Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Mary Moser’s career has long been circumscribed by portraiture—a hemming in that dates almost exactly to her elevation as a founding member of London’s Royal Academy of Arts in 1768. A celebrated flower painter, Moser, later Lloyd (1744-1819), was one of only two women Academicians elected before the early twentieth century.

  2. 30 de oct. de 2019 · Vase of Flowers, n.d., by Mary Moser. Source, The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, UK. When Britain’s Royal Academy was founded in 1769, there were two women among the thirty-six founding members—Angelica Kauffman (also known as Maria Anna Angelika Kauffmann) and Mary Moser. Both were daughters of painters, and both were of Swiss descent.

  3. Moser’s vase is all full of British plants that flower in the spring. Celebrated 17th-century Dutch artists created vases of impossible luxury by gathering species from multiple continents and of various blooming seasons in one painting, but Moser chose to faithfully reflect a British springtime in a careful observation of nature.

  4. Mary Moser. Mary Moser RA, verheiratete Mary Lloyd (* 27. Oktober 1744 in London; † 2. Mai 1819 ebenda) war eine britische Malerin des Klassizismus und neben Angelika Kauffmann die einzige Frau in der Kunst, die Gründungsmitglied der Royal Academy of Arts war. Sie ist durch Porträt- und Blumenmalerei bekannt geworden.

  5. Mary Moser RA was an English painter and one of the most celebrated women artists of 18th-century Britain.

  6. 10 de may. de 2017 · Mary Moser’s death in 1819 marked the start of a long stretch of time when, despite no explicit ban, women remained excluded from the Academy. Lady Elizabeth Butler, renowned at the time for her paintings that reported the realities of the Crimean War, came close to becoming a member in 1871 but according to committee reports, she missed out by a mere one vote.

  7. Mary Moser was the daughter of the Swiss painter, George Michael Moser (1706-83), who arrived in Britain in 1726 and worked for the King. Both father and daughter were founder members of the Royal Academy; Mary Moser specialised in flower painting, but also executed literary subjects. In 1792 Queen Charlotte acquired Frogmore House in the immediate vicinity of Windsor Castle and commissioned ...