Art

Robert Brammer
Itinerant landscape painter Robert Brammer opened a portrait studio in New Orleans in 1842.
Itinerant landscape painter Robert Brammer opened a portrait studio in New Orleans in 1842.
For four decades artist Robert Joseph Warrens has used his painting to explore the nature of art, social ills, and the polluting of the environment.
Robert S. Brantley's photography is informed by a study of architectural history and a background in journalism.
Robert Tannen is an artist, urban planner, and activist. Born in New York, Tannen has worked in New Orleans since the 1950s.
To Louisiana artist Rolland Have Golden, the South has long been the metaphysical "heartbeat" of inspiration.
Artist Roy Ferdinand chronicled the street life and characters from some of New Orleans' toughest neighborhoods with graphic, head-on representations of his subjects.
Nationally acclaimed photographer Russell Lee produced series of photographs on Louisiana life, including scenes of rural communities and New Orleans, for the Great Depression-era Farm Security Administration (FSA) project.
Artist and educator Sarah Agnes Estelle "Sadie" Irvine is considered by many scholars to be the leading figure in the influential Newcomb Pottery movement.
Multimedia installation artist Sally Heller uses ordinary household items, construction materials, and other found objects to create room-size installations.
Of the hundreds of photographers in New Orleans during the second half of the nineteenth century, Samuel T. Blessing stands out for his longevity, production, and business acumen.
Photographer Sandra Russell Clark creates black-and-white, infrared, hand-painted images of historic New Orleans cemeteries, southern landscapes and gardens, and European architecture.
Sarah Albritton was a self-taught artist and restauranteur from Ruston.
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