Art

William Greiner
Since 1980, Louisiana photographer William Greiner has exhibited his work in solo and group exhibitions at galleries and museums around the world.
Since 1980, Louisiana photographer William Greiner has exhibited his work in solo and group exhibitions at galleries and museums around the world.
Democrat William Heard, an accountant and banker, won the governorship in 1900 with strong support from Murphy J. Foster, his predecessor.
William Henry Baker was a itinerant Grand Manner portrait painter active in the New Orleans area during the nineteenth century.
Artist William Henry Buck was among the originators of the “bayou school” of painting in Louisiana.
William Moreland played a significant role in advancing the evolution of contemporary art in Louisiana's Acadiana region.
William Pitt Kellogg was governor of Louisiana during the divisive period of Radical Reconstruction.
William Ratcliffe Irby, a wealthy tobacco company executive, banker, and philanthropist in New Orleans, became a driving force in saving the French Quarter from potential mass demolition.
William Rumpler (born Johann Wilhelm) was a German portrait and landscape painter active in New Orleans between 1853 and 1866.
William S. Burroughs called New Orleans home for a brief but dramatic period from 1948 to 1949.
William P. Spratling was part of a thriving artists colony in New Orleans in the 1920s. It was from New Orleans that Spratling first traveled to Mexico where he became a leading silversmith.
William Woodward was a prolific painter, etcher, potter, historic preservationist, architect, teacher, and promoter of art in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century New Orleans.
Artist Willie Birch's work emphasizes the continuing relevance of African heritage in New Orleans, the vernacular vitality of its African American community, and the city's dark legacy of racial oppression.
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