Preview | Description | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Blacksmith Shop by Alfred Wordsworth Thompson Oil on canvas Private Collection Unknown, USA | Thompson, Alfred Wordsworth | ||
Blanche Marchesi by John Singer Sargent 1910 Private Collection Unknown, USA | Sargent, John Singer |
From: www.bach-cantatas.com
Blanche
Marchesi, (de Castrone) 1863-1940,
was an opera singer/teacher (Soprano)
She was the
daughter of the distinguished Italian baritone and teacher Salvatore Marchesi
de Castrorie (1822-1908) and the famous German mezzo-soprano and pedagogue
Mathilde (née Graumann) Marchesi de Castrone (1821-1913). After... | |
Bleak December by William Lamb Picknell 1887 Private Collection Unknown, USA | Picknell, William Lamb | ||
Blowing Bubbles by Charles Volkmar Oil Private Collection Unknown, USA | Volkmar, Charles | ||
Blue Gentians by John Singer Sargent 1905 Private Collection Unknown, USA | Sargent, John Singer | ||
Blue kimono by Frank H. Desch Oil on Canvas Private Collection Unknown, USA | Desch, Frank H. | ||
Boating In The Adirondacks by Henry Augustus Ferguson 1869 Private Collection Unknown, USA | Ferguson, Henry Augustus | The Adirondack Park contains thousands of streams, brooks and lakes, most famously Lake Placid, adjacent to the village of Lake Placid, two-time site of the Winter Olympic Games, the Saranac Lakes, favored by the sportsmen who made the Adirondacks famous,[3] and Raquette Lake, site of many of the first Great Camps. | |
Boats at Dock by John Singer Sargent c. 1902 Private Collection Unknown, USA | Sargent, John Singer |
Note:
The
painting reportedly came with provenance and had been authenticated. Offered
for sale at E-bay; 4/10/01; Parkway Antiques, Los Angeles; (626-584-5868)
| |
Boats On Calm Waters by George McConnell 1890 Private Collection Unknown, USA | McConnell, George | ||
Boats, Venice by John Singer Sargent 1903 Private Collection Unknown, USA | Sargent, John Singer |
From Christies
. . . The present work is dominated by
three main aspects. The first is a line down the center of the work, defined
chiefly by the prow of the near boat and its reflection. The other two consist of
mirror-image diagonals that intersect at this vertical center line; at the
bottom of the work the anchor line meets the seam... |
- Private Collection