Category: Artworks
Step into the world of timeless artworks that shaped our visual culture. Explore rare paintings, sculptures, and creative masterpieces that reveal the evolution of artistic expression through centuries.From Renaissance genius to modern minimalism, each piece tells a story of imagination, innovation, and beauty that continues to inspire artists and collectors worldwide.
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#6 Poster by Jacob Jansma, 1925
Bold Dutch lettering shouts “LAAT UW HAREN LIEVER AFKNIPPEN” across the top, immediately setting a cautionary tone that feels unmistakably 1920s in its directness. Jacob Jansma’s 1925 poster uses a limited palette of greens, reds, and creams to create high contrast and instant legibility—hallmarks of effective graphic design meant for public walls and quick glances.…
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#22 Poster by Hans Bolleman, 1942
Bold lettering shouts “KOOLMONOXYDE” across the top, immediately framing Hans Bolleman’s 1942 poster as a public warning rather than mere decoration. Beneath the headline, the Dutch phrase “…SLUIPEND GEVAAR…” (“…creeping danger…”) hangs over a dramatic scene in which an unconscious figure lies near a vehicle, the body rendered in cool tones that heighten the sense…
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#38 Designer unknown, 1959-1964
Bold blocks of red and an expanse of white set the stage for a striking piece of mid-century graphic design, dated broadly to 1959–1964 and credited to an unknown designer. Two simplified black silhouettes act out a small drama across a gap, with a narrow plank bridging the divide. The sparse, modern composition leans on…
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#5 Paper Mosaics: Picasso’s Rare Cut-Paper Artworks #5 Artworks
Against a deep, weathered field of blue, a single cut-paper figure drifts like a quiet thought—an uncluttered composition that makes negative space do as much work as line. The reclining nude, rendered with spare pencil strokes on pale paper, feels both intimate and experimental, a reminder that modern art isn’t only built from paint and…
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#2 18 years old (1900)
A steady, unsmiling gaze meets the viewer in this 1900-era portrait titled “18 years old,” rendered with soft, smudged shading that suggests charcoal or graphite on paper. The young sitter’s dark hair is swept back beneath a cap or wrapped head covering, while a high collar or scarf frames the neck, pulling attention toward the…
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#4 Flor Garduño, Reina (Queen), 1989.
Flor Garduño’s *Reina (Queen)* from 1989 offers a quiet coronation built from everyday materials: a woman seated in shadow, her hands folded, a thick shawl wrapped around her shoulders, and a dramatic spray of spined leaves rising from her head like a natural diadem. The background drops away into velvety darkness, making the crown-like silhouette…
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#10 With these few words he went on tracking, and Piglet,after watching him for a minute or two, ran after him
Along a pale woodland path, a small bear and his cautious companion move away from the viewer, their bodies rendered in quick, confident lines. The ground is alive with little marks—footprints and scuffs that read like clues—while a cluster of bare tree trunks leans in from the right, framing the quiet urgency of their walk.…
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#26 Winnie-the-Pooh lived in a forest all by himself under the name of Sanders.“What does ‘under the name’ mean? asked Christopher Robin. It means he had the name over the door in gold letters, and lived under it…
Drawn in quick, confident pen strokes, the scene settles at the root of a great tree where a small door sits half-hidden in bark and shadow. A bell and pull-cord hang by the entrance, and above it the sign reads “MR. SANDERS,” the famous little joke that explains what “under the name” means. Pooh stands…
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#14 Attention
A quiet command hangs in the air: attention. Centered against a dark backdrop, an older man faces the camera with a steady, unblinking gaze, his lined forehead and tired eyes rendered in soft, sepia-toned light. The stark contrast between his pale garment and the surrounding shadows heightens the intensity, as if the photographer wanted nothing…
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#30 Scene of coquetry
A coy smile and a lifted chin set the tone for “Scene of coquetry,” a staged moment that plays as much to the camera as to the unseen audience beyond it. The woman’s loose, off-shoulder garment and relaxed posture suggest a theatrical tableau rather than everyday life, with flirtation expressed through pose and expression as…