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Vithória Konzen Dill

Porto Alegre
Featured in: Favicon dailyartmagazine.com

Articles

  • Sep 22, 2024 | dailyartmagazine.com | Magda Michalska |Candy Bedworth |Vithória Konzen Dill |Camilla de Laurentis

    When the days are warm and long, all I can think about are picnics and barbecues. When the sun is shining, the grass is green and birds are singing. When the basket is full of yummy sandwiches and bottles of homemade compote. If you’re planning an eat-out with your friends and family but want to do it differently than usual, take a glimpse at these picnic inspirations from art!1. Bonnard: Watching SportsHow about a picnic by the river, while watching a rowing race?

  • Jul 21, 2024 | dailyartmagazine.com | Marina Kochetkova |Candy Bedworth |Vithória Konzen Dill |Camilla de Laurentis

    Fresh produce, herbs, dappled sunlight playing through trees and onto picnic spreads, fruit, and vegetables are all ingredients for the perfect meal to savor on a summer day. These elements were a source of inspiration for many artists, whose paintings are like the tantalizing promise of wonderful food. Can summer meals be inspired by art? Summer BreakfastLet’s start our list of summer meals depicted in art with a breakfast! The summer of 1883 in France was perfect.

  • Mar 14, 2024 | dailyartmagazine.com | Jimena Escoto |Errika Gerakiti |Vithória Konzen Dill

    Using art to manifest one’s feelings and ideas has always been common among artists and designers. Fashion designer Dilara Fındıkoğlu is no exception. For Odunpazarı Modern Museum, Fındıkoğlu designed a set of uniforms to manifest her empowering ideas. She dreamed of a “Turkish Space Station” and its crew to execute these ideas. The envisioned crew members were to wear uniforms that drew inspiration from the matriarchal culture of Anatolia, one of Fındıkoğlu’s primary sources of inspiration.

  • Mar 13, 2024 | dailyartmagazine.com | Rachel Witte |Candy Bedworth |Vithória Konzen Dill |Camilla de Laurentis

    Baroque Carefully arranged plates of food surrounded by carefully planned out backgrounds, images with hidden meanings, a snapshot of wealth… What may sound like an average display of life through our modern-day social media accounts is actually a well-curated still-life from the 17th-century Dutch Golden Age, known as a pronkstilleven (the term refers to a very ornate and ostentatious still-life painting, developed in the mid-17th century Dutch Republic).

  • Aug 9, 2023 | dailyartmagazine.com | Jimena Escoto |Errika Gerakiti |Vithória Konzen Dill |Lauren Kraut

    The Rococo Fans as Luxury ObjectsAs with any product, materiality denoted the status of the buyer. In the fans’ case, the most luxurious pieces contained ivory and nacre. Furthermore, fan makers would add precious stones, gold, or silver to them. Surely, ladies who accessed these items belonged to the aristocracy or other exceedingly wealthy families. Middle and low classes were also able to buy fans, but the materials used in them were far more affordable, like wood.

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