Andrey Avinoff (Russian,1884-1949)
Still Life with Tulips
watercolor on paper laid on board
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Andrey Avinoff
Mother Nature’s Helpers, 1932
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The Tulips Are Gone (also known as Impermanence)
Andrey Avinoff
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Andrey Avinoff, Star of Bethlehem, 1941
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Andrey Avinoff 1925/1947
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The Fall of Atlantis illustrations by Andrey Avinoff
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1944 illustration by Andrey Avinoff for the 1938 epic poem by George V. Golokhvastoff, The Fall of Atlantis
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Andrey Avinoff [or Andrei Nikolayevich Avinov] (Russian-American, 1884 - 1949), Iridescence or The Chrysalis: Passage of the Flight of Time, watercolor, c. 1916-1926; Carnegie Museum of Art.
"Iridescence or The Chrysalis: Passage of the Flight of Time seems to have been executed following Avinoff’s emigration to the United States in 1916, but probably before his appointment as director of the Museum of Natural History in 1926."
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Impermanence/aka
The Tulips are Gone.
by Andrey Avinoff.
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My only strong memory of Shameless is when the art history professor Lip was fucking (?), who was a world-renowned expert in Egon Schiele, gave a presentation on Egon Schiele at the Egon Schiele conference without knowing that new Egon Schiele correspondence had been discovered and it COMPLETELY undermined her argument and it was SO humiliating. That’s why I’ve never used my art history degree for anything
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Andrey Avinoff (Russian,1884-1949)
Yellow roses with butterflies and rainbow
pencil and watercolour on paper laid on board
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Andrei Avinoff Nijinsky
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Andrey Avinoff, Frustration, 1948
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Andrey Avinoff (1884–1949), Iridescence
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Andrey Avinoff, 1948
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Andrey Avinoff, Nightmare of Faces, 1915
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