The American Realist George Bellows (1882–1925) was a maker who contained multitudes: an athlete and an artist, a war supporter and a government critic, a socialist activist and a member of elite ...
The Columbus Museum of Art recently unveiled its George Bellows Center, a space devoted to providing opportunities for scholarly research, exhibitions, publications and public programs related to the ...
During the winter of 2024, Debra Force reached out to ANTIQUES ROADSHOW with the news that she discovered a bit more about the George Bellows painting that she appraised in Atlantic City back in 2009.
On Thursday, the Columbus Museum of Art will unveil its new George Bellows Center devoted to research, publications and programs about the American artist and Columbus native. Bellows, born in 1882, ...
This 1909 painting of the Queensboro Bridge is infused with life, arbitrary and off-balance Most of us crave stillness, smoothness, order. It’s why we love Johannes Vermeer and revere Edward Hopper.
Three master artists — Winslow Homer, Edward Hopper and Columbus native George Bellows — captured working-class life in late 19th- and early 20th-century America. In paintings, drawings and prints, ...
Upbeat prose, photographs, and reproductions of George Bellows’s paintings provide an insightful homage to the urban artist and athlete who found inspiration in unlikely places. Burleigh places ...
“Men of the Docks,” a major painting by George Bellows and the longtime star of Randolph College’s art collection in Lynchburg, Va., will be exhibited in a five-day auction preview opening Friday at ...
Randolph College’s sale of the George Bellows painting “Men of the Docks” to the National Gallery in London drew mixed reactions Friday. The painting sold for $25.5 million this week and went on ...
Check out Debra Force's appraisal of a 1912 George Bellows Rain in the Hills oil in Vintage Atlantic City, Hour 2. Antiques Roadshow is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results