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"We both loved blue," he said, "Marc horses and I riders. So the name seemed obvious." The new exhibit at the Busch-Reisinger, Franz Marc: Horses, has perhaps taken its cue from Kandinsky's anecdote.
Franz Marc’s The Tower of Blue Horses (1913) has not been seen in public since a Nazi exhibition of “degenerate” art in Munich in 1937, but the curators of two shows opening in Germany this ...
Carle can't recall exactly what he saw, but he thinks that's where he saw expressionist Franz Marc's Blue Horse. Then, Carle says, the teacher said something courageous — or crazy. "He said ...
But it wasn't until this year that Carle wrote and illustrated "The Artist who Painted a Blue Horse," an homage to his childhood hero, Franz Marc. The illustrations in this book — done in Carle ...
Like many of you, German artist Franz Marc loved animals. One of his paintings, called The Blue Horse, is world famous. The artist used unusual colours for this picture. He felt that colours had ...
One such painting is The Tower of Blue Horses by Franz Marc. WILLIAM COOK visits a new show dedicated to this missing work and recalls other great paintings whose loss is still mourned.
Artist Franz Marc (1880-1916) was a rebel ... the centennial celebration of his death on March 4, 1916. The blue horse became Marc's trademark. Like other artists of the pre-World War I avant- ...
The Blaue Reiter painter Franz Marc had his art banned by the Nazis ... [the page turns] “a blue horse and... [another page turns] a red crocodile and...” and the series continues, each ...
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