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  1. Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson was an English figure and landscape painter, etcher and lithographer, who was one of the most famous war artists of World War I. He is often referred to by his initials C. R. W. Nevinson, and was also known as Richard. Nevinson studied at the Slade School of Art under Henry Tonks and alongside Stanley Spencer ...

  2. 艺术家名:克里斯托弗·内文森(Christopher Nevinson) 生卒日期: 1889年8月13日 - 1946年10月7日 国籍:英国 克里斯托弗·内文森的全部作品(98) 克里斯托弗·理查德·韦恩·内文森(Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson)是英国人物和风景画家、蚀刻师和石版画家,是第一次世界大战中最著名的战争艺术家之一。

  3. Christopher Nevinson (1889-1946), Artist. Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson. Sitter in 14 portraits Artist, a fellow student with Stanley Spencer at the Slade; unfit for service in the army, in 1914 Nevinson joined the Friends' Ambulance Unit and went to France where he worked as a driver, stretcher-bearer and hospital orderly.

  4. Christopher Nevinson. Artist, a fellow student with Stanley Spencer at the Slade; unfit for service in the army, in 1914 Nevinson joined the Friends' Ambulance Unit and went to France where he worked as a driver, stretcher-bearer and hospital orderly. Later he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps as a nurse at the Third General Hospital in ...

  5. Christopher Nevinson. Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson (1889-1946) was a noted British war painter, whose predilection for representing the mechanical nature of war set him apart from many of his wartime contemporaries. Nevinson was the son of the noted journalist journalist Henry Nevinson, and shared similarly radical views.

  6. 13 de ago. de 2023 · Christopher R. W. Nevinson. Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson nació en Hampstead, Londres, Reino Unido, el 13 de agosto de 1889. Pintor, grabador y litógrafo, fue uno de los artistas de guerra más famosos de la Primera Guerra Mundial. Se le conoce por sus iniciales CRW Nevinson, y también como Richard Nevinson.

  7. Nevinson, like Hokusai, created an image in which nature is shown as sublime—that is, awe-inspiring in both its beauty and potential for danger. While Hokusai took a broader view and included additional elements, such as Mount Fuji and three small boats with rowers, Nevinson omitted representations of people and anything man-made.