit Big bucks drive the van Gogh accessory business. |
Searcher September 2001 Mary Colette Wallace |
The Science and Art of Online Research in the Fine Arts: A Process Approach The optimum process requires understanding the function of the needed and given information before taking action... |
Entrepreneur May 2010 Rosalind Resnick |
Fine Art of Investment When it comes to sinking your money into the art market, caution is critical. |
Chemistry World February 15, 2014 Emma Stoye |
Raman reveals Renoir's true colours Scientists have used Raman spectroscopy to show the original colors of a Renoir painting. By identifying a red dye that had been degraded by light they were able to digitally restore a faded background to its former glory. |
BusinessWeek September 2, 2010 Lindsey Pollock |
Corporate Art in Tight Times Even the financial crisis hasn't prevented companies as diverse as Bayer and the Dallas Cowboys from building on their collections |
Financial Advisor May 2012 Thomas M. Kostigen |
Art Is For The Living Leaving art to charity helps avoid big tax payments to the the IRS. |
HBS Working Knowledge August 2, 2010 Sean Silverthorne |
Modern Indian Art: The Birth of a Market The market for modern Indian art was created in three broad steps: redefinition of the category, creation of valuation metrics, and broad acceptance and understanding of the category. |
Reason December 2007 Charles Paul Freund |
Artifact: Warhol Goes to China In Dafen, China sweatshops, artists paint up to 30 replicas during a 16-hour day. Has China outdone Warhol, dispensing with art's status entirely? |
TIME Asia October 18, 2010 Harrell & Perraudin |
Culturally Invested In the decade before the financial meltdown, curators like Alistair Hicks used some of the banks' huge profits to make those institutions the world's largest holders of contemporary art. |
Financial Planning September 1, 2011 Jenny Sherman |
Art is an Asset More boutique firms that provide wealth managers with financially based art market analysis are cropping up, and a clutch of new art-focused investment funds are launching. |
HBS Working Knowledge May 6, 2015 Christian Camerota |
A Flood of Picassos Threatens to Water Down the Art Market Though Picasso is no longer producing masterpieces, a noticeable increase in the number of his works available for sale may cause some lasting effects in the art market, says associate professor Mukti Khaire. |
Psychology Today Sep/Oct 2008 Eriq Gardner |
Accounting for Taste Our choices in books, movies, music, and art go to the core of who we are. What your tastes reveal about you. |
Lucire March 20, 2008 M. K. Johnson |
I heart Mike Mills The top ten reasons to be a fan of artist-filmmaker-graphic designer Mike Mills, one of the subjects of the documentary Beautiful Losers. |
Macworld January 17, 2006 Jeffery Battersby |
Painter Essentials 3.0 Entry-level painting application makes fine-art creation easy for amateurs. |
BusinessWeek May 27, 2010 Lindsey Pollock |
Navigating Art Basel An insider's guide to the must-see shows and hippest spots so you can do this year's fair like an art-world savant |
Reason July 2002 Charles Paul Freund |
This Magic Mona The medieval appeal of a modern icon. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2010 Willie D. Jones |
A New Algorithm to Attack Art Fraud Sparse-coding technique spots fakes. Mathematicians at Dartmouth College, in Hanover, N.H., may have the answer. They recently presented a computer-based statistical analysis technique which they say will help art historians and conservators discover even the most skilled forgery. |
Chemistry World October 28, 2015 Matthew Gunther |
Van Gogh's Sunflowers may be wilting in the sun His famed series of Sunflowers paintings may themselves be fading as an international group of scientists has found evidence that a yellow pigment Van Gogh used is changing chemically under sunlight. |
Financial Planning August 1, 2008 David E. Adler |
For Art's Sake The New York City art auctions in May and June put to rest the idea that gloom in financial markets was spreading into the art market -- at least, not at the very upper end |
Chemistry World November 6, 2014 Catherine Emma Nicholson |
Science and art: the painted surface This volume shows a global solution to a long-discussed problem: how to get scientists, art historians and conservators working together. |
Salon.com August 4, 2000 Kristine O'Malley |
Jesse Helms has nothing on my ex-husband What could cause a bisexual artist and mother to behave like a depressed June Cleaver? A custody battle. |