[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"museum-museum-of-modern-art-mo-ma":3,"museum-nearby-museum-of-modern-art-mo-ma":35,"museum-paintings-museum-of-modern-art-mo-ma":69},{"address":4,"latitude":5,"longitude":6,"name":7,"zipCode":8,"id":9,"city":10,"slug":21,"description":22,"background":23,"logo":24,"phone":25,"popularity":26,"schedules":27,"website":28,"wikipediaId":29,"popularPaintingImages":30},"11 W 53rd St",40.7614,-73.9776,"Museum of Modern Art (MoMa)","10019","52d50c03-3926-4b70-b256-c7d9960f5a8f",{"latitude":11,"longitude":12,"name":13,"id":14,"country":15,"slug":19,"image":20},40.7128,-74.006,"New York","1679091c-45b4-4d44-a6f6-33535e89d0f7",{"id":16,"name":17,"slug":18},"163eceee-fc56-4c98-b05e-32dce9a959a5","United States of America","united-states-of-america","new-york","","museum-of-modern-art-mo-ma","The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues. MoMA's collection spans the late 19th century to the present, and includes over 200,000 works of architecture and design, drawing, painting, sculpture, photography, prints, illustrated and artist's books, film, as well as electronic media.\n\nThe institution was conceived in 1929 by Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, Lillie P. Bliss, and Mary Quinn Sullivan. Initially located in the Heckscher Building on Fifth Avenue, it opened just days after the Wall Street Crash. The museum was led by A. Conger Goodyear as president and Abby Rockefeller as treasurer, with Alfred H. Barr Jr. as its first director. Under Barr's leadership, the museum's collection rapidly expanded, beginning with an inaugural exhibition of works by European modernists. Despite financial challenges, including opposition from John D. Rockefeller Jr., the museum moved to several temporary locations in its early years, and John D. Rockefeller Jr. eventually donated the land for its permanent site. In 1939, the museum moved to its current location on West 53rd Street designed by architects Philip L. Goodwin and Edward Durell Stone. A new sculpture garden, designed by Barr and curator John McAndrew, also opened that year.\n\nFrom the 1930s through the 1950s, MoMA became a host to several landmark exhibitions, including Barr's influential \"Cubism and Abstract Art\" in 1936. Nelson Rockefeller became the museum's president in 1939, playing a key role in its expansion and publicity. David Rockefeller joined the board in 1948 and continued the family's close association with the museum until his death in 2017. In 1953, Philip Johnson redesigned the garden, which subsequently became the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden. In 1958, a fire at MoMA destroyed a painting by Claude Monet and led to the evacuation of other artworks. In later decades, the museum was among several institutions to aid the CIA in its efforts to engage in cultural propaganda during the Cold War. Major expansions in the 1980s and the early 21st century, including the selection of Japanese architect Yoshio Taniguchi for a significant renovation, nearly doubled MoMA's space for exhibitions and programs. The 2000s saw the formal merger with the P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center, and in 2019, another major renovation added significant gallery space.\n\nThe museum has been instrumental in shaping the history of modern art, particularly modern art from Europe. In recent decades, MoMA has expanded its collection and programming to include works by traditionally underrepresented groups. The museum has been involved in controversies regarding its labor practices, and the institution's labor union, founded in 1971, has been described as the first of its kind in the U.S. The MoMA Library includes about 300,000 books and exhibition catalogs, more than 1,000 periodical titles and more than 40,000 files of ephemera about individual artists and groups. The archives hold primary source material related to the history of modern and contemporary art. In 2023, MoMA was visited by over 2.8 million people, making it the 15th most-visited art museum in the world and the 6th most-visited museum in the United States.","museum-of-modern-art\u002Fbackground\u002Fmuseum-of-modern-art_background","museum-of-modern-art\u002Flogo\u002Fmuseum-of-modern-art_logo","+1 212-708-9400",2,"Daily: 10:30 AM – 5:30 PM\nFriday: open until 9:80 PM","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.moma.org","Museum_of_Modern_Art",[31,32,33,34],"vincent-van-gogh\u002Fthe-starry-night\u002Fthe-starry-night","salvador-dali\u002Fthe-persistence-of-memory\u002Fthe-persistence-of-memory","pablo-picasso\u002Fthe-ladies-of-avignon\u002Fthe-ladies-of-avignon","henri-rousseau\u002Fthe-sleeping-gypsy\u002Fthe-sleeping-gypsy",[36,53],{"address":37,"latitude":38,"longitude":39,"name":40,"zipCode":41,"id":42,"city":43,"slug":45,"description":46,"background":47,"logo":48,"phone":49,"popularity":50,"schedules":20,"website":51,"wikipediaId":52},"1000 Fifth Avenue - 82nd Street",40.7794,-73.9634,"Metropolitan Museum of Art (The Met)","NY 10028","798bdd0c-03dc-4842-82ad-4b155211aad8",{"latitude":11,"longitude":12,"name":13,"id":14,"country":44,"slug":19,"image":20},{"id":16,"name":17,"slug":18},"metropolitan-museum-of-art-the-met","The Metropolitan Museum of Art, colloquially referred to as the Met, is an encyclopedic art museum in New York City. By floor area, it is the fourth-largest museum in the world and the largest art museum in the Americas. With 5.727,258 million visitors in 2024, it is the most-visited museum in the United States and the fourth-most visited art museum in the world.\n\nIn 2000, its permanent collection had over two million works; it currently lists a total of 1.5 million works. The collection is divided into 17 curatorial departments. The main building at 1000 Fifth Avenue, along the Museum Mile on the eastern edge of Central Park on Manhattan's Upper East Side, is by area one of the world's largest art museums. The first portion of the approximately 2-million-square-foot (190,000 m2) building was built in 1880. A much smaller second location, The Cloisters at Fort Tryon Park in Upper Manhattan, contains an extensive collection of art, architecture, and artifacts from medieval Europe.\n\nThe Metropolitan Museum of Art was founded in 1870, the museum was established by a group of Americans, including philanthropists, artists, and businessmen, with the goal of creating a national institution that would inspire and educate the public. The museum's permanent collection consists of works of art ranging from the ancient Near East and ancient Egypt, through classical antiquity to the contemporary world. It includes paintings, sculptures, and graphic works from many European Old Masters, as well as an extensive collection of American, modern, and contemporary art. The Met also maintains extensive holdings of African, Asian, Oceanian, Byzantine, and Islamic art. The museum is home to encyclopedic collections of musical instruments, costumes, and decorative arts and textiles, as well as antique weapons and armor from around the world. Several notable interiors, ranging from 1st-century Rome through modern American design, are installed in its galleries.","metropolitan-museum-of-art-the-met\u002Fbackground\u002Fmetropolitan-museum-of-art-the-met_background","metropolitan-museum-of-art-the-met\u002Flogo\u002Fmetropolitan-museum-of-art-the-met_logo","+1 212-535-7710",13,"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.metmuseum.org\u002F","Metropolitan_Museum_of_Art",{"address":54,"latitude":55,"longitude":56,"name":57,"zipCode":41,"id":58,"city":59,"slug":61,"description":62,"background":63,"logo":64,"phone":65,"popularity":66,"schedules":20,"website":67,"wikipediaId":68},"1048 5th Ave",40.7812,-73.9602,"Neue Galerie New York","4eb6105c-7530-4273-bdef-d9a3e587f15b",{"latitude":11,"longitude":12,"name":13,"id":14,"country":60,"slug":19,"image":20},{"id":16,"name":17,"slug":18},"neue-galerie-new-york","The Neue Galerie New York (German for \"New Gallery\") is a museum of early twentieth-century German and Austrian art and design located in the William Starr Miller House at 86th Street and Fifth Avenue in New York City. Established in 2001, it is one of the most recent additions to New York City's Museum Mile, which runs from 83rd to 105th streets on Fifth Avenue on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.","neue-galerie-new-york\u002Fbackground\u002Fneue-galerie-new-york_background","neue-galerie-new-york\u002Flogo\u002Fneue-galerie-new-york_logo","+1 212-628-6200",41,"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.neuegalerie.org","Neue_Galerie_New_York",{"items":70,"total":247,"page":248,"pageSize":249,"totalPages":250},[71,120,159,198],{"title":72,"id":73,"artists":74,"slug":89,"date":90,"description":91,"height":92,"image":31,"inPrivateCollection":93,"isLocationUnknown":93,"originalTitle":94,"popularity":26,"width":95,"wikipediaId":96,"collections":97,"genres":98,"museum":103,"movements":106,"mediums":115},"The Starry Night","805f3d28-7524-4fc5-bd48-74d0acfbf355",[75],{"name":76,"id":77,"nationality":78,"slug":82,"biography":83,"born":84,"death":85,"image":86,"popularity":26,"sex":87,"wikipediaId":88},"Vincent van Gogh","e071d28a-4541-478c-8ac4-227b9e936471",{"id":79,"name":80,"slug":81},"a9c6c9dc-fe5f-46ac-ad89-5121979f7bb7","Dutch","dutch","vincent-van-gogh","Vincent Willem van Gogh (30 March 1853 – 29 July 1890) was a Dutch Post-Impressionist painter who is among the most famous and influential figures in the history of Western art. In just over a decade, he created approximately 2,100 artworks, including around 860 oil paintings, most of them in the last two years of his life. His oeuvre includes landscapes, still lifes, portraits, and self-portraits, most of which are characterised by bold colours and dramatic brushwork that contributed to the rise of expressionism in modern art. Van Gogh's work was only beginning to gain critical attention before his death from suicide at age 37. During his lifetime, only one of Van Gogh's paintings, The Red Vineyard, was sold.\n\nBorn into an upper-middle-class family, Van Gogh drew as a child and was serious, quiet and thoughtful, but showed signs of mental instability. As a young man, he worked as an art dealer, often travelling, but became depressed after he was transferred to London. He turned to religion and spent time as a missionary in southern Belgium. Later he drifted into ill-health and solitude. He was keenly aware of modernist trends in art and, while back with his parents, took up painting in 1881. His younger brother, Theo, supported him financially, and the two of them maintained a long correspondence.\n\nVan Gogh's early works consist of mostly still lifes and depictions of peasant labourers. In 1886, he moved to Paris, where he met members of the artistic avant-garde, including Émile Bernard and Paul Gauguin, who were seeking new paths beyond Impressionism. Frustrated in Paris and inspired by a growing spirit of artistic change and collaboration, in February 1888 Van Gogh moved to Arles in southern France to establish an artistic retreat and commune. Once there, his paintings grew brighter and he turned his attention to the natural world, depicting local olive groves, wheat fields and sunflowers. Van Gogh invited Gauguin to join him in Arles and eagerly anticipated Gauguin's arrival in late 1888.\n\nVan Gogh suffered from psychotic episodes and delusions. He worried about his mental stability, and often neglected his physical health, did not eat properly and drank heavily. His friendship with Gauguin ended after a confrontation with a razor when, in a rage, he mutilated his left ear. Van Gogh spent time in psychiatric hospitals, including a period at Saint-Rémy. After he discharged himself and moved to the Auberge Ravoux in Auvers-sur-Oise near Paris, he came under the care of the homeopathic doctor Paul Gachet. His depression persisted, and on 29 July 1890 Van Gogh died from his injuries after shooting himself in the chest with a revolver.\n\nVan Gogh's work began to attract critical artistic attention in the last year of his life. After his death, his art and life story captured public imagination as an emblem of misunderstood genius, due in large part to the efforts of his widowed sister-in-law Johanna van Gogh-Bonger. His bold use of colour, expressive line and thick application of paint inspired avant-garde artistic groups like the Fauves and German Expressionists in the early 20th century. Van Gogh's work gained widespread critical and commercial success in the following decades, and he has become a lasting icon of the romantic ideal of the tortured artist. Today, Van Gogh's works are among the world's most expensive paintings ever sold. His legacy is celebrated by the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, which holds the world's largest collection of his paintings and drawings.","1853-03-30","1890-07-29","vincent-van-gogh\u002Fvincent-van-gogh","MALE","Vincent_van_Gogh","the-starry-night","1889","The Starry Night, often called simply Starry Night, is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Dutch Post-Impressionist painter Vincent van Gogh. Painted in June 1889, it depicts the view from the east-facing window of his asylum room at Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, just before sunrise, with the addition of an imaginary village. It has been in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City since 1941, acquired through the Lillie P. Bliss Bequest. Described as a \"touchstone of modern art\", The Starry Night has been regarded as one of the most recognizable paintings in the Western canon.\n\nThe painting was created in mid-June 1889, inspired by the view from Van Gogh’s bedroom window at the Saint-Paul-de-Mausole asylum. The former monastery functioned as a mental asylum, where Van Gogh voluntarily admitted himself on 8 May 1889, following a mental breakdown and his infamous act of self-mutilation that occurred in late December 1888. Catering to wealthy patients, the facility was less than half full at the time of Van Gogh's admission, allowing the artist access to both a second-story bedroom and a ground-floor studio. During his year-long stay, he remained highly productive, creating Irises, a self-portrait, and The Starry Night.\n\nThe painting's celestial elements include Venus, which was visible in the sky at the time, though the moon’s depiction is not astronomically accurate. The cypress trees in the foreground were exaggerated in scale compared to other works. Van Gogh's letters suggest he viewed them primarily in aesthetic rather than symbolic terms. The village in the painting is an imaginary addition, based on sketches rather than the actual landscape seen from the asylum.\n\nThe Starry Night has been subject to various interpretations, ranging from religious symbolism to representations of Van Gogh’s emotional turmoil. Some art historians link the swirling sky to contemporary astronomical discoveries, while others see it as an expression of Van Gogh’s personal struggles. Van Gogh himself was critical of the painting, referring to it as a \"failure\" in letters to his brother, Theo. The artwork was inherited by Theo upon Vincent's death. Following Theo's death six months after Vincent's, the work was owned by Theo's widow, Jo, who sold it to Émile Schuffenecker in 1901, who sold it back to Jo in 1905. From 1906 to 1938 it was owned by one Georgette P. van Stolk, of Rotterdam. Paul Rosenberg bought it from van Stolk in 1938 and sold it (by exchange) to the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1941, which rarely loans it out. Scientific analysis of the painting has confirmed Van Gogh’s use of ultramarine and cobalt blue for the sky, with indian yellow and zinc yellow for the stars and moon.",73.7,false,"De sterrennacht (Dutch)",92.1,"The_Starry_Night",[],[99],{"name":100,"id":101,"slug":102},"Landscape","3c4d5e6f-789a-4bcd-9ef0-1234567890ab","landscape",{"address":4,"latitude":5,"longitude":6,"name":7,"zipCode":8,"id":9,"city":104,"slug":21,"description":22,"background":23,"logo":24,"phone":25,"popularity":26,"schedules":27,"website":28,"wikipediaId":29},{"latitude":11,"longitude":12,"name":13,"id":14,"country":105,"slug":19,"image":20},{"id":16,"name":17,"slug":18},[107,111],{"name":108,"id":109,"slug":110,"dates":20},"Post-Impressionism","86aae3e1-efba-4a62-93ab-dd9de5288827","post-impressionism",{"name":112,"id":113,"slug":114,"dates":20},"Modern Art","f4c96565-ac59-4dd1-802c-46e44261c09a","modern-art",[116],{"name":117,"id":118,"slug":119},"Oil on canvas","f74fc1b0-2804-4c39-a52c-84cad71698d7","oil-on-canvas",{"title":121,"id":122,"artists":123,"slug":138,"date":139,"description":140,"height":141,"image":32,"inPrivateCollection":93,"isLocationUnknown":93,"originalTitle":142,"popularity":143,"width":144,"wikipediaId":145,"collections":146,"genres":147,"museum":149,"movements":152,"mediums":157},"The Persistence of Memory","c8505a66-c190-4d0c-8f79-695601827f7a",[124],{"name":125,"id":126,"nationality":127,"slug":131,"biography":132,"born":133,"death":134,"image":135,"popularity":136,"sex":87,"wikipediaId":137},"Salvador Dalí","61e6d8b0-cb43-4883-94d2-5dea33d6f748",{"id":128,"name":129,"slug":130},"4a09a1c7-aa43-449d-8504-5ee4f0da4987","Spanish","spanish","salvador-dali","Salvador Domingo Felipe Jacinto Dalí i Domènech, Marquess of Dalí de Púbol GYC (11 May 1904 – 23 January 1989), known as Salvador Dalí (\u002Fˈdɑː.li, dɑː.ˈliː\u002F DAH-lee, dah-LEE; Catalan: ; Spanish: ), was a Spanish surrealist artist renowned for his technical skill, precise draftsmanship, and the striking and bizarre images in his work.\n\nBorn in Figueres in Catalonia, Dalí received his formal education in fine arts in Madrid. Influenced by Impressionism and the Renaissance masters from a young age, he became increasingly attracted to Cubism and avant-garde movements. He moved closer to Surrealism in the late 1920s and joined the Surrealist group in 1929, soon becoming one of its leading exponents. His best-known work, The Persistence of Memory, was completed in August 1931. Dalí lived in France throughout the Spanish Civil War (1936 to 1939) before leaving for the United States in 1940 where he achieved commercial success. He returned to Spain in 1948 where he announced his return to the Catholic faith and developed his \"nuclear mysticism\" style, based on his interest in classicism, mysticism, and recent scientific developments.\n\nDalí's artistic repertoire included painting, sculpture, film, graphic arts, animation, fashion, and photography, at times in collaboration with other artists. He also wrote fiction, poetry, autobiography, essays, and criticism. Major themes in his work include dreams, the subconscious, sexuality, religion, science and his closest personal relationships. To the dismay of those who held his work in high regard, and to the irritation of his critics, his eccentric and ostentatious public behavior often drew more attention than his artwork. His public support for the Francoist regime, his commercial activities and the quality and authenticity of some of his late works have also been controversial. His life and work were an important influence on other Surrealists, pop art, popular culture, and contemporary artists such as Jeff Koons and Damien Hirst.\n\nThere are two major museums devoted to Salvador Dalí's work: the Dalí Theatre-Museum in Figueres, Spain, and the Salvador Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida, U.S.","1904-05-11","1989-01-23","salvador-dali\u002Fsalvador-dali",10,"Salvador_Dalí","the-persistence-of-memory","1931","The Persistence of Memory (Catalan: La persistència de la memòria, Spanish: La persistencia de la memoria) is a 1931 painting by artist Salvador Dalí and one of the most recognizable works of Surrealism. First exhibited at the Julien Levy Gallery in 1932 and sold for $250, The Persistence of Memory was donated to the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City two years later in 1934 by an anonymous donor, where it has remained ever since. It is widely recognized and frequently referred to in popular culture, and sometimes referred to by more descriptive titles, such as \"The Melting Clocks\", \"The Soft Watches\" or \"The Melting Watches\".",24,"La persistencia de la memoria (Spanish)",42,33,"The_Persistence_of_Memory",[],[148],{"name":100,"id":101,"slug":102},{"address":4,"latitude":5,"longitude":6,"name":7,"zipCode":8,"id":9,"city":150,"slug":21,"description":22,"background":23,"logo":24,"phone":25,"popularity":26,"schedules":27,"website":28,"wikipediaId":29},{"latitude":11,"longitude":12,"name":13,"id":14,"country":151,"slug":19,"image":20},{"id":16,"name":17,"slug":18},[153],{"name":154,"id":155,"slug":156,"dates":20},"Surrealism","57992a0c-6d2c-4081-aca8-e429c561e59e","surrealism",[158],{"name":117,"id":118,"slug":119},{"title":160,"id":161,"artists":162,"slug":174,"date":175,"description":176,"height":177,"image":33,"inPrivateCollection":93,"isLocationUnknown":93,"originalTitle":178,"popularity":179,"width":180,"wikipediaId":181,"collections":182,"genres":183,"museum":188,"movements":191,"mediums":196},"The Ladies of Avignon","54d214a8-5e24-4260-8af1-f1a4144ae08c",[163],{"name":164,"id":165,"nationality":166,"slug":167,"biography":168,"born":169,"death":170,"image":171,"popularity":172,"sex":87,"wikipediaId":173},"Pablo Picasso","71b4c2ca-ee41-4a0b-9b03-bb77936f683b",{"id":128,"name":129,"slug":130},"pablo-picasso","Pablo Ruiz Picasso (25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973) was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist, and theatre designer who spent most of his adult life in France. One of the most influential artists of the 20th century, he is known for co-founding the Cubist movement, the invention of constructed sculpture, the co-invention of collage, and for the wide variety of styles that he helped develop and explore. Among his most famous works are the proto-Cubist Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907) and the anti-war painting Guernica (1937), a dramatic portrayal of the bombing of Guernica by German and Italian air forces during the Spanish Civil War.\n\nBeginning his formal training under his father José Ruiz y Blasco aged seven, Picasso demonstrated extraordinary artistic talent from a young age, painting in a naturalistic manner through his childhood and adolescence. During the first decade of the 20th century, his style changed as he experimented with different theories, techniques, and ideas. After 1906, the Fauvist work of the older artist Henri Matisse motivated Picasso to explore more radical styles, beginning a fruitful rivalry between the two artists, who subsequently were often paired by critics as the leaders of modern art.\n\nPicasso's output, especially in his early career, is often periodized. While the names of many of his later periods are debated, the most commonly accepted periods in his work are the Blue Period (1901–1904), the Rose Period (1904–1906), the African-influenced Period (1907–1909), Analytic Cubism (1909–1912), and Synthetic Cubism (1912–1919), also referred to as the Crystal period. Much of Picasso's work of the late 1910s and early 1920s is in a neoclassical style, and his work in the mid-1920s often has characteristics of Surrealism. His later work often combines elements of his earlier styles.\n\nExceptionally prolific throughout the course of his long life, Picasso achieved universal renown and immense fortune for his revolutionary artistic accomplishments, and became one of the best-known figures in 20th-century art.","1881-10-25","1973-10-08","pablo-picasso\u002Fpablo-picasso",5,"Pablo_Picasso","the-ladies-of-avignon","1907","Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (The Young Ladies of Avignon, originally titled The Brothel of Avignon) is a large oil painting created in 1907 by the Spanish artist Pablo Picasso. Part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, it portrays five nude female prostitutes in a brothel on Carrer d'Avinyó, a street in Barcelona, Spain. The figures are confrontational and not conventionally feminine, being rendered with angular and disjointed body shapes, some to a menacing degree. The far left figure exhibits facial features and dress of Egyptian or southern Asian style. The two adjacent figures are in an Iberian style of Picasso's Spain, while the two on the right have African mask-like features. Picasso said the ethnic primitivism evoked in these masks moved him to \"liberate an utterly original artistic style of compelling, even savage force\" leading him to add a shamanistic aspect to his project.\n\nDrawing from tribal primitivism while eschewing central dictates of Renaissance perspective and verisimilitude for a compressed picture plane using a Baroque composition while employing Velazquez's confrontational approach seen in Las Meninas, Picasso sought to take the lead of the avant-garde from Henri Matisse. John Richardson said Demoiselles made Picasso the most pivotal artist in Western painting since Giotto and laid a path forward for Picasso and Georges Braque to follow in their joint development of cubism, the effects of which on modern art were profound and unsurpassed in the 20th century.\n\nLes Demoiselles was revolutionary, controversial and led to widespread anger and disagreement, even amongst the painter's closest associates and friends. Henri Matisse considered the work something of a bad joke yet indirectly reacted to it in his 1908 Bathers with a Turtle. Georges Braque too initially disliked the painting yet studied the work in great detail. His subsequent friendship and collaboration with Picasso led to the cubist revolution. Its resemblance to Cézanne's The Bathers, Paul Gauguin's statue Oviri and El Greco's Opening of the Fifth Seal has been widely discussed by later critics.\n\nAt the time of its first exhibition in 1916, the painting was deemed immoral. Painted in Picasso's studio in the Bateau-Lavoir in Montmartre, Paris, it was seen publicly for the first time at the Salon d'Antin in July 1916, at an exhibition organized by the poet André Salmon. It was at this exhibition that Salmon, who had previously titled the painting in 1912 Le bordel philosophique, renamed it to its current, less scandalous title, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, instead of the title originally chosen by Picasso, Le Bordel d'Avignon. Picasso, who always referred to it as mon bordel (\"my brothel\"), or Le Bordel d'Avignon, never liked Salmon's title and would have instead preferred the bowdlerization Las chicas de Avignon (\"The Girls of Avignon\").",243.9,"Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (French)",49,233.7,"Les_Demoiselles_d'Avignon",[],[184],{"name":185,"id":186,"slug":187},"Figure painting","8b9c0def-0123-4567-89ab-cdef12345678","figure-painting",{"address":4,"latitude":5,"longitude":6,"name":7,"zipCode":8,"id":9,"city":189,"slug":21,"description":22,"background":23,"logo":24,"phone":25,"popularity":26,"schedules":27,"website":28,"wikipediaId":29},{"latitude":11,"longitude":12,"name":13,"id":14,"country":190,"slug":19,"image":20},{"id":16,"name":17,"slug":18},[192],{"name":193,"id":194,"slug":195,"dates":20},"Proto-Cubism","64561441-27fd-49d0-a6d7-e2df7ab36606","proto-cubism",[197],{"name":117,"id":118,"slug":119},{"title":199,"id":200,"artists":201,"slug":216,"date":217,"description":218,"height":219,"image":34,"inPrivateCollection":93,"isLocationUnknown":93,"originalTitle":220,"popularity":221,"width":222,"wikipediaId":223,"collections":224,"genres":225,"museum":231,"movements":234,"mediums":245},"The Sleeping Gypsy","3c03cc45-2705-4bfc-a888-ed6ffc6a0266",[202],{"name":203,"id":204,"nationality":205,"slug":209,"biography":210,"born":211,"death":212,"image":213,"popularity":214,"sex":87,"wikipediaId":215},"Henri Rousseau","b47d493d-c6a8-4355-99c2-4da868faf2f9",{"id":206,"name":207,"slug":208},"ed07084f-12cd-4fcc-b61e-8f2ba92e0866","French","french","henri-rousseau","Henri Julien Félix Rousseau (French: ; 21 May 1844 – 2 September 1910) was a French post-Impressionist painter in the Naïve or Primitive manner. He was also known as Le Douanier (the customs officer), a humorous description of his occupation as a toll and tax collector. He started painting seriously in his early forties; by age 49, he retired from his job to work on his art full-time.\n\nRidiculed during his lifetime by critics, he came to be recognized as a self-taught genius whose works are of high artistic quality. Rousseau's work exerted an extensive influence on several generations of avant-garde artists.","1844-05-21","1910-09-02","henri-rousseau\u002Fhenri-rousseau",57,"Henri_Rousseau","the-sleeping-gypsy","1897","The Sleeping Gypsy (French: La Bohémienne endormie) is an 1897 oil on canvas painting by the French Naïve artist Henri Rousseau (1844–1910). It is a fantastical depiction of a lion musing over a sleeping woman on a moonlit night. It is held by the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, to which it was donated by Mrs. Simon Guggenheim in 1939. In the museum, the painting is housed next to Vincent van Gogh's famous 1889 painting The Starry Night.",129.5,"La Bohémienne endormie (French)",102,200.7,"The_Sleeping_Gypsy",[],[226,227],{"name":100,"id":101,"slug":102},{"name":228,"id":229,"slug":230},"Genre Art","ac674f9c-b197-4cb9-b646-e6af5173aa1b","genre-art",{"address":4,"latitude":5,"longitude":6,"name":7,"zipCode":8,"id":9,"city":232,"slug":21,"description":22,"background":23,"logo":24,"phone":25,"popularity":26,"schedules":27,"website":28,"wikipediaId":29},{"latitude":11,"longitude":12,"name":13,"id":14,"country":233,"slug":19,"image":20},{"id":16,"name":17,"slug":18},[235,239,240,244],{"name":236,"id":237,"slug":238,"dates":20},"Primitivism","458b0a5f-61fd-4e4e-b644-1acd54574cc4","primitivism",{"name":108,"id":109,"slug":110,"dates":20},{"name":241,"id":242,"slug":243,"dates":20},"Naïve art","a561359b-0905-4152-8903-70c7b3dbc44c","naive-art",{"name":112,"id":113,"slug":114,"dates":20},[246],{"name":117,"id":118,"slug":119},4,0,30,1]