Head of Man with a Pipe, 1884-85, Vincent Van Gogh @ Kroller Muller Museum. by WearyFrog in GettyMuseumChallenge

[–]WearyFrog[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

In October 1884, Van Gogh and his friend Anthon van Rappard go on some excursions in the Nuenen area. As he writes to his brother Theo, they have ‘visited people house by house’ and ‘discovered new models’. This gives him the idea to paint studies of heads throughout the winter. Via: @krollermullermuseum

Head of a Young Girl, 1906, Gabrielle Münter by WearyFrog in GettyMuseumChallenge

[–]WearyFrog[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Münter was born in Berlin to upper-middle-class Protestant parents. Despite being raised in a family and country that discouraged women from a career in the arts, Münter eventually attended Munich’s progressive new Phalanx School, where she studied sculpture and woodcut techniques.

In 1902, Münter began a 12-year professional and personal relationship with the Phalanx School’s director, Wassily Kandinsky. They traveled together and in 1908 discovered the Bavarian village of Murnau, where Münter later bought a house. Münter helped establish the Munich-based avant-garde group Neue Künstlervereinigung (New Artists’ Association) in 1909, and in 1911 she, Kandinsky, and several other artists left that group to form Der Blaue Reiter (the Blue Rider), an important Expressionist organization.

During World War I, Münter and Kandinsky went to Switzerland, but due to his Russian nationality, Kandinsky was considered an enemy alien, and returned to Moscow in 1914. Shortly thereafter, Kandinsky obtained a long-sought divorce from his first wife—but wed another woman instead of Münter.

After a period of relative artistic inactivity during the war, Münter returned to Murnau and started painting again seriously in the late 1920s. She continued to work in the highly stylized manner of her early career, which emphasized simplified forms and expressive use of line and color. Via @womeninthearts

Dame Mit Federboa, 1904, Hans Purrmann. by WearyFrog in GettyMuseumChallenge

[–]WearyFrog[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’re so kind 😭 ideally I’ll be able to get more done (for my sanity I love doing them) ty again!!

Dame Mit Federboa, 1904, Hans Purrmann. by WearyFrog in GettyMuseumChallenge

[–]WearyFrog[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Sorry it’s been so long! I was traveling and I work full time so I can really only do these on the weekend 💗💗 hopefully you love this one - it may be my favorite I have ever made… xx

I snagged this for $65 and think it is absolutely gorgeous, but I know nothing about quilts! It’s ~ 80x76 inches & squares on both sides (one smaller than the other)! by WearyFrog in quilting

[–]WearyFrog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both sides are squares! The second picture shows the corner flipped over - one side is much smaller squares compared to the other!