Garantía de devolución · 30 días Envío gratuito a todo el mundo
448 429obras de arte 30 637artistas 4 753museos 32Idiomas
Moneda
Idioma
Atelier · Est. 2015 · París, Francia
AllPaintingsStore
allpaintingsstore.com
Mi cuenta Lista de deseos Carrito

Vista previaVista previa Vista previa ARVista previa AR Cambiar a impresión Cambiar a impresiónCambiar a pintura hecha a mano Cambiar a pintura hecha a manoCambiar a imagen Cambiar a imagen CompartirCompartir
Añadir a favoritos Añadir a favoritos DescargarDescargar Ver similaresVer similares RadiografíaRadiografía Presentación automáticaPresentación automática

Bird

Sir Sidney Robert Nolan (1917 – 1992)

Descubre la obra icónica de Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992), artista modernista australiano. Explora sus audaces representaciones de Ned Kelly, paisajes y la historia australiana en AllPaintingsStore.

Museo y Galería de Canberra (Canberra, Australia)

Descubre el arte australiano y la historia regional en CMAG, Canberra! Exposiciones fascinantes, colección Nolan y entrada gratuita para explorar la identidad cultural del Territorio Capital Australiano.

During his travels in Australia, Africa, Antarctica and also China, Sidney Nolan created several paintings and drawings of animals in their natural habitat. About animals and his desire to depict them, Nolan commented:“I feel like there’s a painting to be done with animals and natural camouflage that would be, in a sense, a no-painting; there would be a total disappearance of the image – but if you stared at it long enough the image would eventually waft up.” (Missingham, 1967)Birds, and particularly Australian native birds, featured prominently in Nolan’s Australian desert landscapes during the late 1940s and early 1950s. The fact that he returned to this subject during the 1980s, when he was living semi-permanently in England, attests to his fascination with Australian birds. These two paintings, Bird (Birds 7) and Moor-hen (Birds 2), were created in 1982 and they are distinctly different from Nolan’s earlier representations of birds. Here the birds appear more lifelike and they are shown close-up against a white background. In many of Nolan’s earlier images, including Desert bird (1948) and Desert thorn (1953), the birds resemble mythical creatures which are airborne (often upside down) and they form an integral part of the landscape. In these two paintings the bird rather than its environment is the centre of attention.

Sobre esta obra

Código QR

Código QR