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Emily Dickinson | Portami il tramonto in una tazza / Bring me the sunset in a cup

Portami il tramonto in una tazza
conta le anfore del mattino
le gocce di rugiada.
Dimmi fin dove arriva il mattino -
quando dorme colui che tesse
d’azzurro gli spazi.

Scrivimi quante sono le note
nell’estasi del nuovo pettirosso
tra i rami stupefatti - quanti passetti
fa la tartaruga -
Quante coppe di rugiada beve
l’ape viziosa.

Vladimir Volegov | Thoughts of decadence

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John La Farge (1835-1910)

From: Smithsonian American Art Museum

Painter, stained glass designer. Among his many commissions, decoration of the Trinity Church in Boston placed La Farge at the forefront of the American Arts and Crafts movement.
He early admired the formality and patterning of Japanese art, and he recored his impressions of his travels in Asia in An Artist’s Letters from Japan (1897).

John La Farge was born in New York City, the son of prosperous French emigres, his father having been a refugee from the ill-fated Napoleonic expedition to San Domingo.
La Farge began drawing at an early age, had intermittent instruction, and graduated from the Roman Catholic Mount St. Mary’s College in Maryland.


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Artemisia Gentileschi | Artistic importance

The research paper "Gentileschi, padre e figlia" (1916) by Roberto Longhi (Italian academic, art historian and curator, 1890-1970. The main subjects of his studies were the painters Caravaggio and Piero della Francesca) described Artemisia (1593-1652) as "the only woman in Italy who ever knew about painting, coloring, drawing, and other fundamentals".
Longhi also wrote of Judith Slaying Holofernes:

"There are about fifty-seven works by Artemisia Gentileschi and 94% (forty-nine works) feature women as protagonists or equal to men".
These include her works of Jael and Sisera, Judith and her Maidservant, and Esther. These characters intentionally lacked the stereotypical "feminine" traits - sensitivity, timidness, and weakness - and were courageous, rebellious, and powerful personalities (such subjects are now grouped under the name the Power of Women).
A nineteenth-century critic commented on Artemisia's Magdalene stating, "no one would have imagined that it was the work of a woman. The brush work was bold and certain, and there was no sign of timidness".


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Elisabeth Warling | Genre painter

Swedish painter Elisabeth Warling (1858-1915) was the daughter of the confectioner Viktor Warling and Carin Sjögren.
Warling studied at the Technical School in Stockholm (1875-1877) and the Academy of Fine Arts 1877-1883 and abroad at, among others, the Académie Colarossi in Paris (1875–1887) after she was awarded a scholarship from the Academy of Fine Arts.
Her art consists mainly of genre and portrait paintings made in oil, gouache, watercolor or pencil drawings, but she also performed to a lesser extent figure studies and landscape depictions.
She participated in the Art Academy's Stockholm Exhibition in 1887, the Nordic exhibition in Copenhagen in 1888 and several of the Swedish Artists' Association's exhibitions in Stockholm from 1890, the Swedish General Art Association's December exhibition in 1911, the Swedish Artists Association's exhibitions in Stockholm in 1911 and in Lund in 1912 and The Baltic exhibition 1914.


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Charlotte Wahlström | Landscape painter

Charlotte Constance Wahlström (1849-1924) was a Swedish painter.
Wahlström was born in the parish of Svärta in Södermanland, Sweden. She was the daughter of Anders Wahlström and Carolina Setterberg. She attended the Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm.
She traveled on a scholarship to Paris, Brittany in 1885 and later to Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium.
In 1889, she spent a period in the artist colony in Barbizon.
Wahlström exhibited her work at the Palace of Fine Arts at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois.


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Viggo Johansen | Skagen painter

Viggo Johansen (1851-1935) was a Danish painter and active member of the group of Skagen Painters who met every summer in the north of Jutland.
He was one of Denmark's most prominent painters in the 1890s.

Early life and education

As a boy, Johansen already had a talent for drawing which was recognized by Wilhelm Marstrand.
He studied at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts from 1868-1875, specializing in figure painting, but did not pass the graduation examination.


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David Burliuk | Il padre del Futurismo russo

David Davidovich Burliuk /Дави́д Дави́дович Бурлю́к (1882-1967) è stato uno scrittore, pittore, giornalista, illustratore di libri, futurista e neo-primitivista ucraino, associato al movimento futurista russo. Burljuk è spesso descritto come "Il padre del futurismo russo".
David Burljuk nacque a Char’kov 1882 da una famiglia della classe privilegiata russa. Sua moglie fu istruita con i rampolli dello zar. Nel 1898 frequentò le scuole d’arte di Kazan e poi di Odessa e Mosca.
Nel 1902 si recò a Monaco per studiare presso Azbé, W. Diez e Archipov e nel 1904 frequentò a Parigi lo studio di Cormon.
I suoi primi lavori si rifecero all'arte Fauve "violenti nei colori e dalla verniciata greve" e furono esposti alla mostra del "Blaue Reiter" di Monaco.
Tornato a Mosca nel 1907 entrò in rapporto con gli artisti delle avanguardie ed in particolare strinse amicizia con Larionov e Goncarova.
L’influenza di costoro lo spinsero verso il Primitivismo il cui contributo è stato sovente trascurato a favore del più noto intervento sulla scena letteraria Cubo-Futurista.