561. 她建造了大型艺术作品,以重新连接到他们太阳神经丛,这样他们就可以开始感觉到人类心脏跳动(2021年) by Lita Albuquerque 高清作品[26%]

She builds large art works to reconnect to their solar plexus so they can begin to sense the beating of the human heart (2021)

材质 :24K Yellow Gold Leaf on Resin, Pigment on Panel 尺寸 :106.7 × 106.7 × 9.5 cm Painting

她建造了大型艺术作品,以重新连接到他们太阳神经丛,这样他们就可以开始感觉到人类心脏跳动(2021年)-利塔·阿尔伯克基(American, b. 1946)

英文名称:She builds large art works to reconnect to their solar plexus so they can begin to sense the beating of the human heart (2021)-Lita Albuquerque

562. 【作品10:他们眼睛现在睁开了——约翰·弥尔顿,《失乐园》,第九卷,第1053行(1920-1945年) by Winold Reiss 高清作品[26%]

[Opus 10: Their Eyes Now Opened - John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book IX, line 1053] (1920-1945) | Available for Sale

材质 :Pastel and graphite on black paper 尺寸 :30.5 × 22.9 cm Drawing, Collage or other Work on Paper

【作品10:他们眼睛现在睁开了——约翰·弥尔顿,《失乐园》,第九卷,第1053行(1920-1945年)-温诺德赖斯(American, 1886–1953)

英文名称:[Opus 10: Their Eyes Now Opened - John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book IX, line 1053] (1920-1945) | Available for Sale-Winold Reiss

563. “Des Essentes现在看到这只乌龟蹲在餐厅一个角落里,在半明半暗光线下闪闪发光”(1974/2018) by William Tillyer 高清作品[26%]

\'Des Esseintes now watched the tortoise crouching in a corner of his dining room, as it glittered in the half-light\' (1974/2018) | Available for Sale

材质 :Coloured relief and intaglio printed plate on Arches paper 尺寸 :65.5 × 48.5 cm Print

“Des Essentes现在看到这只乌龟蹲在餐厅一个角落里,在半明半暗光线下闪闪发光”(1974/2018)-威廉·蒂利尔(British, b. 1938)

英文名称:\'Des Esseintes now watched the tortoise crouching in a corner of his dining room, as it glittered in the half-light\' (1974/2018) | Available for Sale-William Tillyer

569. 2005年,《无题》(记忆不过是我们对过去感觉,但正是记忆帮助我们摆脱了过去样子,让我们成为现在样子)。 by Markus Muntean & Adi Rosenblum 高清作品[26%]

Untitled (Memory is no more than our sensation of the past but it is memory that has helped to take us from who we were and make us who we have become), 2005.

材质 : Oil on canvas

图片文件尺寸 : 4859 x 3695 px

2005年,《无题》(记忆不过是我们对过去感觉,但正是记忆帮助我们摆脱了过去样子,让我们成为现在样子)。-马库斯·蒙坦和阿迪·罗森布鲁姆

英文名称:Untitled (Memory is no more than our sensation of the past but it is memory that has helped to take us from who we were and make us who we have become), 2005.-Markus Muntean & Adi Rosenblum