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Fruit Alphabet

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132 views105 pages

Fruit Alphabet

Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Fruit Alphabet

This book is intended to be read to a child at the pre-reading level by a parent,


guardian or teacher.

Following are some of the different fruit names:

A: Apples, Apricots, Avocados

B: Bananas, Boysenberries, Blueberries, Bing Cherry

C: Cherries, Cantaloupe, Crab apples, Clementine, Cucumbers

D: Damson plum, Dinosaur Eggs (Pluots), Dates, Dewberries, Dragon Fruit

E: Elderberry, Eggfruit, Evergreen Huckleberry, Entawak

F: Fig, Farkleberry, Finger Lime

G: Grapefruit, Grapes, Gooseberries, Guava

H: Honeydew melon, Hackberry, Honeycrisp Apples

I: Indian Prune (Plum), Indonesian Lime, Imbe, Indian Fig

J: Jackfruit, Java Apple, Jambolan


K: Kiwi, Kaffir Lime, Kumquat

L: Lime (Lemon), Longan, Lychee, Loquat

M: Mango, Mandarin Orange, Mulberry, Melon

N: Nectarine, Navel Orange, Nashi Pear (Asian Pear)

O: Olive, Oranges, Ogeechee Limes, Oval Kumquat

P: Papaya, Persimmon, Paw Paw, Prickly Pear, Peach, Pomegranate, Pineapple,


Passion Fruit
Q: Quince, Queen Anne Cherry, Quararibea cordata (Chupa Chupa)

R: Rambutan, Raspberries, Rose Hips

S: Star Fruit, Strawberries, Sugar Baby Watermelon

T: Tomato, Tangerine, Tamarind, Tart Cherries

U: Ugli Fruit, Uniq Fruit, Ugni

V: Vanilla Bean, Velvet Pink Banana, Voavanga

W: Watermelon, Wolfberry, White Mulberry

X: Xigua (Chinese Watermelon), Ximenia caffra fruit, Xango Mangosteen Fruit


Juice

Y: Yellow Passion Fruit, Yunnan Hackberry, Yangmei

Z: Zig Zag Vine fruit, Zinfandel Grapes, Zucchini (a fruit, like tomatoes)

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
Authors
A is for Apple

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
B is for Banana

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
C is for Cherry

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
D is for Damson plum

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
E is for Elderberry

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
F is for Fig

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
G is for Grapes

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --

H is for Honeydew
-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --

I is for Indian Plum

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
J is for Jackfruit

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
K is for Kiwi

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
L is for Lime

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --

M is for Mango

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
N is for Nectarine

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --

O is for Olive

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
P is for Peach

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
Q is for Quince

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
R is for Rambutan

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
S is for Starfruit

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
T is for Tomato

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
U is for Ugli Fruit

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
V is for Vanilla Beans

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
W is for Watermelon

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --

X is for Xigua (Chinese Watermelon)

File:Xigua.PNG

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
Y is for Yellow Passion Fruit

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --

Z is for Zucchini

-- A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z --
A Apple, Apricot, Avocado, Abiu, Acai, Acerola, Ackee, Arhat,
American Mayapple, African Cherry Orange, Amazon grape, Araza,
Alligator apple, Ambarella, African Cucumber, African Medlar,
African Moringa, Agave Plant, Aizen Fruit, American Black
Elderberry, American Chestnut, American Hazelnut Shrub,
American Red Raspberry, Aprium, Atemoya, Atherton Raspberry
B Banana, Berry, Bayberry, Blueberry, Blackberry, Boysenberry,
Bearberry, Bilberry, Barberry, Buffaloberry, Black cherry, Beach
plum, Black raspberry, Black apple, Blue tongue, Bolwarra,
Burdekin plum, Bramble, Broadleaf Bramble, Black mulberry,
Blood orange, Babaco, Bael, Barbadine, Barbados cherry, Betel
nut, Bilimbi, Bitter gourd, Black sapote, Bottle gourd, Brazil nut,
Breadfruit, Burmese grape, Blackcurrant, Bignay, Beechnut,
Bacuri Fruit, Balsam Apple, Batuan Fruit, Blood Lime, Brazilian
Guava, Brush cherry
C Cantaloupe, Chokeberry, Cranberry, Cloudberry, Crowberry,
Conkerberry, Calabash, Calamansi, Calamondins, Canistel, Cape
Gooseberry, Capuli Cherry, Carob Fruit, Cashew Apple, Cedar Bay
Cherry, Cempedak, Ceylon Gooseberry, Charichuelo Fruit,
Chayote Fruit, Cherimoya Fruit, cherry Fruit, Chokecherry,
Citrofortunella, Clementines, Cluster Fig, Coco Plum, Common
Apple Berry, Cornelian Cherry, Cucumber, Cupuacu
D Damson, Date plum, Davidson's plum, Dead Man's Fingers,
Dekopon, Desert fig, Desert lime, Dodder laurel, Double Coconut,
Dragon Fruit, Duku fruit, Durian
E Eastern Hawthorn, Elephant apple, Emu Apple, Emu berry
F Fairchild tangerine, False mastic, Feijoa, Fibrous Satinash, Finger
Lime, Florida strangler fig, Forest strawberries
G Gac Fruit, Galia melon, Gambooge, Genip, Giant Granadilla,
Golden apple, Goumi Fruit, Governor�s Plum, Granadilla,
Grapefruit, Grapes, Grapple, Greengage, Ground Plum,
Grumichama, Guanabana, Guarana, Guavaberry
H Hackberry, Hardy-kiwi, Hawthorn, Honeydew, Honeysuckle,
Horned melon, Huckleberry, Huito
I Ice Cream Bean, Ilama, Illawarra Plum, Imbe fruit, Indian almond,
Indian Fig, Indian Gooseberry, Indian jujube, Indian Prune
J Jabotacaba, Jackfruit, Jambul fruit, Japanese Persimmon, Jatoba
fruit, Jelly Palm, Jocote, Jostaberry, Jujube, Junglesop, Juniper
berry
K Kabosu Fruit, Kaffir lime, Kahikatea, Kakadu plum, Kapok,
Karkalla, Karonda, Kei apple, Kepel, Keule, Kiwi, Korlan,
Kumquat, Kundong, Kutjera, Kwai Muk
L Lablab, Lady apple, Lakoocha, Langsat, Lapsi, Lardizabala,
Lemato, Lemon aspen, Lemons, Leucaena, Lillypilly, Limeberry,
Limequat, Lingonberry, Loganberry, Loquat, Lucuma, Lychee
M Macadamia, Madrono, Malay Apple, Mamey Sapote, Mammee
Apple, Mamoncillo, Mandarin, Mangaba, Mangosteen, Manila
Tamarind, Manoao, Ma-praang, Maqui, Marang, Marionberry,
Marula, Mayan Nut, Mayapple, Maypop, Melinjo, MelonPear,
Midyim, Miracle fruit, Mock Strawberry, Monstera Delicisiosa,
Mora de Castilla, Morinda, Mountain pepper, Mountain Soursop,
Muscadine
N Naartjie, Nageia, Nance, Naranjilla, Nectacotum, Nectarines, Neem,
Nere, Nonda plum, Nungu, Nutmeg

O Oil Palm, Olallieberry, Olive, Orangelo, Oranges, Oregon grape,


Oroblanco, Ortanique, Otaheite gooseberry
P Papaya, Passion Fruit, Peach, Peach palm, Peanut, Pears, Pecan,
Pequi, Persian lime, Persimmon, Peumo, Phalsa, Physalis Fruit,
Pigeon pea, Pigeon plum, Pigface, Pili Nut, Pine apple, Pineberry,
Pink-flowered Native Raspberry, Plum, Plumcot, Pluot, Pomato,
Pomegranate, Pulasan, Pummelo
R Rambutan, Rangpur, Red Mombin, Riberry, Rollinia, Rose Apple
S Safou, Salak, Santol, Sapodilla, Soncoya, Star Apple, Star Fruit,
Strawberry guava, Sugar Apple, Sweet Orange, Sweet Pepper
T Tamarind, Tangelo, Tangor, Tayberry, Tomato
U Ugli
V Vanilla, Velvet apple
W Walnut, Watermelon, Wax jambu, White sapote
Y Youngberry, Yuzu

Top of Form
Bottom of Form
FRUITS FROM A-Z

BROWSE:
 HOME
 FRUIT AND VEGGIE FACTS
 FRUITS FROM A-Z


Acerola – West Indian Cherry


Apple


Apricots


Avocado


Banana

Blackberries


Blackcurrant


Blueberries


Breadfruit


Cantaloupe


Carambola


Cherimoya

Cherries


Clementine


Coconut Meat


Cranberries


Custard-Apple


Date Fruit

Durian


Elderberries


Feijoa


Figs


Gooseberries


Grapefruit


Grapes


Guava


Honeydew Melon


Jackfruit


Java-Plum


Jujube Fruit

Kiwifruit


Kumquat


Lemon


Lime


Longan

Loquat


Lychee


Mandarin


Mango


Mangosteen


Mulberries

Nectarine


Olives


Orange


Papaya


Passion Fruit


Peaches


Pear

Persimmon


Pitaya (Dragonfruit)


Pineapple


Pitanga


Plantain


Plums

Pomegranate


Prickly Pear


Prunes


Pummelo


Quince


Raspberries

Rhubarb


Rose-Apple


Sapodilla


Sapote, Mamey


Soursop


Strawberries

Sugar-Apple


Tamarind


Tangerine


Watermelon
1. PICASSO

PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)

Love him or hate him, Pablo Picasso changed it all. He is to Art History a giant
earthquake with eternal consequences. Nobody tried harder than Picasso to
create the avant-garde. And no one tried harder to destroy it. He looked back at
the masters and created a personal style that was imitated by artists around
the globe. During his later years, his works are often somewhat dull and
unexciting, but his unmatched legacy had already been set. For the better or
for the worse.

PICASSO´S BIOGRAPHY
2. GIOTTO

GIOTTO DI BONDONE (c.1267-1337)

The greatest renovator of early European painting, Giotto was the first to
deviate from the rigid course of Byzantine painting. With his unusually
imaginative talent, his original iconographies, and his remarkable love for the
nature and the human expression, Giotto revolutionized Western Art to the
point that many critics consider him, not without reason, the first genius of
European painting, praised by his contemporaries Dante, Petrarca and
Boccaccio.

GIOTTO´S BIOGRAPHY
3. LEONARDO

LEONARDO DA VINCI (1452-1519)

There is no artist more legendary than Leonardo da Vinci. In the entire History
of Art, no other name has generated more debates, more discussions and more
hours of study than the genius born in Vinci in 1452, who will be always
known as the author of the most famous painting of all times,
the Gioconda or Mona Lisa.

LEONARDO´S BIOGRAPHY

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4. CÉZANNE

PAUL CÉZANNE (1839-1906)

“Cézanne is the father of us all”. This lapidary phrase has been attributed to
both Picasso and Matisse, and it certainly matters little who actually said it,
because it is true in any case.

Riding the wave of fresh air that Impressionism represented, Cézanne left the
entire Impressionist group behind to develop a style of painting hitherto
unseen, which opened the door wide for the arrival of Cubism and the rest of
the 20th century avant-garde.

CÉZANNE´S BIOGRAPHY
5. REMBRANDT

REMBRANDT VAN RIJN (1606-1669)

The fascinating, magnetic interplay of light and shadow in his works seems a
reflection of his life, which went from fame to oblivion while his technique only
improved.

His self-portraits, by far the most fascinating in the history of painting, tell us
of a sincere and honest painter, a master capable of penetrating the mind of
the greatest stranger: oneself.

REMBRANDT´S BIOGRAPHY
6. VELÁZQUEZ

DIEGO VELÁZQUEZ (1599-1660)

Along with Rembrandt, Velázquez represents the zenith of Baroque painting.


But unlike the Dutchman, the Sevillian artist spent most of his life in the
comfortable but rigid court society. Despite this, Velázquez was a renovator, a
“painter of atmospheres” almost two centuries before Turner or the
Impressionists, and he captured this in his colossal royal paintings (“Meninas“,
“The Forge of Vulcan“) as well as in the bold and unforgettable sketches of the
Villa Medici.

VELÁZQUEZ´S BIOGRAPHY
7. KANDINSKY

WASSILY KANDINSKY (1866-1944)

Few artists -perhaps none- played as decisive a role as Wassily Kandinsky


(1866-1944) in the development of abstract art, the greatest revolution in
Western art since the Renaissance. Over a period of three years, at the dawn of
the First World War, Kandinsky culminated a personal artistic evolution that
had begun 20 years earlier when, impressed by Monet’s painting, he began to
experiment with the power of pure paint and the capacity of colour to express
feelings.

KANDINSKY´S BIOGRAPHY
8. MONET

CLAUDE MONET (1840-1926)

The importance of Monet in the history of art is sometimes “underrated”, as Art


lovers tend to see only the overwhelming beauty that emanates from his
canvases, ignoring the complex technique and composition of the work (a
“defect” somehow caused by Monet himself, when he declared that “I do not
understand why everyone discusses my art and pretends to understand, as if it
were necessary to understand, when it is simply necessary to love”). However,
Monet’s experiments, including his studies on the changes in the same object
caused by daylight at different times of the day; and the almost abstract quality
of his “water lilies”, are clearly a prologue to the art of the twentieth century.

MONET´S BIOGRAPHY
9. CARAVAGGIO

Ottavio Leoni – Portrait of


Caravaggio small
MICHELANGELO MERISI DA CARAVAGGIO (1571-1610)

The tough and violent Caravaggio is considered the father of Baroque painting,
with his spectacular use of lights and shadows. Caravaggio’s chiaroscuro
became so famous that many painters started to copy his paintings, creating
the ‘Caravaggisti’ style.

CARAVAGGIO´S BIOGRAPHY

10. VAN EYCK


JAN VAN EYCK (1390-1441)

Van Eyck is the colossal pillar on which all Flemish painting of later centuries
rests, a genius of precision, perspective and meticulousness, far above any
other artist of his time, Flemish or Italian.

VAN EYCK´S BIOGRAPHY

11. TURNER

JOSEPH-MALLORD WILLIAM TURNER (1775-1851)

Turner is the best landscape painter of Western painting. Albeit an academic


painter during his first years, Turner slowly but unstoppably evolved towards a
free, atmospheric style, sometimes even outlining the abstraction, which was
misunderstood and rejected by the same critics who then admired him for
decades.

TURNER´S BIOGRAPHY
12. DÜRER

ALBRECHT DÜRER (1471-1528)

The real Leonardo da Vinci of Northern European Rennaisance was Albrecht


Dürer, a restless and innovative genious, master of drawing and color. He was
one of the first artists to represent nature without artifice, either in his painted
landscapes or in his drawings of plants and animals.

DÜRER´S BIOGRAPHY

13. MICHELANGELO

MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI (1475-1564)


Some readers will be quite surprised to see a man who is arguably the greatest
artistic genius of all time out of the “top ten” of this list, but the fact is that
even Michelangelo defined himself as “sculptor”, and even his painted
masterpiece (the frescoes in the Sistine Chapel) are often defined as ‘painted
sculptures’. Nevertheless, that unforgettable masterpiece is enough to
guarantee him a place of honor in the history of painting.

MICHELANGELO´S BIOGRAPHY

14. GOYA

FRANCISCO DE GOYA (1746-1828)

Goya is an enigma. In the whole History of Art few figures are as complex as
the artist born in Fuendetodos, Spain. Enterprising and indefinable, a painter
with no rival in all his life, Goya was the painter of the Court and the painter of
the people. He was a religious painter and a mystical painter. He was the
author of the beauty and eroticism of the ‘Maja desnuda’ and the creator of the
explicit horror of ‘The Third of May, 1808’. He was an oil painter, a fresco
painter, a sketcher and an engraver. And he never stopped his metamorphosis.

GOYA´S BIOGRAPHY
15. VAN GOGH

VINCENT VAN GOGH (1853-1890)

Few names in the history of painting are now as famous as Van Gogh, despite
the complete neglect he suffered in life. His works, strong and personal, are one
of the greatest influences in the twentieth century painting, especially for the
German Expressionism.

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VAN GOGH´S BIOGRAPHY

16. MANET

ÉDOUARD MANET (1832-1883)

Manet was the origin of Impressionism, a revolutionary in a time of great


artistic revolutions. His (at the time) quite polemical “Olympia” or “Déjeuner sur
l’Herbe” opened the way for the great figures of the Impressionism.
17. MATISSE

HENRI MATISSE (1869-1954)

Some art critics tend to regard Matisse as the greatest exponent of twentieth
century painting, only surpassed by Picasso. That is quite debatable, although
the almost pure use of color in some of his works strongly influenced many of
the following avant-gardes.

18. RAPHAEL

RAFFAELLO SANZIO (1483-1520)


Equally loved and hated in different eras, no one can doubt that Raphael is one
of the greatest geniuses of the Renaissance, with an excellent technique in
terms of drawing and color.

19. POLLOCK

JACKSON POLLOCK (1912-1956)

The major figure of American Abstract Expressionism, Pollock created his best
works, his famous drips, between 1947 and 1950. After those fascinating
years, comparable to Picasso’s Blue Period or van Gogh’s final months in
Auvers, he abandoned the drip, and his latest paintings are often bold,
uninspired works.

POLLOCK´S BIOGRAPHY
20. AF KLINT

HILMA AF KLINT (1862-1944)

A pioneer of abstract art, Hilma af Klint was a painter who remained – by her
own wish – outside any organized artistic movement, and she never exhibited
her now famous works during her lifetime. Nevertheless, in recent years she
has achieved unanimous recognition as one of the most original figures of
modernism.

21. EL GRECO

DOMENIKOS THEOTOKOPOULOS · EL GRECO (1541-1614)


One of the most original and fascinating artists of his era, with a very personal
technique that was admired, three centuries later, by the impressionist
painters. A true innovator in the broadest sense of the word.

22. GAUGUIN

PAUL GAUGUIN (1848-1903)

One of the most fascinating figures in the history of painting, his works moved
from Impressionism (soon abandoned) to a colorful and vigorous symbolism, as
can be seen in his ‘Polynesian paintings’. Matisse and Fauvism could not be
understood without the works of Paul Gauguin.

GAUGUIN´S BIOGRAPHY
23. BASQUIAT

JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT (1960-1988)

Basquiat is undoubtedly the most important and famous member of the


“graffiti movement” that appeared in the New York scene in the early’80s, an
artistic movement whose enormous influence on later painting is still to be
measured.

BASQUIAT´S BIOGRAPHY

24. MUNCH

EDVARD MUNCH (1863-1944)


Modernist in his context, Munch could be also considered the first
expressionist painter in history. Works like “The Scream” are vital for the
understanding of twentieth century painting.

MUNCH´S BIOGRAPHY

25. TITIAN

TIZIANO VECELLIO DI GREGORIO (c.1476-1576)

After the premature death of Giorgione, Titian became the leading figure of
Venetian painting of his time. His use of color and his taste for mythological
themes defined the main features of 16th century Venetian Art. His influence
on later artists -Rubens, Velázquez…- is extremely important.
26. BACON

FRANCIS BACON (1909-1992)

Maximum exponent, along with Lucian Freud, of Postwar British Art, Bacon’s
painting rebelled against all the canons of previous painting, not only in terms
of beauty, but also against the abstraction of the dominant Abstract
Expressionism of the time.

27. WARHOL

ANDY WARHOL (1928-1987)


Brilliant and controversial, Warhol is the leading figure of pop-art and one of
the icons of contemporary art. His silkscreen series depicting icons of the
mass-media (as a reinterpretation of Monet’s series of Water lilies or the Rouen
Cathedral) are one of the milestones of contemporary Art, with a huge influence
in the Art of our days

28. RUBENS

SIR PETER PAUL RUBENS (1577-1640)

Rubens was one of the most prolific painters of all time, thanks in part to the
collaboration of his study. Very famous in life, he traveled around Europe to
meet orders from very wealthy and important clients. His female nudes are still
amazing in our days.
29. VERMEER

JOHANNES VERMEER (1632-1675)

Vermeer was the leading figure of the Delft School, and for sure one of the
greatest genre painters of all time. Works such as “View of the Delft” are
considered almost “impressionist” due to the liveliness of his brushwork. He
was also a skilled portraitist, and his “Girl With a Pearl Earring” has been called
the “Mona Lisa of the North”.

30. MIRÓ

JOAN MIRÓ (1893-1983)


Like most geniuses, Miro is an unclassificable artist. His interest in the world
of the unconscious, those ideas and emotions hidden in the depths of the
mind, link him with Surrealism, but with a personal style, sometimes closer to
Fauvism and Expressionism. His most important works are those from the
series of “Constellations“, created in the early 40s.

31. MASACCIO

TOMMASO MASACCIO (1401-1428)

Masaccio was one of the first old masters to use the laws of scientific
perspective in his works. One of the greatest and most innovative painters of
the Early Renaissance.
32. ARTEMISIA

ARTEMISIA GENTILESCHI (1597-1654)

One of the most gifted artists of the early baroque era, she was the first female
painter to become a member of the Accademia di Arte del Disegno in Florence.
During the last decades reevaluation of her work has placed Gentileschi in the
place she deserves among the greatest painters of her era.

33. PIERO

PIERO DELLA FRANCESCA (1416-1492)


Despite being one of the most important figures of the quattrocento, the art of
Piero della Francesca has been described as “cold”, “hieratic” or even
“impersonal”. But with the apparition of Berenson and the great historians of
his era, like Michel Hérubel -who admired the “metaphysical dimension” of the
paintings by Piero-, his precise and detailed Art finally occupied the place that
it deserves in the History of Art.

34. MONDRIAN

PIET MONDRIAN (1872 -1944)

Along with Kandinsky and Malevich, Mondrian is the leading figure of early
abstract painting. After emigrating to New York, Mondrian filled his abstract
paintings with a fascinating emotional quality, as it can be seen in his series of
“boogie-woogies” created in the mid-40s.
35. COURBET

GUSTAVE COURBET (1819-1877)

Leading figure of realism, and a key precedent for the impressionists, Courbet
was one of the greatest revolutionaries, both as an artist and as a social-
activist, of the history of painting. Like Rembrandt and other predecessors,
Courbet did not seek to create beauty, but believed that beauty is achieved
when the artist represents the purest reality without artifice.

36. POUSSIN

NICOLAS POUSSIN (1594-1665)


The greatest among the great French Baroque painters, Poussin had a vital
influence on French painting for many centuries. His use of color is unique
among all the painters of his era.

37. KLIMT

GUSTAV KLIMT (1862-1918)

Half way between modernism and symbolism appears the figure of Gustav
Klimt, who was also devoted to the industrial arts. His nearly abstract
landscapes also make him a forerunner of geometric abstraction.

38. DELACROIX
EUGÈNE DELACROIX (1798-1863)

Eugène Delacroix is the French romanticism painter “par excellence” and one
of the most important names in the European painting of the first half of the
19th century. His famous “Liberty leading the People” also demonstrates the
capacity of Painting to become the symbol of an era.

39. UCCELLO

PAOLO UCCELLO (1397-1475)

“Solitary, eccentric, melancholic and poor”. Giorgio Vasari described with these
four words one of the most audacious geniuses of the early Florentine
Renaissance, Paolo Uccello. Without a doubt, one of the key figures of the
Quattrocento.
40. BLAKE

WILLIAM BLAKE (1757-1827)

Revolutionary and mystic, painter and poet, Blake is one of the most
fascinating artists of any era. His watercolors, prints and temperas are filled
with a wild imagination (almost crazyness), unique among the artists of his era

41. FRIEDRICH

CASPAR DAVID FRIEDRICH (1774-1840)


Leading figure of German Romantic painting, Friedrich was, as David d’Angers
said, a man who had discovered ‘the tragedy of landscape’, a painter of
landscapes of loneliness and distress, with human figures facing the terrible
magnificence of nature.

42. FRIDA KAHLO

MAGDALENA CARMEN FRIDA KAHLO CLADERÓN (1907-1954)

In recent years, Frida’s increasing fame seems to have obscured her


importance in Latin American art. Marked since childhood by the physical
aftermath of a bus accident, Kahlo’s self-portraits seem like silent, yet powerful
wails.
43. MALEVICH

KAZIMIR MALEVICH (1878-1935)

Creator of Suprematism (do not mispell this word…), Malevich will forever be
one of the most controversial figures of the history of art among the general
public, divided between those who consider him an essential innovator and
those who consider that his works based on polygons of pure colors do not
deserve to be considered Art.

44. HOMER

WINSLOW HOMER (1836-1910)


The main figure in the American painting of his era, Homer was a breath of
fresh air for the American artistic scene, which was somewhat “stuck” in the
academic painting and the more romantic Hudson River School. Homer’s loose
and lively brushstroke is almost impressionistic.

45. RICHTER

GERHARD RICHTER (born 1932)

One of the most important artists of recent decades, Richter is known either for
his fierce and colorful abstractions and for his serene and photorealistic
landscapes and scenes with candles.
46. DUCHAMP

MARCEL DUCHAMP (1887-1968)

One of the major figures of Dadaism and a prototype of “total artist”, Duchamp
is one of the most important and controversial figures of his era. His
contribution to painting is just a small part of his huge contribution to the art
world.

47. BOTTICELLI

SANDRO BOTTICELLI (1445-1510)


“If Botticelli were alive today, he would be working for Vogue”, said actor Peter
Ustinov. As well as Raphael, Botticelli had been equally loved or hated in
different eras, but his use of color is one of the most fascinating among all old
masters.

48. HOPPER

EDWARD HOPPER (1882-1967)

Hopper is widely known as the painter of urban loneliness. His most famous
work, the fabulous “Nighthawks” (1942) has become the symbol of the solitude
of the contemporary metropolis, and it is one of the icons of the 20th century
Art.
49. SAVILLE

JENNY SAVILLE (b.1970)

If Tracey Emin is the enfant terrible of the Young British Artists, Jenny Saville
is their wunderkind, the artist whose works created in her early twenties
changed forever the concept of the female nude in Western Art.

50. ROTHKO

MARK ROTHKO (1903-1970)


The influence of Rothko in the history of painting is yet to be quantified,
because the truth is that half a century after his death the influence of
Rothko’s large, dazzling and emotional masses of color continues to be present
in many painters of the 21st century.

5. MANTEGNA

ANDREA MANTEGNA (1431-1506)

One of the greatest exponents of the Quattrocento, interested in the human


figure, which he often represented under extreme perspectives (“The Dead
Christ”).
52. KLEE

PAUL KLEE (1879-1940)

In a period of artistic revolutions and innovations, few artists were as crucial as


Paul Klee. His studies of color, widely taught at the Bauhaus, are unique
among all the artists of his time.

53. CHAGALL

MARC CHAGALL (1887-1985)


Artist of dreams and fantasies, Chagall was for all his life an immigrant
fascinated by the lights and colors of the places he visited. Few names from the
School of Paris of the early twentieth century have contributed so much -and
with such variety of ideas- to change modern Art as this man “impressed by
the light,” as he defined himself.

54. HANS HOLBEIN

HANS HOLBEIN THE YOUNGER (1497-1543)

After Dürer, Holbein is the greatest of the German painters of his time. The
fascinating portrait of “The Ambassadors” is still considered one of the most
enigmatic paintings from the Renaissance.
55. DEGAS

EDGAR DEGAS (1834-1917)

Though Degas was really not a impressionist painter, his works shared the
ideals of that artistic movement. Degas paintings of young dancers or
ballerinas are icons of the late 19th century painting.

56. FRA ANGÉLICO

FRA ANGELICO (1387-1455)


One of the great colorists from the early Renaissance. Initially trained as an
illuminator, he is the author of masterpieces such as “The Annunciation” in the
Prado Museum.

57. SEURAT

GEORGES SEURAT (1859-1891)

Georges Seurat is one of the most important post-impressionist painters, and


he is considered the creator of the “pointillism”, a style of painting in which
small distinct points of primary colors create the impression of a wide selection
of secondary and intermediate colors.
58. WATTEAU

JEAN-ANTOINE WATTEAU (1684-1721)

Watteau is today considered one of the pioneers of the Rococo style.


Unfortunately, he died at the height of his powers, as it is evidenced in the
great portrait of “Gilles” painted in the year of his death.

59. DALÍ

SALVADOR DALÍ (1904-1989)


“I am Surrealism!” shouted Dalí when he was expelled from the surrealist
movement by André Breton. Although the quote sounds presumptuous (which
was not unusual in Dalí), the fact is that Dalí’s paintings are now the most
famous images of all the surrealist movement.

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60. DE KOONING

WILLEM DE KOONING (1904-1997)


After Pollock, the leading figure of abstract expressionism, albeit he never felt
limited to the abstraction, often resorting to a heartbreaking figurative painting
(his series of “Women” are the best example) with a major influence on later
artists such as Francis Bacon or Lucian Freud.

61. HOCKNEY

DAVID HOCKNEY (born 1937)

David Hockney is one of the living myths of the Pop Art. Born in Great Britain,
he moved to California, where he immediately felt identified with the light, the
culture and the urban landscape of the ‘Golden State’.
62. ERNST

MAX ERNST (1891-1976)

Halfway between Surrealism and Dadaism appears Max Ernst, important in


both movements. Ernst was a brave artistic explorer thanks in part to the
support of his wife and patron, Peggy Guggenheim.

63. TINTORETTO

TINTORETTO (1518-1594)
Tintoretto is the most flamboyant of all Venetian masters (not the best, such
honour can only be reclaimed by Titian or Giorgione) and his remarkable
oeuvre not only closed the Venetian splendour (until the apparition of
Canaletto and his contemporaries), but also makes him the last of the
Cinquecento masters.

64. JOHNS

JASPER JOHNS (born 1930)

A legend of the early Pop Art, although he has never considered himself a “pop
artist”. His most famous works are the series of “Flags” and “Targets”.
65. BOCCIONI

UMBERTO BOCCIONI (1882-1916)

The maximum figure of Italian Futurism, fascinated by the world of the


industry, and the movement as a symbol of contemporary times.

66. DUCCIO

DUCCIO DA BUONINSEGNA (c.1255/60 – 1318/19)


While in Florence Giotto di Bondone was changing the history of painting,
Duccio of Buoninsegna provided a breath of fresh air to the important Sienese
School.

67. VAN DER WEYDEN

ROGER VAN DER WEYDEN (1399-1464)

After Van Eyck, the leading exponent of Flemish painting in the fifteenth
century; a master of perspective and composition.

68. CONSTABLE
JOHN CONSTABLE (1776-1837)

John Constable (1776-1837) is, along with Turner, the great figure of English
romanticism. But unlike his contemporary, he never left England, and he
devoted all his time to represent the life and landscapes of his beloved England.

69. DAVID

JACQUES-LOUIS DAVID (1748-1825)

David is the summit of neoclassicism, a grandiloquent artist whose


compositions seem to reflect his own hectic and revolutionary life.
70. GORKY

ARSHILLE GORKY (1905-1948)

Armenian-born American painter, Gorky was a surrealist painter and also one
of the leaders of abstract expressionism. He was called “the Ingres of the
unconscious”.

71. GIORGIONE

GIORGIO BARBARELLI DA CASTELFRANCO (1478-1510)


Like so many other painters who died at young age, Giorgione (1477-1510)
makes us wonder what place would his exquisite painting occupy in the history
of Art if he had enjoyed a long life, just like his direct artistic heir -Titian- did.

72. BOSCH

HIERONYMUS BOSCH (1450-1516)

An extremely religious man, all works by Bosch are basically moralizing,


didactic. The artist saw the society of his time as the triumph of sin, the
depravation, and all the things that have caused the fall of the human being
from its angelical character; and he wanted to warn his contemporaries about
the terrible consequences of his impure acts.

BOSCH´S BIOGRAPHY
73. PIETER BRUEGEL

PIETER BRUEGEL THE ELDER (1528-1569)

Many people find important similarities between the works by Hyeronimus


Bosch and those by Brueghel, but the truth is that the differences between
both of them are abysmal. Whereas Bosch’s fantasies are born of a deep
deception and preoccupation for the human being, with a clearly moralizing
message; works by Bruegel are full of irony, and even filled with a love for the
rural life, which seems to anticipate the Dutch landscape paintings from the
next century.

74. SIMONE MARTINI


SIMONE MARTINI (1284-1344)

One of the great painters of the Trecento, he was a step further and helped to
expand its progress, which culminated in the “International Style”.

75. FRANZ MARC

FRANZ MARC (1880-1916)

After Kandinsky, the great figure of the Expressionist group “The Blue Rider”
and one of the most important expressionist painters ever. He died at the
height of his artistic powers, when his use of color was even anticipating the
later abstraction.
76. GÉRICAULT

THEODORE GÉRICAULT (1791-1824)

Key figure in romanticism, revolutionary in his life and works despite his
bourgeois origins. In his masterpiece, “The raft of the Medusa”, Gericault
creates a painting that we can define as “politically incorrect”, as it depicts the
miseries of a large group of castaways abandoned after the shipwreck of a
French naval frigate.

77. HOGARTH

WILLIAM HOGARTH (1697-1764)


A list of the great portrait painters of all time should never miss the name of
William Hogarth, whose studies and sketches could even qualify as “pre-
impressionist”.

78. CAMILLE COROT

JEAN-BAPTISTE CAMILLE COROT (1796-1875)

One of the great figures of French realism in the 19th century and certainly one
of the major influences for the impressionist painters like Monet or Renoir,
thanks to his love for “plen-air” painting, emphasizing the use of light.

79. BRAQUE
GEORGES BRAQUE (1882-1963)

Along with Picasso and Juan Gris, the main figure of Cubism, the most
important of the avant-gardes of the 20th century Art.

80. MORISOT

BERTHE MARIE PAULINE MORISOT (1841-1895)

One of the most talented painters from the age of the impressionism,
considered one of “les trois grandes dames” of the Impressionism along with
Mary Cassatt and Marie Bracquemond.
81. WHISTLER

JAMES ABBOT MCNEILL WHISTLER (1834-1903)

Along with Winslow Homer, the great figure of the American painting of his
time. Whistler was an excellent portraitist, which is shown in the fabulous
portrait of his mother, considered one of the great masterpieces of the
American painting of all time.

82. CHURCH

FREDERIC EDWIN CHURCH (1826-1900)


Church represents the culmination of the Hudson River School: he had
Thomas Cole’s love for the landscape, Asher Brown Durand’s romantic
lyricism, and Albert Bierstadt’s grandiloquence, but he was braver and
technically more gifted than anyone of them. Church is without any doubt one
of the greatest landscape painters of all time, perhaps only surpassed by
Turner and some impressionists and postimpressionists like Monet or
Cézanne.

83. DE LA TOUR

GEORGES DE LA TOUR (1593-1652)

The influence of Caravaggio is evident in De la Tour, whose use of light and


shadows is unique among the painters of the Baroque era.
84. MILLET

JEAN.FRANÇOIS MILLET (1814-1875)

One of the main figures of the Barbizon School, creator of one of the most
emotive paintings of the 19th century: The “Angelus”.

85. MODIGLIANI

AMEDEO MODIGLIANI (1884-1920)

One of the most original portraitists of the history of painting, considered as a


“cursed” painter because of his wild life and early death.
86. VIGEÉ LE BRUN

ÉLISABETH-LOUISE VIGÉE LE BRUN (1755-1842)

Placed between the late Rococo and the early Neoclassical, Élisabeth Vigée Le
Brun was one of the most sought-after portraitists of her era.

87. MAGRITTE

RENÉ MAGRITTE (1898-1967)

One of the leading figures of surrealism, his apparently simple works are the
result of a complex reflection about reality and the world of dreams
88. CIMABUE

CIMABUE (c.1240-1302)

Although in some of his works Cimabue already represented a visible evolution


of the rigid Byzantine art, his greatest contribution to painting was to discover
a young talented artist named Giotto (see number 2), who changed forever the
Western painting.

89. RENOIR

PIERRE-AUGUSTE RENOIR (1841-1919)


One of the key figures of Impressionism, he soon left the movement to pursue a
more personal, academic painting.

RENOIR´S BIOGRAPHY

90. SCHIELE

EGON SCHIELE (1890-1918)

Another “died too young” artist, his strong and ruthless portraits influenced
the works of later artists, like Lucian freud or Francis Bacon.

91. ROSSETTI
DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI (1828-1882)

Perhaps the key figure in the pre-Raphaelite movement, Rossetti left the poetry
to focus on classic painting with a style that influenced the symbolism.

92. HALS

FRANS HALS (c.1580-1666)

One of the most important portraitists ever, his lively brushwork influenced
early impressionism.

93. LORRAIN
CLAUDE LORRAIN (1600-1682)

His works were a vital influence on many landscape painters for many
centuries, both in Europe (Corot, Courbet) and in America (Hudson River
School).

94. LICHTENSTEIN

ROY LICHTENSTEIN (1923-1977)

Along with Andy Warhol, the most famous figure of the American Pop-Art. His
works are often related to the style of the comics, though Lichtenstein rejected
that idea.
95. O’KEEFFE

GEORGIA O’KEEFE (1887-1986)

A leading figure in the 20th century American Art, O’Keefe single-handedly


redefined the Western American painting.

96. BANKSY

BANKSY (born 1974?)

The most recent and most mysterious name in this list is Banksy,
pseudonymous of the most famous street artist of our era.
97. BOUGUEREAU

WILLIAM-ADOLPHE BOUGUEREAU (1825-1905)

Another case of “love him or hate him” artist. Admired and extremely sought-
after during his time, after the rise of the avant-garde his style fell into oblivion,
altough he has been somewhat “rediscovered” in recent years.

98. MOREAU

GUSTAVE MOREAU (1826-1898)


One of the key figures of symbolism, introverted and mysterious in life, but
very free and colorful in his works.

99. DE CHIRICO

GIORGIO DE CHIRICO (1888-1978)

Considered the father of metaphysical painting and a major influence on the


Surrealist movement.

100. LÉGER

FERNAND LÉGER (1881-1955)


A pure cubist painter during his early decades, Leger was increasingly
attracted to the world of machinery and movement, creating works such as
“The Discs” (1918).

101. INGRES

JEAN-AUGUSTE-DOMINIQUE INGRES (1780-1867)

Ingres was the most prominent disciple of the most famous neoclassicist
painter, Jacques Louis David, and a master of classic portrait.

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