Examples of Red Summer in the following topics:
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- Race riots and other civil uprisings occurred throughout the US during the Red Summer of 1919, reflecting economic competition over jobs, housing, and social territories.
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- Kōrin's masterpiece "Red and White Plum Trees" (紅 Kōhakubai-zu, c. 1714–15) is now at the MOA Museum of Art in Atami, Shizuoka.
- Sakai published a series of 100 woodcut prints based on paintings by Kōrin, and his painting "Summer and Autumn Grasses" (夏 Natsu akikusa-zu) is painted on the back of Kōrin's "Wind and Thunder Gods screen" is now at the Tokyo National Museum.
- Kōrin's "Red and White Plum Trees" (1714/15) established the direction of Ripa for the remainder of its history.
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- In its soft form, impasto clay can range from red to brown.
- The Etruscans developed an imitative adoption of the red-figure technique (known as Pseudo-Red-Figure) around 490 BCE, nearly half a century after that style had been invented in Greece.
- In true red-figure, the red areas were left free of slip.
- In pseudo-red-figure painting, internal details were marked by incision, similar to the usual practice in black-figure vase painting, rather than painted on, as in true red-figure.
- Even after true red-figure became the dominant style, some workshops continued to specialize in pseudo-red-figure painting into the fourth century BCE.
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- Archaic black- and red-figure painting began to depict more naturalistic bodies by conveying form and movement.
- Bilingual vase painting became popular with the advent of red-figure painting.
- Euthymides is known as a pioneer of red-figure painting.
- Red-figure side of a bilingual amphora.
- Athenian Red-figure calyx krater.
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- The Classical period witnessed the continuation of red- and black-figure painting techniques on ceramic objects.
- Red-figure painting continued to flourish during the Early, High, and Late Classical periods.
- Athenian red-figure calyx krater. c. 450 BCE.
- Athenian red figure calyx krater. c. 450 BCE.
- Attic red-figure bell krater. c. 500-490 BCE.
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- The spectrum of colors consists of red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet, in that order.
- Color theory subdivides color into the "primary colors" of red, yellow and blue, which cannot be mixed from other pigments; and the "secondary colors" of green, orange and violet, which result from different combinations of the primary colors.
- Complementary colors are found directly opposite each other on the traditional color wheel (for instance, purple and yellow, green and red, and orange and blue.
- Red, red-orange, and orange are examples of analogous colors.
- It's best used with either warm colors (such as red, orange and yellow) or cool colors (such as blue and indigo), creating an aesthetic that has a certain temperature as well as proper color harmony.
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- The spectrum of colors contained in white light are, in order: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.
- Additive color is color created by mixing red, green, and blue lights.
- Television screens, for example, use additive color as they are made up of the primary colors of red, blue and green (RGB).
- Complementary colors can be found directly opposite each other on the color wheel (purple and yellow, green and red, orange and blue).
- Warm colors are the hues from red through yellow, browns and tans included.
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- Other works of Picasso's African Period include the Bust of a Woman (1907, in the National Gallery, Prague); Mother and Child (Summer 1907, in the Musée Picasso, Paris); Nude with Raised Arms (1907, in the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, Madrid, Spain); and Three Women (Summer 1908, in the Hermitage Museum, St.
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- The spectrum of colors contained in white light consists of red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet, in that order.
- Color is subdivided into the "primary colors" of red, yellow and blue, which cannot be mixed from other pigments, and the "secondary colors" of green, orange and violet, which result from different combinations of the primary colors.
- Complementary colors" are found directly opposite each other on the color wheel, such as purple and yellow, green and red, or orange and blue, and represent the most aesthetically pleasing combinations of the various colors.
- "Hue" can be defined as the degree to which a stimulus can be described as similar to or different than those described as red, blue, green and yellow, known as the "unique hues" or "pure colors".
- Television screens, for example, use additive color since they are made up of the primary colors of red, blue and green.
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- Derain and Matisse worked together through the summer of 1905 in the Mediterranean village of Collioure, and later that year displayed their highly innovative paintings at the Salon d'Automne.