Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Euston Road School is a term applied to a group of English painters, active either as staff or students at the School of Drawing and Painting in London between 1937 and 1939. The School opened in October 1937 at premises in Fitzroy Street before moving to 314/316 Euston Road in February 1938.

  2. The Euston Road School was a British realist group formed in 1938 of artists who either taught or studied at the School of Painting and Drawing at 316 Euston Road in London

  3. Euston Road School. The Euston Road School artists' group, named after their premises at 314-316 Euston Road, was active between 1937-39, with its members favouring realism, instead of the contemporary trend of Avant Garde abstraction.

  4. Overview. Euston Road School. Quick Reference. A group of British painters centred round the ‘School of Drawing and Painting’ that opened in a studio at 12 Fitzroy Street, London, in 1937, and soon transferred to nearby 316 Euston Road.

  5. The Euston Road School is a term applied to a group of English painters, active either as staff or students at the School of Drawing and Painting in London between 1937 and 1939. The School opened in October 1937 at premises in Fitzroy Street before moving to 314/316 Euston Road in February 1938.

  6. Euston Road School. The School was founded in October 1937 by William Coldstream, Claude Rogers and Victor Pasmore and was set up as a School of Drawing and Painting, in reaction to Surrealism and non-figurative abstract art in which ironically some of its members had briefly experimented in the mid-1930's.

  7. Euston Road School School of painting and drawing founded in London in 1937. Its return to a more straightforward naturalism was inspired by Sickert and Cézanne, and was a response to the prevalent abstract or surrealist styles.