ordinary people engaging in everyday activities
heroic and mighty. -apex Diversity is the subject matter of paintings done in the Grand Manner had to be.
Norman Rockwell is figurative and he tells a story. Jackson Pollock's paintings are non-figurative, which means there is no discernable subject.
Claude Monet was an impressionist (a kind of artist, named because their art gives an impression of the subject) who was particularly close with nature, therefore many of his later paintings were of his gardens. He is well known for doing many paintings of the same subject, often from different angles or when the light is shining on the subject differently. One his most famous examples of this was a series of paintings on water lilies that he did in his gardens in Giverny.
He foumd that paintings can be more beautiful without a realistic subject.
When it is not possible to recognise a subject. Some of the Analytical Cubism paintings are very close to this. On the other hand both Braque and Picasso titled their paintings as if they were realistic.
ordinary people engaging in everyday activities
The dominant themes of paintings by Chardin are children and domestic activities.
Common subjects of naturalist art include landscapes, wildlife, and everyday scenes of nature. Artists like John James Audubon and Thomas Cole often depicted these subjects in their paintings.
distance from subject
Jean Baptiste Durosoy has written: 'Philosophie sociale : ou essai sur les devoirs de l'homme et du citoyen' -- subject(s): Social life and customs, Early works to 1900, Conduct of life, Social ethics
Jean-Baptiste Oudry was not an author but a French Rococo painter known for his animal paintings and illustrations for the works of French playwrights. He was famous for his skillful renderings of fur textures and expressive animal poses in his artwork.
Jean Baptiste Sevenans has written: '\\' -- subject(s): Miscellanea
A distance from the subject-APEX
Baptiste Blanchet has written: 'Zidane' -- subject(s): Soccer players, Biography
how do the paintings compare in terms of their subject matter
Claire Baptiste has written: 'Building bridges' -- subject(s): Fathers and daughters, Fiction
Philippe Chardin has written: 'L' obstination' 'Souvenirs impies' 'Proust, ou, Le bonheur du petit personnage qui compare' -- subject(s): Criticism and interpretation