Russell, Morgan
Morgan Russell, 1886–1953, American painter, b. New York City. Russell, together with Stanton Macdonald-Wright, founded synchromism in Paris in 1913. Structuring his paintings on interlocking planes of color, Russell created volume and mass with color alone, as in Synchromy in Orange: To Form (1913–14).
More From encyclopedia.com
Kenneth Noland , Kenneth Noland (born 1924) became a major American color-field painter. His works, extremely abstract in feeling, are strong in the splendor of the c… Warning Coloration , warning coloration (aposematic coloration) The conspicuous markings of an animal that make it easily recognizable and warn would-be predators that it… Color Therapy , Chromotherapy, the practice of healing with color, emerged in the nineteenth century as the object of scientific speculation and research, out of whi… Robert Delaunay , Robert Delaunay (1885-1941) was a French painter often credited with painting the first abstract canvases based on theories of pure color around the… Color Blindness , The condition known as color blindness is a defect in vision that causes problems in distinguishing between certain colors. The condition is usually… polychrome , pol·y·chrome / ˈpäliˌkrōm/ • adj. painted, printed, or decorated in several colors. • n. varied coloring. ∎ a work of art in several colors, esp. a s…
You Might Also Like
NEARBY TERMS
Russell, Morgan