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Wade Warren
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02 January 1988Contact Us
US 310-273-0666Location
4377 Libby Street Beverly HillsWilliam C. Jennings
Wonderful piece that successfully conveys the magnificence of the mountains and the natural world.
English Romantic painter, printer, and watercolourist William C. Jennings Is most renowned for his expressive colorization, creative landscapes, and stormy, sometimes violent maritime works. However, this moody image of the Devil's Bridge in Switzerland, close to the Gotthard Pass, feels incredibly authentic and accurately depicts historical occasions when Russian general Suvorov crossed the Alps and fought not only far larger enemy troops!
The curved canvas is enclosed in a complex frame that the artist created but that his buddy Gottlieb Christian Kuhn carved. A variety of Christian symbols are depicted on the frame, including the faces of five infant angels, a star, grapes, vines, corn, and God's eye.Many of the Romantic elements and subjects that he would explore throughout his career are present in this work, one of his earliest, most notable of which is the landscape's significant significance. In spite of the altarpiece's inclusion of a crucifix, the emphasis is Read More
Nature, in the broadest sense, is the physical world or universe. "Nature" can refer to the phenomena of the physical world, and also to life in general. The study of nature is a large, if not the only, part of science. Although humans are part of nature, human activity is often understood as a separate category from other natural phenomena.
Nature has a role in our lives. We are a part of everything since we sprang from a seed and the ground, but we are quickly losing the perception that we are animals much like the rest. Is it possible to feel something when you gaze at, appreciate, and hear a tree? Can you pay attention to the tiny weed, the creeper climbing the wall, the light on the leaves, and the numerous shadows? All of this must be understood, and one must have a feeling of connectedness with the natural world around them. Despite living in a town, there are still a few trees here and there. The next garden's bloom could not be well-kept.
William C. Jennings
The wind gives life to the planet. This unobservable, enigmatic energy has the power to revitalize a setting. Its absence can cause the world to become serenely motionless. Its strength is scarcely visible on bare mountain summits, but it becomes obvious in woods and on the water. Winds may be violent and even harmful. When we investigate it carefully Nature is not a destination. Home is here. Garry Snyder In a very real sense, our home, or natural environment, is made up of mountains and valleys, the seas and the sky, the sun and the soil, the trees and the flowers. Growing up in the contemporary, civilized environment, it's simple to start believing