Maxfield Parrish, once the most popular artist in America, is now a name associated unfailingly with kitsch. Yet Parrish’s own estimation of himself was as a “popular” artist, and said as much in an ...
The dreamlike creations of artist Maxfield Parrish are on display now at the Henry Morrison Flagler Museum in Palm Beach, bringing the island some of the painter and illustrator's most notable works. ...
The masterpieces of Maxfield Parrish are recognized by many who have seen his vibrant landscapes and dreamy fantasies gracing homes, hotels and magazine covers for decades. For Alma Gilbert, the ...
The first time I saw Maxfield Parrish's work was a couple of years after college when I bought a CD by the rock band Dalis Car. The cover showed a detail of Parrish's most-famous work, "Daybreak," a ...
Works by the American imagist Maxfield Parrish (1870-1966), one of the greats of the golden age of illustration, will be on view at Nassau County Museum of Art from Nov. 21 to Feb. 28, 2016. The works ...
Twenty years is a long time for a stolen painting to be missing -- making it all the more odd, San Francisco police say, that the artwork turned up just three blocks from the Union Square gallery ...
The first biographer of Parrish has not seen this traveling exhibition of magazine covers, print advertisements, posters and calendars, but confidently offers this advice to museumgoers: “I think it ...
From 1895 to 1931, Maxfield Parrish produced superb commercial art that blended fantasy, nature and historical references. His output included book and magazine illustrations, advertising art and ...
Maxfield Parrish was one of the most successful artists in America in the first half of the 20th century. So popular were his illustrations that it was said reproductions of "Daybreak," alone, hung in ...
Q: I own a framed Maxfield Parrish “Daybreak” print. The frame measures 20 by 121/4 inches. A label on the back indicates it was purchased from the Art Department of A.S. Johnson & Co. in Tacoma, Wash ...
On an otherwise unremarkable July day in 2002, Texas businessman and art collector J.P. Bryan received an unexpected call from the FBI. The agent on the other end of the line wanted to confirm that ...