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Title:

Portrait of the Artist's Second Wife with a Lamp


Artist: Rousseau, Henri
Year: 1903
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 22 x 17 cm
Copyright: Public Domain
Periods:

French
Impressionist Artists
Post-Impressionists
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  1. A Bowl of Plums
  2. A Fashionable Woman
  3. A Peaceable Kingdom
  4. Abstraction
  5. Across the Strip
  6. Adirondacks: Bridge for Fishing
  7. After the Bath
  8. Along the Erie Canal
  9. Along the River
  10. Americaine Endormie
  11. Approaching a City
  12. Approaching Storm
  13. Approaching Storm
  14. April
  15. Arabian Song
  16. As You Like It
  17. Autumn Farm
  18. Balcony, Delaware Water Gap
  19. Band Concert Night
  20. Bathers at Bellport
  21. Black Sea
  22. Blue Café
  23. Bouquet
  24. Breeze Rustling Through Fall Flowers
  25. Bullfight
  26. Bunker Hill
  27. Cabs for Hire
  28. Capri
  29. Cathedral
  30. Children on the Beach
  31. Children, Dogs and Pony
  32. Circus Rider
  33. City Suburbs
  34. Composition with Black, White, Yellow and Red / Compositie met zwart,wit,geel en rood
  35. Dancers at the Barre
  36. Deer in the Forest
  37. Dew Drops
  38. Domino Players
  39. Dorothy Burgers
  40. Drydock, Gloucester
  41. Dutch Girl
  42. East 22nd Street, New York
  43. Eduardo Cansino, Dancer
  44. Egg Beater No. 4
  45. Eggplant
  46. Elysian Fields
  47. Emerald Pool
  48. Emma at the Window
  49. English Landscape
  50. Entrance to the Public Gardens in Arles
  51. Equinox
  52. Evening on the Pier
  53. Fantasy (Landscape with Figures)
  54. Fęte Champętre
  55. Figure in a Landscape
  56. Five Rows of Sunglasses
  57. Florence
  58. Fruit Dish Glass And Lemon Still Life With Newspaper
  59. Girl Writing
  60. Giverny
  61. Going to Town
  62. Gondolas
  63. Gray Day, Goochland
  64. Green and Maroon
  65. Green and Tangerine on Red
  66. Hide and Seek
  67. High Bridge - Early Moon
  68. Horses of Attica
  69. Hudson River
  70. Ice in the River
  71. In Luxembourg Gardens
  72. Interior of a Turkish Cafe
  73. Interior with Boy
  74. Interior with Egyptian Curtain
  75. Joinville
  76. Judgment of Paris
  77. Kingsbridge
  78. Lady in Crinoline
  79. Lake Albano
  80. Landscape
  81. Landscape
  82. Landscape with purple mountains
  83. Landscape with three single trees
  84. Landscape with trees
  85. Linoleum Cut with Tribute by Sherwood Anderson
  86. Little Regatta
  87. Madge in the Morning
  88. Man on Horseback
  89. Man on Trotting Horse
  90. Many Waters
  91. Maria Lani
  92. Market in Paris
  93. May in the Mountains
  94. Melancholy
  95. Miss Amelia Van Buren
  96. Mont Sainte-Victoire with Large Pine
  97. Monument, Bermuda
  98. Moonlight
  99. Moonlight, Tarpon Springs
  100. Mother and Child
  101. Mountain Lake - Autumn
  102. Mountain Landscape
  103. Mt. Beacon at Newburgh
  104. My House
  105. Mystery
  106. Narrow Street in Paris
  107. New England Birches
  108. New York Roof Tops
  109. Night in Seward Park
  110. Notebook Leaf No. 114
  111. Notre Dame: View of the Ile Saint-Louis from the Quai Henri IV
  112. Nude in an Interior
  113. Ochre and Red on Red
  114. Olive Trees
  115. On a Bridge at Night
  116. On the River Stour
  117. Orange and Red on Red
  118. Painting on Glass No. 17
  119. Pastel
  120. Pele Point, Land's End
  121. Pincian Hill, Rome (Afternoon, Pincian Hill)
  122. Ponte della Paglia
  123. Portrait of Amelia C. Van Buren
  124. Portrait of Elena Pavlowski
  125. Printed Sheet with Picture
  126. Ranchos Church, No. II, NM
  127. Recreation Pier
  128. Red Barns
  129. Red Chimneys
  130. Rowing Home
  131. Samoa
  132. Self-Portrai / Zelfportret
  133. Self-Portrait
  134. Sketch I For 'Painting with White Border (Moscow)'
  135. Snow at Louveciennes
  136. Spring
  137. Spring Morning
  138. Spring Night, Harlem River
  139. Springtime of Delight
  140. St Peter Repentant
  141. Still Life with Pomegranate and Pears
  142. Still Music, 1948
  143. Street in Lugano
  144. Street in Quebec
  145. Street in Village near Biskra
  146. Street Singer
  147. Studio, Quai Saint-Michel
  148. Succession
  149. Succession, R. 1055
  150. Summer
  151. Summer
  152. Summer Landscape with Hawk
  153. Sunday
  154. Sunday
  155. Surf and Boat
  156. The Artist's Studio
  157. The Bench
  158. The Birth of the Green
  159. The Blue Room
  160. The Dancers
  161. The Dream
  162. The Dream
  163. The Dream
  164. The Flood
  165. The Garden at Les Lauves
  166. The Hallway
  167. The Halt
  168. The Ham
  169. The Hesitation of Orestes
  170. The Luncheon of the Boating Party
  171. The Migration Series, Panel no. 1: During World War I there was a great migration north by southern African Americans.
  172. The Migration Series, Panel no. 11: Food had doubled in price because of the war.
  173. The Migration Series, Panel no. 13: The crops were left to dry and rot. There was no one to tend them.
  174. The Migration Series, Panel no. 15: There were lynchings.
  175. The Migration Series, Panel no. 17: Tenant farmers received harsh treatment at the hands of planters.
  176. The Migration Series, Panel no. 19: There had always been discrimination.
  177. The Migration Series, Panel no. 21: Families arrived at the station very early. They did not wish to miss their trains north.
  178. The Migration Series, Panel no. 23: The migration spread.
  179. The Migration Series, Panel no. 25: They left their homes. Soon some communities were left almost empty.
  180. The Migration Series, Panel no. 27: Many men stayed behind until they could take their families north with them.
  181. The Migration Series, Panel no. 29: The labor agent recruited unsuspecting laborers as strike breakers for northern industries.
  182. The Migration Series, Panel no. 3: From every southern town migrants left by the hundreds to travel north.
  183. The Migration Series, Panel no. 31: The migrants found improved housing when they arrived north.
  184. The Migration Series, Panel no. 33: Letters from relatives in the North told of the better life there.
  185. The Migration Series, Panel no. 35: They left the South in great numbers. They arrived in the North in great numbers.
  186. The Migration Series, Panel no. 37: Many migrants found work in the steel industry.
  187. The Migration Series, Panel no. 39: Railroad platforms were piled high with luggage.
  188. The Migration Series, Panel no. 41: The South was desperate to keep its cheap labor. Northern labor agents were jailed or forced to operate in secrecy.
  189. The Migration Series, Panel no. 43: In a few sections of the South leaders of both Black and White communities met to discuss ways of making the South a good place to live.
  190. The Migration Series, Panel no. 45: The migrants arrived in Pittsburgh, one of the great industrial centers of the North.
  191. The Migration Series, Panel no. 47: As the migrant population grew, good housing became scarce.
  192. The Migration Series, Panel no. 49: They found discrimination in the North. It was a different kind.
  193. The Migration Series, Panel no. 5: Migrants were advanced passage on the railroads, paid for by northern industry.
  194. The Migration Series, Panel no. 51: African Americans seeking to find better housing attempted to move into new areas. This resulted in the bombing of their new homes.
  195. The Migration Series, Panel no. 53: African American, long-time residents of northern cities met the migrants with aloofness and disdain.
  196. The Migration Series, Panel no. 55: The migrants, having moved suddenly into a crowded and unhealthy environment, soon contracted tuberculosis. The death rate rose.
  197. The Migration Series, Panel no. 57: The female workers were the last to arrive north.
  198. The Migration Series, Panel no. 59: In the North they had the freedom to vote.
  199. The Migration Series, Panel no. 7: The migrant, whose life had been rural and nurtured by the earth, was now moving to urban life dependent on industrial machinery.
  200. The Migration Series, Panel no. 9: They left because the boll weevil had ravaged the cotton crop.
  201. The Open Window
  202. The Opera, Paris
  203. The Orange Book
  204. The Pink Candle
  205. The Railroad Crossing at Les Patis
  206. The Rejected Suitor
  207. The Repentant St. Peter
  208. The Rise
  209. The Riviera
  210. The Road Menders
  211. The Seer
  212. The Stone Breaker
  213. The Tambourine
  214. The Team
  215. The Terrace
  216. The Uprising
  217. The Voyage
  218. The Way to the Citadel
  219. Three Dancers in Purple Skirts
  220. Through the Window
  221. To the Rescue
  222. Tree and Barn
  223. Tree Nursery
  224. Triumph of Senators
  225. Twilight in Samoa
  226. Twilight in Spain
  227. Two Girls
  228. Two in a Boat
  229. Untitled
  230. Vanity Fair
  231. Verandah in Spring
  232. Verdun, France
  233. View from the Farnese Gardens, Rome
  234. Viola Obligato
  235. Violets
  236. Visions of Glory
  237. Waiting for the Concert
  238. Washington Arch, Spring
  239. Wheat Field at Auvers with White House
  240. Windy Day, Bronx River
  241. Winter, Harlem River
  242. Woman with Dog
  243. Woman with Green Hat
  244. Woman with Orange Background
  245. Wonderland
  246. Young Spanish Girl
  247. Yuma, Arizona