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  • Art History • Artworks under the lens • Famous faces
    The Two Fridas (1939): Duality and Surrealism in Kahlo’s Famous Portrait

    One of Frida Kahlo’s most famous works, The Two Fridas encompasses many threads that run throughout her entire oeuvre, from Mexican identity to the female experience and her own personal history. In her signature style, mixing fantasy and symbolism with realist detail, The Two Fridas is an enigmatic composition with enduring significance today. In this article Singulart deciphers the symbols…

  • Art History • Artworks under the lens • Famous faces • Featured
    Leonardo Da Vinci and his Greatest Love: The Mona Lisa

    The Renaissance masterpiece The Mona Lisa by Leonardo Da Vinci is arguably the most famous painting in the world. With her iconic smile catching viewers’ attention, she has lived in the castles of French kings, from Francis I and Louis XIV to Napoleon and today she remains a huge part of France’s cultural heritage despite her Italian provenance. In this…

  • Art History • Artworks under the lens • Famous faces • Featured
    How did Edgar Degas create ‘A Cotton Office in New Orleans’?

    A Cotton Office in New Orleans is a seminal piece by impressionist artist Edgar Degas. On a trip to New Orleans in 1872, Degas was inspired to produce the piece after visiting the cotton office of his brother. The artwork, which mixes portraiture and genre art, is one of the most important portrayals of 18th century capitalism, and was the…

  • Art History • Artworks under the lens • Famous faces • Featured
    The Scandal Behind Édouard Manet’s ‘The Luncheon on the Grass’

    Hailed as the first modern painting, Manet’s The Luncheon on the Grass was as scandalous as it was revolutionary. Portraying an ordinary scene of everyday life on a scale previously reserved for great historical or mythological compositions, Manet rejected the conventions of classical painting to forge a path toward Modernism. In this article, Singulart dissects the scandal behind Manet’s masterpiece…