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  • Charles Alston
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  • Will H. Bradley
  • Georges Braque
  • Victor Brauner
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  • Pieter Brueghel the Elder
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  • Walter Williams
  • Grant Wood
  • Hale Woodruff
  • Richard C Woodville
  • Andrew Wyeth
  • Newell Convers Wyeth
  • Taikan Yokoyama






  •   Fernand  Leger 


    Birth Year : 1881
    Death Year : 1955
    Country : France

    Fernand Leg�r was born of peasant stock in Argentan, Normandy, but left the land at sixteen to become an architect's apprentice in Caen. Three years later he took a similar post in Paris and then, after completing his military service, abandoned architecture for painting and studied briefly at the Beaux-Arts. Between 1905 and 1910, he met Henri Rousseau, discovered C�zanne, and became associated with the sculptors Lipchitz and Laurens as well as with artists like Delaunay, Chagall, and Soutine. In 1910 he met Braque and Picasso, and in 1911 he participated in the first Cubist exhibition as a purely Cubist painter. He did not develop his own mechanistic and highly personal style until 1917.

    His first works were primarily of objects and machinery with human figures serving merely as incidental additions to an industrial landscape. By 1921, however, the human figures, larger than life-size and majestically ordinary, became important parts of these scenes. Between 1924 and 1926, he returned to the painting of still lives and also began to paint large, rigorously abstract and decorative murals. He then painted several series of works including "Objects in Space" in which architectural elements are replaced by scattered objects: "Contrasting Rhythms", "Swimmers", "Bicycles", and "American Works", all of these works are concerned with the violent contrasts apparent within modern life, alongside its great machines and buildings Leger insists on placing civilization's most common and therefore most often forgettable elements. L�ger believed that the painter should not try to paint beautiful objects, but rather that he should create beautiful pictures in which the human figure has no more importance than the bicycle wheel. He thus created a distinct form of modern art that is both timeless and universal in its force and dignity. Its observations of daily life are presented in stylistic lines and forms, large planes of flat surface colors that create rhythm and space.

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    Fernand Leger
    Leisure Homage to Louis David



    Fernand Leger
    Nude on a Red Background



    Fernand Leger
    Three Women



    Fernand Leger
    La Grande Parade sur Fonde Rouge, 1953



    Fernand Leger
    City (La ville), The



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