List of artworks by Marc Chagall
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from List of Chagall's artwork)
This article lists notable artworks produced by Marc Chagall (Yiddish: מאַרק שאַגאַל; (7 July 1887 – 28 March 1985), a Russian-French painter who is associated with the modern movements after impressionism.
He produced artwork in a variety of mediums:
- Young Woman on a Sofa (Mariaska), 1907, (Private collection)
- The Wedding, 1910
- The Birth, 1910, Kunsthaus Zürich
- I and the Village, 1911, New York, Museum of Modern Art
- The Green Donkey (L'Ane vert), 1911, Tate Collection
- Adam and Eve, 1912
- Paris through the window, 1913, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
- Self-Portrait with Seven Fingers, 1913, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
- The Violinist, 1911–1914, Düsseldorf, Germany, Kunstsammlung NRW
- The Birthday, 1915, New York, Museum of Modern Art
- The Poet Reclining, 1915, London, Tate Modern
- Bella with White Collar, 1917
- Houses at Vitebsk, 1917
- Cemetery Gates, 1917
- The Blue House, 1917–1920
- Two Clowns on Horseback, circa 1920
- The Tailor, 1922
- The Fall of the Angels, 1923–1947, Kunstmuseum Basel
- Green Violinist, 1923–1924, Guggenheim Museum
- The Vision (L'Apparition), 1924-5/circa 1937, Tate Collection
- The Cat Transformed Into A Woman (La Chatte métamorphosée en Femme), circa 1928-31/1947, Tate Collection
- Dream Village, 1929, San Antonio, TX, McNay Art Museum
- The Female Acrobat, 1930, Paris, Musée National d´Art Moderne
- Solitude, 1933, Tel Aviv Museum
- Bouquet with Flying Lovers (Bouquet aux amoureux volants), circa 1934–1947, Tate Collection
- The White Crucifixion 1938
- Midsummer Night's Dream, 1939
- The Red Rooster, 1940, Cincinnati Art Museum
- The Yellow Crucifixion 1943
- Madonna with sleighs, 1947, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
- The Firebird, designs for New York City Ballet (1949)
- La Mariée (The Bride), 1950 — featured in the 1999 film Notting Hill
- Lovers in the Red Sky, 1950
- The Dance and The Circus (La Dance et le cirque) 1950, Tate Collection
- The Blue Circus (Le Cirque bleu) 1950 Tate Collection
- Moses receiving the Tablets of the Law, 1950–1952
- The Green Night, 1952
- The Bastille, 1953
- Bridge over the Seine, 1954, Hamburger Kunsthalle
- Champ de mars, 1954–1955, Museum Folkwang, Essen
- The Crossing of the Red Sea, 1955
- "The Lovers of Vence (Les Amoureux de Vence)", 1957
- Commedia dell'arte, 1959 (Opern- und Schauspielhaus Frankfurt, Foyer)
- Self-portrait, 1959–1960
- Stained glass windows for the synagogue of the Hadassah Ein Kerem hospital in Jerusalem, 1960
- King David, 1961
- Ceiling of the Garnier Opera, 1964
- Exodus, 1952–1966
- Wall art for the Knesset in Jerusalem, 1966
- War, 1964–1966, Kunsthaus Zürich
- Mosaic murals in the lobby of the Metropolitan Opera, New York, 1966
- Stage settings for Die Zauberflöte, Metropolitan Opera, New York, 1967
- Biblical-themed windows, 1968, Metz Cathedral
- The Prophet Jeremiah, 1968
- Job, 1975
- Biblical Message, 17 Works (Nice, Musée National)
- America Windows, 1977, Art Institute of Chicago
- The Yellow Donkey, 1979
- Biblical-themed windows, 1974, Reims Cathedral
- Four Seasons, 1974, Chase Tower, Chicago, Illinois [1]
- Family, (1975–1976)
- Nine biblical-themed windows in luminous blue, 1978–1985, St. Stephan Church, Mainz, Germany
- The Great Parade, 1979–1980, Pierre Matisse Gallery, New York.
- The Jerusalem Windows
- Scene de Cirque, 1980
|
|
This article's use of external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links, and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references. (July 2011) |