American Artists Abroad
and Expatriate Artists
2004-2006 Resource Library articles and essays
Resource Library articles and essays honoring the American experience through its art:
2004-2006
Americans in Paris, 18601900 (8/30/06)
Americans in Paris, 1860-1900 (8/9/06)
Norman Rubington (1921-1991), Italian Landscape, 1975, oil on canvas, 28.74 x 48 inches. Courtesy Norman Rubington Gallery from Norman Rubington (1921-1991) -- Full Circle: New York, Paris, Rome, London, New York)
Light Motifs: American Impressionist Paintings from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (7/28/05)
The French Experience: Alice Schille's Artistic Legacy; article by James M. Keny (5/19/05)
The Carmel Monterey Peninsula Art Colony: A History; article by Barbara J. Klein (4/21/05)
Great Expectations: John Singer Sargent Painting Children (4/11/05)
James McNeill Whistler: Selected Works from the Hunterian Art Gallery (11/8/04)
In Monet's Light: Theodore Robinson at Giverny (10/6/04)
Paths to Impressionism: French and American Landscape Paintings (10/1/04)
Return From Oblivion: Reassessing the Art of Gari Melchers; essay by Stephen May (9/30/04)
A Matter of Style: The Influence of French Art on the Old Lyme Art Colony (9/27/04)
Guy Pène du Bois: The Twenties at Home and Abroad; essay be Betsy Fahlman (8/27/04
Classic Ground; essay by Paul A. Manoguerra, Georgia Museum of Art (7/20/04)
Ana Mendieta: Earth Body, Sculpture and Performance 19721985 (5/31/04)
Whistler and His Circle in Venice (4/5/04)
American Attitude: Whistler and His Followers (3/5/04)
Whistler in Paris: Lithographs from the Belle Epoque, 1891-1896 (1/26/04)
Whistler in Venice: The Pastels (1/24/03)
Alfred Maurer: The First American Modern (1/22/04)
(above: Augustus Dunbier, Toward Taxco, 1949, oil on canvas, 24 x 28 inches. Private collection.)
Return to Artists Abroad & Expatriate Artists
Return to Topics in American Representational Art
See our Museums Explained to learn about the "inner workings" of art museums and the functions of staff members. In the exhibitions section find out how to get the most out of a museum visit. See definitions for a glossary of museum-related words used in articles.
To help you plan visits to institutions exhibiting American art when traveling see Sources of Articles Indexed by State within the United States.
Unless otherwise noted, all text and image materials relating to the above institutional source were provided by that source. Before reproducing or transmitting text or images please read Resource Library's user agreement.
Our catalogues provide many more useful resources.
American Representational Art has links to dozens of topics.
Distinguished Artists is a national registry of historic artists.
About Resource Library
Resource Library is a free online publication of nonprofit Traditional Fine Arts Organization (TFAO). Since 1997, Resource Library and its predecessor Resource Library Magazine have cumulatively published online 1,300+ articles and essays written by hundreds of identified authors, thousands of other texts not attributable to named authors, plus 24,000+ images, all providing educational and informational content related to American representational art. Texts and related images are provided almost exclusively by nonprofit art museum, gallery and art center sources.
All published materials provide educational and informational content to students, scholars, teachers and others. Most published materials relate to exhibitions. Materials may include whole exhibition gallery guides, brochures or catalogues or texts from them, perviously published magazine or journal articles, wall panels and object labels, audio tour scripts, play scripts, interviews, blogs, checklists and news releases, plus related images.
What you won't find:
User-tracking cookies are not installed on our website. Privacy of users is very important to us. You won't find annoying banners and pop-ups either. Our pages are loaded blazingly fast. Resource Library contains no advertising and is 100% non-commercial. .
Links to sources of information outside our website are provided only as referrals for your further consideration. Please use due diligence in judging the quality of information contained in these and all other websites. Information from linked sources may be inaccurate or out of date. We neither recommend or endorses these referenced organizations. Although we include links to other websites, we take no responsibility for the content or information contained on other sites, nor exert any editorial or other control over them. For more information on evaluating web pages see our General Resources section in Online Resources for Collectors and Students of Art History.
*Tag for expired US copyright of object image:
Search Resource Library
Copyright 2024 Traditional Fine Arts Organization, Inc., an Arizona nonprofit corporation. All rights reserved.