{"pagination":{"total":13601,"limit":12,"offset":0,"total_pages":1134,"current_page":1,"next_url":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/artists?page=2"},"data":[{"id":30979,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/30979","title":"Don A. DuBroff","sort_title":"DuBroff, Don A.","alt_titles":["Don DuBroff"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1951,"death_date":null,"description":null,"ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Don A. DuBroff","DuBroff, Don A.","Don DuBroff"],"weight":2,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"1976-09-02T11:20:00-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:18-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":36138,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/36138","title":"Ed Paschke","sort_title":"Paschke, Ed","alt_titles":["Edward F. Paschke"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1939,"death_date":2004,"description":null,"ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_boosted":{"input":["Ed Paschke","Paschke, Ed","Edward F. Paschke"],"weight":3},"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Ed Paschke","Paschke, Ed","Edward F. Paschke"],"weight":3,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"1976-09-02T11:20:00-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:17-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":42434,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/42434","title":"Charles White","sort_title":"White, Charles","alt_titles":["Charles Wilbert White"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1918,"death_date":1979,"description":"
Adept in multiple artistic mediums, Charles White created bold, large-scale paintings and drawings that magnified the power of the black figure, communicating universal human themes while also focusing attention on the lives of African Americans and the struggle for equality. At a time when the art world increasingly favored abstraction, White developed a distinctive and labor-intensive approach to art making and remained committed to a representational style that explored social and political themes ranging from the ongoing fight for freedom and equality to the dignity and struggles of labor.<\/p>
Born and educated in Chicago, White was one of the preeminent artists to emerge during the city\u2019s Black Renaissance of the 1930s and 1940s. As a child, White sketched in the galleries of the Art Institute of Chicago and in grade school received an award to attend drawing classes at the museum. As a high school student he earned a scholarship to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. White received other scholarships that were revoked because of his race, but this early support was critical in White\u2019s path to becoming a professional artist, offering him exhibition opportunities, including the museum\u2019s Twenty-First International Exhibition of Watercolors in 1942. <\/p>
A 2018 exhibition<\/a> at the Art Institute was the first major retrospective of White\u2019s work in more than 35 years and showcased the talented and influential artist whose work continues to resonate amid today\u2019s national dialogues about race, work, equality, and history.<\/p>","ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_boosted":{"input":["Charles White","White, Charles","Charles Wilbert White"],"weight":3},"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Charles White","White, Charles","Charles Wilbert White"],"weight":3,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"1976-09-02T11:20:00-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:15-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":114063,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/114063","title":"Leigh Ledare","sort_title":"Ledare, Leigh","alt_titles":null,"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1976,"death_date":null,"description":null,"ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Leigh Ledare","Ledare, Leigh"],"weight":2,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"2020-12-17T12:08:34-06:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:14-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":43356,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/43356","title":"A.J.S.","sort_title":"A.J.S.","alt_titles":["Monogrammist A.J.S.","A. J. S."],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":null,"death_date":null,"description":null,"ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["A.J.S.","A.J.S.","Monogrammist A.J.S.","A. J. S."],"weight":2,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"1976-09-02T11:20:00-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:12-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":36062,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/36062","title":"Georgia O'Keeffe","sort_title":"O'Keeffe, Georgia","alt_titles":["Mrs. Alfred Stieglitz","Georgia O'Keefe","Georgia Totto O'Keeffe","Georgia Totto O'Keeffe","\u4e54\u6cbb\u4e9a\u00b7\u6b27\u59ec\u8299"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1887,"death_date":1986,"description":" One of the most influential American artists of the 20th century, Georgia O'Keeffe promoted new ideas of abstraction and helped redefine modern art. Best known for her paintings of flowers and plants\u2014enlarged beyond life-size and precisely painted with bold colors\u2014and for her spare and dramatic images inspired by the landscape of the Southwest, O'Keeffe also took inspiration in the aesthetic and architectural styles that she was exposed to during her time as a student at School of the Art Institute of Chicago.<\/p> Although she only spent one year at SAIC, leaving to recuperate from typhoid fever, she developed a loyalty to the institution, exhibiting her first retrospective at the museum in 1943<\/a>. After the death of her husband\u2014photographer and art dealer Alfred Stieglitz\u2014O\u2019Keeffe donated his art collection, including his immense holdings of photography to the Art Institute.<\/p> While O\u2019Keeffe incorporated elements from various modernist movements into her work, her style was entirely her own. Her ability to connect and infuse natural and abstracted forms with evocative visual and spiritual qualities contributed significantly to the innovations of American modernism.<\/p> O\u2019Keeffe also differed from most other American pioneers of modernism in that she was trained entirely in the United States. Apart from her time in Chicago, O'Keeffe lived in Virginia, Texas, and South Carolina before moving permanently to New Mexico, where she worked almost until her death at the age of 98.<\/p>","ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_boosted":{"input":["Georgia O'Keeffe","O'Keeffe, Georgia","Mrs. Alfred Stieglitz","Georgia O'Keefe","Georgia Totto O'Keeffe","Georgia Totto O'Keeffe","\u4e54\u6cbb\u4e9a\u00b7\u6b27\u59ec\u8299"],"weight":3},"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Georgia O'Keeffe","O'Keeffe, Georgia","Mrs. Alfred Stieglitz","Georgia O'Keefe","Georgia Totto O'Keeffe","Georgia Totto O'Keeffe","\u4e54\u6cbb\u4e9a\u00b7\u6b27\u59ec\u8299"],"weight":3,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"2019-06-14T15:03:15-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:11-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":31257,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/31257","title":"Claude Lorrain","sort_title":"Lorrain, Claude","alt_titles":["Claude Gell\u00e9e","Le Lorrain","Claude Gell\u00e9e, called Lorrain","Claude Lorrain","Claude Gell\u00e9e","Le Lorrain Gill\u00e9e","Claude Lorraine, (Claude Gell\u00e9e)","Le Lorrain Claude","Claudio Lorense","Claudio de Lorena"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1600,"death_date":1682,"description":null,"ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_boosted":{"input":["Claude Lorrain","Lorrain, Claude","Claude Gell\u00e9e","Le Lorrain","Claude Gell\u00e9e, called Lorrain","Claude Lorrain","Claude Gell\u00e9e","Le Lorrain Gill\u00e9e","Claude Lorraine, (Claude Gell\u00e9e)","Le Lorrain Claude","Claudio Lorense","Claudio de Lorena"],"weight":3},"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Claude Lorrain","Lorrain, Claude","Claude Gell\u00e9e","Le Lorrain","Claude Gell\u00e9e, called Lorrain","Claude Lorrain","Claude Gell\u00e9e","Le Lorrain Gill\u00e9e","Claude Lorraine, (Claude Gell\u00e9e)","Le Lorrain Claude","Claudio Lorense","Claudio de Lorena"],"weight":3,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"1976-09-02T11:20:00-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:11-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":40810,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/40810","title":"Georges Seurat","sort_title":"Seurat, Georges","alt_titles":["Georges Pierre Seurat","Georges-Pierre Seurat","\u4e54\u6cbb\u00b7\u4fee\u62c9"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1859,"death_date":1891,"description":" Inspired by recently published research in optical and color theory, Georges Seurat distinguished his art from what the Impressionists considered a more intuitive painting approach by developing his own \u201cscientific\u201d style called Pointillism. Tackling the issues of color, light, and form, Seurat\u2019s method juxtaposed tiny dabs of colors to create hues that he believed, through optical blending, were more intense and luminous.<\/p> Although Seurat embraced the subject matter of modern life preferred by artists such as Claude Monet and Pierre-Auguste Renoir, he went beyond their concern for translating paint qualities of light in nature. Rather, Seurat sought to evoke permanence by recalling the art of the past, especially Egyptian and Greek sculpture and even Italian Renaissance frescoes, although some contemporary critics found his figures to be less a nod to earlier art history than a commentary on the posturing and artificiality of modern Parisian society.<\/p> \u201cBedlam,\u201d \u201cscandal,\u201d and \u201chilarity\u201d were among the epithets used to describe what is now considered Georges Seurat\u2019s greatest work\u2014A Sunday on La Grande Jatte\u20141884<\/em><\/a>\u2014<\/em>when it was first exhibited in Paris. Recognized for its unusual technique, simplified figure types, and enormous scale, the monumental work is a manifesto of the new style of painting that broke with Impressionism.<\/p>","ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_boosted":{"input":["Georges Seurat","Seurat, Georges","Georges Pierre Seurat","Georges-Pierre Seurat","\u4e54\u6cbb\u00b7\u4fee\u62c9"],"weight":3},"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Georges Seurat","Seurat, Georges","Georges Pierre Seurat","Georges-Pierre Seurat","\u4e54\u6cbb\u00b7\u4fee\u62c9"],"weight":3,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"2019-06-13T14:51:58-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:09-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":36540,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/36540","title":"John Singer Sargent","sort_title":"Sargent, John Singer","alt_titles":["John S. Sargent","\u7ea6\u7ff0\u00b7\u8f9b\u683c\u00b7\u8428\u91d1\u7279"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1856,"death_date":1925,"description":" John Singer Sargent was the most sought-after portraitist of his generation on both sides of the Atlantic. Best known for his powerful, vibrant portraits, Sargent nevertheless excelled in a variety of genres, including landscapes, watercolors, and murals. Born in Florence to American parents, he lived abroad, traveling the world in search of his subjects and working professionally for more than 50 years.<\/p> Sargent first exhibited at the Art Institute\u2014at the time located at Michigan Avenue and Van Buren Street\u2014in 1890, drawing crowds of visitors to the museum and helping to put Chicago on the map as a recognized center for contemporary art and culture. His ability to straddle the line between tradition and the avant-garde continued to impress audiences and collectors at the 1893 World\u2019s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Sargent\u2019s work was regularly featured in the galleries of the Art Institute as well as other venues and homes in the city. Foundational collectors in Chicago, including Charles Deering, Martin A. Ryerson, and Annie Swan Coburn, helped to secure Sargent\u2019s presence, and eventual legacy, in the city. A 2018 exhibition<\/a> at the Art Institute examined Sargent\u2019s impressive breadth of artistic accomplishment and the many connections between the artist, his patrons, his creative circle, and the city of Chicago.<\/p>","ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_boosted":{"input":["John Singer Sargent","Sargent, John Singer","John S. Sargent","\u7ea6\u7ff0\u00b7\u8f9b\u683c\u00b7\u8428\u91d1\u7279"],"weight":3},"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["John Singer Sargent","Sargent, John Singer","John S. Sargent","\u7ea6\u7ff0\u00b7\u8f9b\u683c\u00b7\u8428\u91d1\u7279"],"weight":3,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"2023-07-06T10:27:35-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:09-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":33376,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/33376","title":"Ivan Albright","sort_title":"Albright, Ivan","alt_titles":["Ivan Le Lorraine Albright","\u4f0a\u4e07\u2022\u963f\u5c14\u5e03\u83b1\u7279"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1897,"death_date":1983,"description":" Chicago native Ivan Albright remains one of the most uncompromising artists of the 20th century, a \u201cmaster of the macabre\u201d famous for his richly detailed paintings of ghoulish subjects. A medical draftsman during World War I, Albright portrayed the body\u2019s vulnerability\u2014to age, disease, and death\u2014in works that provoked outrage and admiration. <\/p> For Albright, art was a family business. His father, Adam Emory Albright (1862\u20131957), was a commercially successful painter who had several one-person exhibitions at the Art Institute in the early 20th century, but his son rebelled against what he called this \u201cpretty pretty\u201d art. While Albright\u2019s unique style has been called Magic Realism, it defies categorization. His painstaking creative process involved designing sets for his paintings and creating studies of models and props\u2014even making diagrammatic plans for colors. Albright\u2019s desire to present the minutest subtleties of human flesh or the tiniest elements of a still life often required that he spend years on a single painting. <\/p> A graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Albright established a reputation in the city through early support from the museum, which displayed and purchased many of his paintings. As the largest public collection of Albright works, the Art Institute has organized several exhibitions <\/a>showcasing his unconventional style and the controversial subject matter that earned him fame and notoriety throughout his career.<\/p>","ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_boosted":{"input":["Ivan Albright","Albright, Ivan","Ivan Le Lorraine Albright","\u4f0a\u4e07\u2022\u963f\u5c14\u5e03\u83b1\u7279"],"weight":3},"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Ivan Albright","Albright, Ivan","Ivan Le Lorraine Albright","\u4f0a\u4e07\u2022\u963f\u5c14\u5e03\u83b1\u7279"],"weight":3,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"2019-06-14T15:04:23-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:29:04-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":40457,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/40457","title":"Pieter Bruegel, the elder","sort_title":"Bruegel, Pieter, the elder","alt_titles":["Pieter Brueghel, the elder","Pieter Breugel, the elder","Pieter Breughel, the elder","Pieter Brueghel, I","Pieter Brueghel, I, (Peasant Brueghel)","Brughel"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1525,"death_date":1569,"description":null,"ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Pieter Bruegel, the elder","Bruegel, Pieter, the elder","Pieter Brueghel, the elder","Pieter Breugel, the elder","Pieter Breughel, the elder","Pieter Brueghel, I","Pieter Brueghel, I, (Peasant Brueghel)","Brughel"],"weight":2,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"2023-02-15T10:04:08-06:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:28:52-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"},{"id":37156,"api_model":"agents","api_link":"https:\/\/api.artic.edu\/api\/v1\/agents\/37156","title":"Maria Helena Vieira da Silva","sort_title":"Vieira da Silva, Maria Helena","alt_titles":["Maria Elena Vieira da Silva","Maria H. Vieira da Silva","Maria Helena Vieira Silva","Mrs. Arpad Szenes","Marie-H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Vieira da Silva","Vieira Da Silva","Vieira da Silva","Marie Helena Vieira da Silva Szenes"],"is_artist":true,"birth_date":1908,"death_date":1992,"description":" Maria Helena Vieira da Silva left her hometown Lisbon in 1928 with the intention to study sculpture at the Acad\u00e9mie La Grande Chaumi\u00e8re in Paris. Amid the vibrant Parisian art scene, her interests extended to painting, which she studied with Fernand L\u00e9ger<\/a>, among others. In the mid 1930s, Vieira da Silva began working in increasingly abstract modes. Yet abstraction was never Vieira da Silva\u2019s only concern\u2014even earlier in her life, her excitement with the speed of modern life led to an interest in the dynamic pictorial strategies of the Italian Futurists, but she also reacted strongly against those artists\u2019 alliance with Fascism.<\/p> In 1936, as right-wing extremists were gaining influence in Europe, Vieira da Silva actively debated the merits of abstraction and realism with fellow politically aware artists, particularly the artist\u2019s group Amis de Monde, which met in a Paris caf\u00e9. It was in this context that she painted Composition<\/em><\/a> (<\/em>1936\u20131937), a significant early abstraction that demonstrates her diverse visual interests. The colorful planes of the painting\u2019s central mass suggest checkered textiles as much as they do the artist\u2019s favored azulejos<\/em>, decorative ceramic tiles common in Lisbon, which Vieira da Silva collected from periods as early as the fifteenth century. This painting anticipates later shifts in her work towards abstracted urban space and the stark verticals of modern architecture and engineering, such as in Rotterdam<\/em><\/a> <\/em>(1956).<\/p> When Hitler invaded Poland in 1939, Vieira da Silva and her husband, the Hungarian-Jewish artist \u00c1rp\u00e1d Szenes, left Paris to move back to her native Lisbon. Because of her marriage to Szenes, the Portuguese government revoked Vieira da Silva\u2019s citizenship, and the couple moved once again, traveling on documents issued by the League of Nations to Rio de Janeiro. They would stay there seven years, becoming friends with important Brazilian modernist poets such as Murilo Mendes, receiving federal commissions, and exhibiting at the Museu Nacional de Belas Artes.<\/p> After Vieira da Silva returned to Paris in 1947, the French government purchased important works from this period such as La partie d\u2019\u00e9checs<\/em> (The Chess Game), 1943, now in the collection of the Centre Pompidou, which demonstrate her ongoing negotiations of abstraction and figuration that would continue through the rest of her life. As she saw it, abstraction, politics, and the everyday were all part of the experience of life: \u201cEverything amazes me. I paint my amazement, which at the same time is delight, fear and laughter. I do not want to exclude anything from this amazement. I want to paint pictures with many things, with all the contradictions . . .\u201d<\/p>","ulan_id":null,"suggest_autocomplete_all":{"input":["Maria Helena Vieira da Silva","Vieira da Silva, Maria Helena","Maria Elena Vieira da Silva","Maria H. Vieira da Silva","Maria Helena Vieira Silva","Mrs. Arpad Szenes","Marie-H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Vieira da Silva","Vieira Da Silva","Vieira da Silva","Marie Helena Vieira da Silva Szenes"],"weight":2,"contexts":{"groupings":["title"]}},"source_updated_at":"1976-09-02T11:20:00-05:00","updated_at":"2024-03-28T23:28:52-05:00","timestamp":"2024-03-29T05:17:28-05:00"}],"info":{"license_text":"The data in this response is licensed under a Creative Commons Zero (CC0) 1.0 designation and the Terms and Conditions of artic.edu.","license_links":["https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/","https:\/\/www.artic.edu\/terms"],"version":"1.10"},"config":{"iiif_url":"https:\/\/www.artic.edu\/iiif\/2","website_url":"http:\/\/www.artic.edu"}}
<\/p>