Chagall
English
editEtymology
editFrom a French surname of Hebrew origin.
Pronunciation
edit- enPR: shə-gälʹ, shə-gălʹ
Noun
editChagall (plural Chagalls)
- An artwork, or a copy of one, by the famous artist Marc Chagall.
- 2013 June 29, “Of mice and Manet”, in The Economist[1]:
- [Dr Shigeru Watanabe] has previously shown that Java sparrows are able to distinguish cubist paintings from impressionist and Japanese ones, and that pigeons can tell a Chagall from a Van Gogh, as well as discriminating between the Japanese school and the impressionist.
- 1973, Anne-Marie Stein, George Carpozi, Three Picassos Before Breakfast: Memoirs of an Art Forger's Wife[2], Hawthorne Books, page 46:
- For the next two weeks David worked resolutely at the drawing board turning out Chagalls in crayon, watercolor, and gouache, and he even experimented boldly in oils.
Proper noun
editChagall
- A surname from French; (art) used specifically of Marc Chagall (1887–1985), a Russian-French artist of Belarusian Jewish origin, renown for his use of colors and as a pioneer of modernism, incorporating elements of symbolism, fauvism, and cubism.
- 2014, James A. Levine, Bingo's Run, New York: Spiegel & Grau, page 100:
- “What's tha most monay for a paintin' eva?” ¶ She smiled. “Well, last month I sold a Braque for two million and a Chagall oil for four million. […]”
- 2003 April 23, Sarah Bardem, “The French collections”, in The Guardian[3]:
- Images of flying brides, goats, acrobats and musicians recur again and again in the work of Chagall, each time reworked through the colour spectrum in a world at once harmonious and spiritual.
Derived terms
edit- Chagallesque (adjective)
- Chagallian (adjective)
See also
edit- Chagall (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia