3. Vincent van Gogh. Portrait of Patience Escalier. 1889.
Oil on canvas. 27 1/8" x 22".
Private Collection/Photo @ Lefevre Fine Art, Ltd. London/The Beidgeman Art Library.
[Fig. 14.3]
5. Paul Cézanne. Still Life with Plaster Cast.
ca. 1894. Oil on paper on board. 26-1/2" x 32-1/2".
The Samuel Courtauld Trust, Courtauld Institute of Art Gallery, London. [Fig. 14.5]
6. Paul Cézanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire.
1902-04. Oil on canvas. 28-3/4" x 36-3/16".
Photo: Graydon Wood. Philadelphia Museum of Art: The George W. Elkins Collection,
1936. E1936-1-1. [Fig. 14.6]
16. Franz Marc. The Large Blue Horses.
1911. Oil on canvas. 3'5-3/8" x 5'11-1/4".
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. Gift of T. B. Walker Collection, Gilbert M. Walter Fund,
1942. [Fig. 14.16]
21. Aaron Douglas. “The Prodigal Son,” illustration in James Weldon Johnson,
God’s Trombones: Seven Sermons in Verse.
1927. Book illustration.
University of North Carolina Library. [Fig. 14.21]
23. Kazimir Malevich. Painterly Realism:
Boy with Knapsack - Color Masses in the Fourth Dimension.
1915. Oil on canvas. 28" x 17-1/2".
Museum of Modern Art, New York. 1935 Acquisition confirmed in 1999 by agreement
with the Estate of Kazimir Malevich and made possible with funds from the Mrs. John
Hay Whitney Bequest (by exchange). 816.1935. [Fig. 14.23]
Vincent van Gogh. Portrait of Patience Escalier. 1889.Oil on canvas. 27 1/8" x 22".Private Collection/Photo @ Lefevre Fine Art, Ltd. London/The Beidgeman Art Library.[Fig. 14.3]
Paul Cézanne. Still Life with Plaster Cast.ca. 1894. Oil on paper on board. 26-1/2" x 32-1/2".The Samuel Courtauld Trust, Courtauld Institute of Art Gallery, London. [Fig. 14.5]
Paul Cézanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire.1902-04. Oil on canvas. 28-3/4" x 36-3/16".Photo: Graydon Wood. Philadelphia Museum of Art: The George W. Elkins Collection, 1936. E1936-1-1. [Fig. 14.6]
Franz Marc. The Large Blue Horses.1911. Oil on canvas. 3'5-3/8" x 5'11-1/4".Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. Gift of T. B. Walker Collection, Gilbert M. Walter Fund, 1942. [Fig. 14.16]
Wassily Kandinsky. Composition VII.1913. Oil on canvas. 6'6-3/4" x 9'11-1/8".Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow. [Fig. 14.17]
Aaron Douglas. “The Prodigal Son,” illustration in James Weldon Johnson, God’s Trombones: Seven Sermons in Verse.1927. Book illustration.University of North Carolina Library. [Fig. 14.21]
Kazimir Malevich. Painterly Realism:Boy with Knapsack - Color Masses in the Fourth Dimension.1915. Oil on canvas. 28" x 17-1/2".Museum of Modern Art, New York. 1935 Acquisition confirmed in 1999 by agreement with the Estate of Kazimir Malevich and made possible with funds from the Mrs. John Hay Whitney Bequest (by exchange). 816.1935. [Fig. 14.23]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.1]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.2]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.3]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.4]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.5]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.6]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.7]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.8]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.9]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.10]
Sergei Eisenstein. The Battleship Potemkin, "Odessa Steps Sequence.”1925. Film still.Goskino. Courtesy of the Kobal Collection. [Fig. 14-CL.11]