Odilon Redon (1840-1916), Andromeda, 1904-1910. Oil on panel.

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Odilon Redon (1840-1916), Andromeda, 1904-1910. Oil on panel.
Blue roofs of Rouen, 1884, Paul Gauguin
Medium: oil on canvas
byōbu-e 屏風絵 - peinture sur paravent de
Shindō Reimei 真道黎明 (1867- 1978).
Pisa, Tuscany
Cuno Amiet: girl with flowers, 1896.
Piha, New Zealand - Kieran Stone
Frank Dicksee (Francis Bernard Dicksee) (1853–1928, Engand)
Medievalist paintings
Frank Dicksee was a prominent English Victorian painter and illustrator. The son of Thomas Francis Dicksee, a noted painter of Shakespearean characters, he is best known for his pictures of dramatic literary, historical, and legendary scenes. He also was a noted painter of portraits of fashionable women, which helped to bring him success in his own time.
His style was not fully within other popular modes of the time, such as Pre-Raphaelism or Neoclassicism, and can be seen as a fusion of various methods and aesthetics of his time, including later in life utilising post-Romantic techniques such as lighter brushwork and softer shades.
Self portrait with palette, 1917, Marc Chagall
Parachoques a prueba de mordiscos.
John Martin (1789–1854, England)
Dramatic landscapes 2
John Martin was an English Romantic painter and one of the most popular artists of his day. He was celebrated for his typically vast and melodramatic paintings of religious subjects and fantastic compositions, populated with minute figures placed in imposing landscapes. His dramatic and subjective style of composition was in stark contrast to the emerging schools of naturalism and realism, which led his work to fall out of critical favour soon after his death, however a revival in interest has occured towards the end of the 20th century, and now his major works are popular pieces of many museum’s collections.