Carnegie Prize

Last updated
Carnegie Gold Medal of Honor (1896) Carnegie Gold Medal 1896.jpg
Carnegie Gold Medal of Honor (1896)

The Carnegie Prize is an international art prize awarded by the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It currently consists of a $10,000 cash prize accompanied by a gold medal.

Contents

History

The Carnegie Prize was established in 1896, to recognize the best painting shown in the first annual exhibition of the Museum of Art, Carnegie Institute. Unlike most American annual exhibitions, which were limited to artists born or resident in the United States, the Carnegie exhibitions were international. [1] To attract top painters from home and abroad, the Carnegie exhibitions offered high cash prizes$1,500 for the First Class winner, $1,000 for the Second-Class winner and $500 for the Third-Class winner. The First-Class winner's cash prize was accompanied by the Carnegie Gold Medal of Honor (1896), designed by Tiffany & Co. and cast by J.E. Caldwell & Co. Often, especially in the early years, the prize-winning painting was purchased for the museum's permanent collection. [1]

The exhibition has undergone a series of name changes and transformationsadding a gold medal for sculpture (beginning in 1958), [2] and going from a schedule of every year to every second or third year, and now, to every fourth or fifth year. The exhibitions in the late 1970s were retrospectives of established artists. In 1982, the exhibition was renamed the Carnegie International, and returned to its original mission of showing recent works by a host of artists. In 1985, the Carnegie Prize was refocused to recognize not just a single work of art but an honoree's entire body of work. [1] In the 1990s, the exhibition expanded to include non-traditional artists and filmmakers.

As of 2019, 67 Carnegie Prizes had been awarded and one was refused (Irish painter Francis Bacon, 1967). [3] The Spanish sculptor Eduardo Chillida was awarded it twice (1964 for an individual sculpture, 1979 for his body of work). American painter Cecilia Beaux was the first woman awarded the Carnegie Prize (1899); German sculptor Rebecca Horn was the second woman (1988). South African artist William Kentridge was the first filmmaker awarded it (1999). Documenta, the German contemporary art exhibition, was the only organization awarded the prize (1979). English artist Lynette Yiadom-Boakye was the first woman of color awarded the prize (2018).

The Carnegie International's prize should not be confused with the Carnegie Prize of the National Academy of Design, the Carnegie Prize of the Society of American Artists, the Carnegie Art Award (Sweden), or with the Carnegie Medal (literary award).

List of Gold Medal winners

YearArtistImageWorkCollectionNotes
Annual Exhibition at the Museum of Art, Carnegie Institute [4]
$1,500 cash award accompanied the gold medal

1896
1st
John Lavery
Flag of Ireland.svg  Ireland
Lavery Lady in Brown Carnegie Catalogue 1896 plate 23.jpg Lady in Brown [4]
1897
2nd
James Jebusa Shannon
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Shannon Kitty c.1897 Carnegie Art Museum.jpg Miss Kitty [5] [6] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
The artist's daughter and two dogs
1898
3rd
Dwight William Tryon
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Tryon Early Spring in New England 1897 Smithsonian.jpg Early Spring in New England [7] Freer Gallery of Art,
Washington, D.C.
1899
4th
Cecilia Beaux
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Mother and Daughter Cecilia Beaux 1898 PAFA.jpg Mother and Daughter
(Mrs. Clement Acton Griscom & Frances
Canby Griscom)
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Gold Medal: 1900 Paris Exposition
1900 Temple Gold Medal (PAFA)

First woman awarded a Carnegie Prize. (The next was not
until 1988.)
1900
5th
André Dauchez
Flag of France.svg  France
Dauchez KelpGatherers 1900catalogue no.52.jpg The Kelp Gatherers
1901
6th
Alfred H. Maurer
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Arrangement.jpg An Arrangement Whitney Museum of American Art,
Manhattan, New York City
1902
7th
Exhibition of loaned works. [4]
No prizes awarded.
1903
8th
Frank Weston Benson
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
A Woman Reading [8] Beverly Arts Association,
Chicago, Illinois
1904
9th
Walter Elmer Schofield
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Schofield Across the River 1904 Carnegie Exhibition Catalogue.jpg Across the River [9] [10] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1905
10th
Lucien Simon
Flag of France.svg  France
Lucien Simon, 1904 - Soiree a l'Atelier.jpg Evening in a Studio Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts,
Stanford University,
Stanford, California
1906No annual exhibition
(due to museum expansion) [4]
1907
11th
Gaston La Touche
Flag of France.svg  France
La Touche The Bath 1907.jpg The Bath [4] Ex collection: William S. Stimmel [11]
Ex collection: University Club of Pittsburgh
Sold at Dargate Auction Galleries, Pittsburgh, 7 October 2017. [12]
1908
12th
Thomas W. Dewing
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
The Necklace SAAM-1929.6.40 2.jpg The Necklace [4] Smithsonian American Art Museum,
Washington, D.C.
1909
13th
Edmund C. Tarbell
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Edmund Tarbell, 1904 - A Girl Crocheting.jpg A Girl Crocheting [13] Arkell Museum,
Canajoharie, New York
1910
14th
William Orpen
Flag of Ireland.svg  Ireland
Portrait of the Artist by William Orpen. Figure in front with nude statue of a woman in the rear. LCCN2014688147.jpg Portrait of the Artist (Venus and Myself) [14] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1911
15th
John White Alexander
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
John-White-Alexander-Art-A-Ray-of-Sunlight-1898.jpg A Ray of Sunlight (The Cellist)private collection
1912
16th
Charles Sims
Flag of England.svg  England
SimsCharles Pastorella InternationalStudio June1912.jpg Pastorella [15] Ex collection: William S. Stimmel [11]
1913
17th
Glyn Warren Philpot
Flag of England.svg  England
Philpot MarbleWorker InternationalStudio June1913.jpg The Marble Worker [16] Muskegon Museum of Art,
Muskegon, Michigan
1914
18th
Edward Redfield
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
The Village in Winter [17] [18] Payne Gallery,
Moravian College,
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
Ex collection: William S. Stimmel [11]
19151919No annual exhibitions (due to World War I) [4]
International Exhibition of Paintings, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh [19]
Name change

1920
19th
Abbot Henderson Thayer
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Thayer Young Woman in Olive Plush 1920 Carnegie Catalogue.jpg Young Woman in Olive Plush
(Woman in Green Velvet) [20]
Addison Gallery of American Art,
Phillips Academy,
Andover, Massachusetts
1921
20th
Ernest Lawson
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Vanishing Mist [21] [22] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1922
21st
George W. Bellows
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Bellows Eleanor Int.Studio June1922 p.208.jpg Elinor, Jean and Anna [23] Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
Buffalo, New York
The artist's aunt, daughter and mother
1921 Beck Gold Medal (PAFA)
1923
22nd
Arthur Bowen Davies
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Afterthoughts of Earth [24]
1924
23rd
Augustus John
Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg  Wales
Madame Suggia [25] Tate Britain,
London, UK
1925
24th
Henri Le Sidaner
Flag of France.svg  France (born Mauritius)
Window on the Bay of Villefranche [26] Huntington Museum of Art,
Huntington, West Virginia
1926
25th
Ker-Xavier Roussel
Flag of France.svg  France
The Garden (The Garden Window) [27] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1927
26th
Henri Matisse
Flag of France.svg  France
Still Life: Bouquet and Compotier [28] Virginia Museum of Fine Arts,
Richmond, Virginia
1928
27th
André Derain
Flag of France.svg  France
Still Life [29] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1929
28th
Felice Carena
Flag of Italy.svg  Italy
La Scuola [30] Banca Monte dei Paschi Collection,
Siena, Italy
1930
29th
Pablo Picasso
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Portrait of Mme Picasso [4] private collection
1931
30th
Franklin C. Watkins
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Suicide in Costume [31] Philadelphia Museum of Art Depicts a dead man in clown costume holding a smoking gun.
1932No annual exhibition (due to severity of the
Great Depression)
Cash award reduced to $1,000
1933
31st
André Dunoyer de Segonzac
Flag of France.svg  France
Saint-Tropez
1934
32nd
Peter Blume
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States (born Russia)
South of Scranton [32] Metropolitan Museum of Art
1935
33rd
Hipólito Hidalgo de Caviedes y Gómez
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Elvira and Tiberio [33] Ex collection: Fine Arts Society of San Diego [33]
Auctioned at Sotheby's NY, 18–19 November 1987 [33]
1936
34th
Leon Kroll
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
The Road from the Cove [34] private collection
1937
35th
Georges Braque
Flag of France.svg  France
The Yellow Cloth (The Yellow Tablecloth) [4] private collection
1938
36th
Karl Hofer
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
The Wind [35] Detroit Institute of Arts,
Detroit, Michigan
1939
37th
Alexander Brook
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Georgia Jungle [36] [37] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
19401949No annual exhibitions (due to World War II).
Instead, 9 exhibitions of American paintings. [4]
Pittsburgh International Exhibition of Contemporary PaintingExhibition reorganized as a biennial
Cash award increased to $2,000

1950
38th
Jacques Villon
Flag of France.svg  France
The ThresherVillon was a Cubist painter, and the brother of Marcel Duchamp.
1951No exhibition
1952
39th
Ben Nicholson
Flag of England.svg  England [4]
Azure [38] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1953 & 1954No exhibitionsExhibition reorganized as a triennial. [4]
1955
40th
Alfred Manessier
Flag of France.svg  France
Crown of Thorns [39] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1956 & 1957No exhibitions
Pittsburgh International Exhibition of Contemporary Painting and Sculpture [2]
Gold Medal for Sculpture added

1958
41st
Painting
Antoni Tàpies
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Painting [40] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1958
41st
Sculpture
Alexander Calder
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Pittsburghmobile.jpg Mobile: Pittsburgh [41] Pittsburgh International Airport
1959 & 1960No exhibitions
1961
42nd
Painting
Mark Tobey
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Untitled [42] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1961
42nd
Sculpture
Alberto Giacometti
Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg  Switzerland
Walking Man 1 [43] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1962 & 1963No exhibitions
Pittsburgh International Exhibition of Contemporary Art"The traditional award structure of numbered prizes has been
eliminated in favor of equal awards, four for painting and two
for sculpture, each in the amount of $2,000." [44]
1964
43rd
Painting
Ellsworth Kelly
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Blue, Black and Red
Victor Pasmore
Flag of England.svg  England
Red Abstract No. 5 [45] Bristol Museum & Art Gallery,
Bristol, England.
Antonio Saura
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Imaginary Portrait of Goya [46] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Pierre Soulages
Flag of France.svg  France
24 November '63 [47] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Meditation on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy
1964
43rd
Sculpture
Jean Arp
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
Sculpture Classique [48] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Eduardo Chillida [49]
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Modulation d'espace II [50] Lehmbruck Museum,
Duisburg, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
1965 & 1966No exhibitions
1967
44th
Painting
Francis Bacon
Flag of Ireland.svg  Ireland
Bacon refused the prize. [3]
Josef Albers
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States (born Germany)
Homage to the Square: Vernal [51] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Joan Miró
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Queen Louise of Prussia [52] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1967
44th
Sculpture
Victor Vasarely
Flag of France.svg  France (born Hungary)
Alom [53] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1968 & 1969No exhibitions
1970
45th
No prizes awarded
19711976No exhibitions (due to construction of the
Sarah Mellon Scaife Gallery). [4]
Pittsburgh International SeriesExhibition reorganized as a biennial retrospective of a single
artist's body of work.
$50,000 Andrew W. Mellon Prize awarded to honoree. [54]
1977
46th
Pierre Alechinsky
Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium
1978No exhibition
1979
47th
Willem de Kooning
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States (born Netherlands)
$50,000 Andrew W. Mellon Prize split among 3 honorees
Eduardo Chillida [49]
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Documenta II (1959), IV (1968) and VI (1977)
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
International contemporary art exhibition held in Germany
1980 & 1981No exhibitions
Carnegie International ExhibitionExhibition re-established as a triennial
$10,000 Carnegie International Prize

1982
48th
No prizes awarded
1983 & 1984No exhibitions
1985
49th
Painting
Anselm Kiefer
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
Midgard [55] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1985
49th
Sculpture
Richard Serra
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh.jpg Carnegie [56] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1986 & 1987No exhibitions
1988
50th
Rebecca Horn
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
The Hydra Forest: Performing Oscar Wilde [57] San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Assemblage of electrical devices, glass, coal and other objects

Second woman awarded a Carnegie Prize.
1989 & 1990No exhibitions
1991
51st
On Kawara
Flag of Japan.svg  Japan
Date Paintings [58] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
19921994No exhibitions
1995
52nd
Painting
Sigmar Polke
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
Hermes Trismegistos I-IV [59] De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art,
Tilburg, North Brabant, Netherlands
1995
52nd
Sculpture
Richard Artschwager
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Table Prepared in the Presence of Enemies [60] Carnegie Art Museum,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
19961998No exhibitions
1999/2000
53rd
William Kentridge
Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa
Film: StereoscopeFirst filmmaker awarded a Carnegie Prize.
20012003No exhibitions
2004/2005
54th
Kutlug Ataman
Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey
40-channel video installation: Kuba [61] Interviews with residents of Kuba, a shanty town in Istanbul.
2006 & 2007No exhibitions
2008
55th
"Life on Mars"
Vija Celmins
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States (born Latvia)
Night Sky #12 [62] Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Third woman awarded a Carnegie Prize.
20092012No exhibitions
2013
56th
Nicole Eisenman [63]
Flag of France.svg  France
Figure paintings and sculptureFourth woman awarded a Carnegie Prize.
20142017No exhibitions
2018
57th
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye
Flag of England.svg  England
Figure paintings and portraitsFifth woman awarded a Carnegie Prize.
First woman of color awarded a Carnegie Prize.

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eduardo Chillida</span> Spanish Basque sculptor (1924–2002)

Eduardo Chillida Juantegui, or Eduardo Txillida Juantegi in Basque, was a Spanish Basque sculptor notable for his monumental abstract works.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carnegie Museum of Art</span> Art museum in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

The Carnegie Museum of Art is an art museum in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The museum was originally known as the Department of Fine Arts, Carnegie Institute and was formerly located at what is now the Main Branch of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. The museum's first gallery was opened for public use on November 5, 1895. Over the years, the gallery vastly increased in size, with a new building on Forbes Avenue built in 1907. In 1963, the name was officially changed to Museum of Art, Carnegie Institute. The size of the gallery has tripled over time, and it was officially renamed in 1986 to "Carnegie Museum of Art" to indicate it clearly as one of the four Carnegie Museums.

The Carnegie International is a North American exhibition of contemporary art from around the globe. It was first organized at the behest of industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie on November 5, 1896, in Pittsburgh. Carnegie established the International to educate and inspire the public as well as to promote international cooperation and understanding. He intended the International to provide a periodic sample of contemporary art from which Pittsburgh's Carnegie Museum of Art could enrich its permanent collection.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antoni Tàpies</span> Spanish painter and sculptor

Antoni Tàpies i Puig, 1st Marquess of Tàpies was a Spanish painter, sculptor and art theorist.

Harry Shoulberg was an American expressionist painter. He was known to be among the early group of WPA artists working in the screen print (serigraph) medium, as well as oil.

Renée Stout is an American sculptor and contemporary artist known for assemblage artworks dealing with her personal history and African-American heritage. Born in Kansas, raised in Pittsburgh, living in Washington, D.C., and connected through her art to New Orleans, her art reflects this interest in African diasporic culture throughout the United States. Stout was the first American artist to exhibit in the Smithsonian's National Museum of African Art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Douglas Volk</span> American painter

Stephen Arnold Douglas Volk was an American portrait and figure painter, muralist, and educator. He taught at the Cooper Union, the Art Students League of New York, and was one of the founders of the Minneapolis School of Fine Arts. He and his wife Marion established a summer artist colony in western Maine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brenda Putnam</span> American sculptor teacher and author (1890–1975)

Brenda Putnam was an American sculptor, teacher and author.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frances Grimes</span> American sculptor

Frances Taft Grimes was an American sculptor, best remembered for her bas-relief portraits and busts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Louis Van Lint</span> Belgian painter

Louis Van Lint was a Belgian painter, major figure of the Belgian post-war abstraction.

Eusebio Sempere Juan was a Spanish sculptor, painter, and graphic artist whose abstract geometric works make him the most representative artist of the Kinetic art movement in Spain and one of Spain's foremost artists. His use of repetition of line and mastery of color to manipulate the way light plays on the surface give depth to his pictorial compositions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Smith Prize</span>

The Mary Smith Prize (defunct) was a prestigious art prize awarded to women artists by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. It recognized the best work by a Philadelphia woman artist at PAFA's annual exhibition — one that showed "the most originality of subject, beauty of design and drawing, and finesse of color and skill of execution". The prize was founded in 1879 by Russell Smith in memory of his deceased daughter, artist Mary Russell Smith. It was awarded from 1879 to 1968.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Catharine Carter Critcher</span> American painter

CatharineCarter Critcher was an American painter. A native of Westmoreland County, Virginia, she worked in Paris and Washington, D.C. before becoming, in 1924, a member of the Taos Society of Artists, the only woman ever elected to that body. She was a long time member of the Arts Club of Washington.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Temple Gold Medal</span> Award given by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

Joseph E. Temple Fund Gold Medal (defunct) was a prestigious art prize awarded by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts most years from 1883 to 1968. A Temple Medal recognized the best oil painting by an American artist shown in PAFA's annual exhibition. Recipients included James Whistler, John Singer Sargent, Winslow Homer, Thomas Eakins, Robert Henri and Edward Hopper.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Walter Elmer Schofield</span> American painter

Walter Elmer Schofield was an American Impressionist landscape and marine painter. Although he never lived in New Hope or Bucks County, Schofield is regarded as one of the Pennsylvania Impressionists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sarah McKenzie (artist)</span> American painter

Sarah McKenzie is an American painter born in Greenwich, Connecticut. She has had numerous solo exhibitions, most notably with Denver's David B. Smith Gallery, New York's Jen Bekman Gallery, and the Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art. Her paintings have been included in group exhibitions at the Walker Art Center, the Carnegie Museum of Art, the Yale School of Architecture, the New Mexico Museum of Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, and the Aspen Art Museum.

Aaronel deRoy Gruber was an American painter, sculptor, photographer and artist. Her works are included in several museum collections and over her career her work was a part of both solo and group exhibitions including a retrospective exhibition at the Westmoreland Museum of American Art in 2013. In 2000 she cofounded the Irving and Aaronel deRoy Gruber Foundation with her husband Irving.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bruno Mankowski</span> American sculptor (1902–1990)

Bruno Mankowski, was a German-born American sculptor, carver, ceramicist and medalist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joseph Thurman Pearson Jr.</span> American painter

Joseph Thurman Pearson Jr. was an American landscape and portrait painter, and an instructor at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "A History of the Carnegie International, 18962008". Carnegie Museum of Art. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  2. 1 2 The 1958 Pittsburgh International Exhibition of Contemporary Painting and Sculpture, from Amazon.
  3. 1 2 Matthew Gale & Chris Stephens, Francis Bacon (Rizzoli International Publishing, 2009), p. 263.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Donald Miller (8 October 2004). "Carnegie International Timeline". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Archived from the original on 23 January 2015. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
  5. Miss Kitty, from CMoA
  6. Miss Kitty, from SIRIS.
  7. Early Spring in New England, from SIRIS.
  8. A Woman Reading, from SIRIS.
  9. Across the River, from CMoA.
  10. Across the River, from SIRIS.
  11. 1 2 3 Will J. Hyett, "Some Collections of Paintings in Pittsburgh," Art and Archaeology, vol. 14, nos. 5-6 (November/December 1922), p. 328.
  12. The Bath, from LiveAuctioneers.
  13. A Girl Crocheting, from SIRIS.
  14. Venus and Myself, from CMoA.
  15. "The International studio". New York, John Lane Co. [etc.] 4 January 1897 via Internet Archive.
  16. "The International studio". New York, John Lane Co. [etc.] 4 January 1897 via Internet Archive.
  17. The Village in Winter, from SIRIS.
  18. Village in Winter Archived 2018-12-29 at the Wayback Machine , from The Athenaeum.
  19. "The Pittsburgh international exhibition of contemporary painting and sculpture. 1920 (19th)". HathiTrust.
  20. Woman in Green Velvet, from SIRIS.
  21. Vanishing Mist, from CMoA.
  22. Vanishing Mist, from SIRIS.
  23. Elinor, Jean and Anna, from SIRIS.
  24. Afterthoughts of Earth, from SIRIS.
  25. Madame Suggia, from Tate Britain.
  26. Window on the Bay of Villefranche, from Google Arts & Culture.
  27. The Garden, from CMoA.
  28. Still Life: Bouquet and Compotier, from VMFA.
  29. Still Life, from CMoA.
  30. La Scuola, from Artribune.
  31. Suicide in Costume, from PMA.
  32. South of Scranton, from MMA.
  33. 1 2 3 Elvira and Tiberio, from San Diego State University.
  34. Road from the Cove, from SIRIS.
  35. The Wind, from DIA.
  36. Georgia Jungle, from CMoA.
  37. Georgia Jungle, from SIRIS.
  38. Azure, from CMoA.
  39. Crown of Thorns, from CMoA.
  40. Painting, from CMoA.
  41. Pittsburgh (sculpture), from SIRIS.
  42. Untitled, from CMoA.
  43. Walking Man 1, from CMoA.
  44. Pittsburgh International Exhibition of Contemporary Art (Carnegie Institute, Dept. of Fine Arts, 1964), p. 16.
  45. Red Abstract No. 5, from Art UK.
  46. Imaginary Portrait of Goya, from CMoA.
  47. 24 November '63, from CMoA.
  48. Sculpture Classique, from CMoA.
  49. 1 2 Ken Johnson, "Eduardo Chillida, Sculptor on a Grand Scale, Dies at 78," The New York Times , 22 August 2002.
  50. Modulation d'espace, (PDF) Archived 2018-12-30 at the Wayback Machine from Lehmbruck Museum.
  51. Homage to the Square: Vernal, from CMoA.
  52. Queen Louise of Prussia, from CMoA.
  53. Alom, from CMoA.
  54. Nicole F. Scalissi, "Art of the People: Pierre Alechinsky and the CoBrA Movement," from CMoA.
  55. Midgard, from CMoA.
  56. Carnegie, from CMoA.
  57. The Hydra Forest: Performing Oscar Wilde, from SFMOMA.
  58. Date Paintings, from CMoA.
  59. Hermes Trismegistos I-IV, from De Pont Museum.
  60. Table Prepared in the Presence of Enemies, from CMoA.
  61. Oskar Czerniawski, "Kutlug Ataman's Kuba offers a window into a community," Culture24, from Arts Council England.
  62. Night Sky #12, from CMoA.
  63. "Artist Nicole Eisenman wins Carnegie Prize for ingenious installation at Carnegie International". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 22 Jan 2014.