Art
John Scott
John T. Scott, raised in New Orleans's Ninth Ward, is best known for his vibrantly colored kinetic art.
John T. Scott, raised in New Orleans's Ninth Ward, is best known for his vibrantly colored kinetic art.
José Francisco Xavier de Salazar y Mendoza was a Spanish portraitist in colonial Louisiana.
Known for her intimite, stylized photography, Josephine Sacabo principally has lived in New Orleans, citing the citys unique ambiance as a muse.
Julia Sims is a nature photographer best known for her work in Manchac Swamp between Baton Rouge and New Orleans.
In the 1990s, the Mamou-born New York sculptor Keith Sonnier was among a handful of young artists in the so-called Process Art movement who used the detritus of modern society to create artworks that focused more on materials and process than finished object.
For six decades, Kendall Shaw's art literally and metaphorically has incorporated complex layers of history, reflecting extended passages of time, his process, life experiences, and the changing styles and directions of the American art world.
In order to accommodate seaplanes as well as land-based craft, New Orleans's Lakefront Airport was built on land dredged from Lake Pontchartrain to create a site that projects into the lake.
New Orleans painter Leslie Staub is best known for her series of Louisiana cultural and political figures rendered in a style reminiscent of Orthodox Church icons.
Louis "Rags" Scheuermann was a winning baseball coach at Loyola University and Delgado Community College, as well as in municipal sports programs for the city of New Orleans.
Renowned as a seminal figure in the evolution of jazz, Louis Armstrong is also considered one of the major artistic figures of the twentieth century.
New Orleans–born musician Louis Armstrong helped introduce jazz to global audiences.
Renowned Chicago architect Louis Henry Sullivan designed only one building in Louisiana, Union Station in New Orleans.
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