Greatest living sculptor, by common consent of the artistic world, is grey-bearded Aristide Maillol, who next week celebrates his 80th birthday in the little fishing village of Banyuls, in southern ...
Frenchman Aristide Maillol (pronounced Mayoll) made a long false start. For ten years he tried to paint; for another six he designed tapestries. When he was nearly 40 he took a tree trunk, carved from ...
John Rewald, Maillol, New York, 1939, p. 103, another cast illustrated Waldemar George, Aristide Maillol, Neuchâtel, 1965, p. 126, another cast illustrated; p. 127 ...
A curt dispatch came last week out of France: old Aristide Maillol, one of the leaders of modern sculpture, had been killed in an auto accident near his home in Banyuls, on the Mediterranean near the ...
Aristide Maillol color reproduction of a drawing by the artist on papier pur fil marais, plate from the album Aristide Maillol, Draeger frères, 1949, 1949 Upcoming Aristide Maillol color reproduction ...
In the galleries of Paris’ National Museum of Modern Art, fleshy women of bronze, wood and marble stood, sat, crouched or knelt—and each was as young and enticing as the one before. One or two seemed ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results