Art
Douglas Bourgeois
Douglas Bourgeois is a Louisiana painter, collage artist, and sculptor known for his intimately scaled, highly detailed, and meticulously crafted works.
Douglas Bourgeois is a Louisiana painter, collage artist, and sculptor known for his intimately scaled, highly detailed, and meticulously crafted works.
Photographer E. J. Bellocq gained fame after his death for his portraits of prostitutes in Storyville.
Earl Barthé was a fifth-generation architectural artisan who created architectural decorative plaster works.
Edmund Brewster arrived in New Orleans from Philadelphia in 1819 and was recognized immediately as a talented young artist.
Democratic politician Edwin Washington Edwards cast a long shadow over the state's political history.
Elemore Morgan, Jr. was an internationally recognized landscape painter and longtime advocate of the visual and performing arts in Louisiana.
Photographer Elemore Morgan, Sr., made an important visual record of mid-twentieth-century folkways, rural life, indigenous architecture, and landscapes in Louisiana.
Elizabeth Catlett served as head of the art department at Dillard University in New Orleans, where she is now an honorary citizen.
Louisiana artist Ellsworth Woodward was a pillar of the New Orleans art scene as a teacher and a promoter between 1890 and 1940.
Artist Emery Clark produces her pieces through a painstaking technique of combining photographic images with pastels, charcoal, colored pencils, or watercolors.
Sculptor Enrique Alférez's life spanned almost the entire twentieth century, with much of it spent creating art works in Louisiana.
Many view Eric Waters' photography as a commitment to the preservation of New Orleans' African American culture.
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