Jeffery Edwards born 1945 | Tate https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/jeffery-edwards-1050
Artist page for Jeffery Edwards (born 1945)
artistic output has been in making prints, where he typically ‚adopts a bland, comic‐book
Artist page for Jeffery Edwards (born 1945)
artistic output has been in making prints, where he typically ‚adopts a bland, comic‐book
Artist page for William Maw Egley (1826–1916)
His best-known painting, Omnibus Life in London (Tate Gallery), is a comic scene
‘Two Figures, Possibly Theatrical‘, Henry William Bunbury
Trumpet, Carrying a Banner; a Similar Pair; Two Female Figures under a Tree, and a Comic
Film about artist painter Chris Ofili
range of influences, from Zimbabwean cave painting to blaxploitation movies, fusing comic
movement in the 1960s, and in this film the artist reminds us that he was working with comic
Artist page for Dan Perjovschi (born 1961)
Another exhibition of Perjovschi’s within a Portuguese bank consists of several comic
Artist page for Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997)
in the 1960s through pieces which were inspired by popular advertising and the comic
Artist page for Henry William Bunbury (1750–1811)
using an „innovative story-telling“ format that is considered a forerunner to the comic
Artist page for Edward Francis Burney (1760–1848)
Burney possessed a fine comic sense and his use of wit and irony, combined with his
Tate glossary definition for print: An impression made by any method involving transfer from one surface to another
Hogarth was one of the founders of a satire that led all the way to the modern comic