Tag: a woman with a dog

  • NYC Dog-Art Tour

     

    Howling_canine_metropolitan_museum_art

     

    Howling Canine, 5th or 6th Century Mexican Ceramic at the Met

    In honor of the 136th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show that starts on Monday, Randy Kennedy of The New York Times takes readers on a dog-art tour of New York City.  He has some nice picks spanning sevearal centuries, continents, and mediums, but my favorite aspect of his article is that he’s settled for me my own style guide quandary, something I’ve debated since I began this blog almost five years ago; dog-art has a hyphen.   Read Kennedy’s article Sit. Stay. Good Art.

    2.12.12 Update:  Oops.  Dog art is not automatically hyphenayted.  Thank you dog artist Leslie Moore for this clarification:

    A quick grammatical note from a recovering English teacher: dog art should be hyphenated when the two words are both adjectives modifying a noun, i.e. when Randy Kennedy describes New York City as a “dog-art town.” When the single adjective “dog” modifies the noun “art,” no hyphen is necessary.

     

    Boy_with_a_greyhound_paolo_veronese

     

    Boy with a Greyhound by Paolo Veronese, 1570s at The Met

    Miss_mary_edwards_william_hogarth

     

    Miss Mary Edwards by William Hogarth, 1742 at The Frick

    A_woman_with_a_dog_jean_honore_fragonard

     

    A Woman with a Dog by Jean Honoré Fragonard, 1769 at The Met

    Huntng_dogs_with_dead_hare_gustave_courbet

     

    Hunting Dogs with Dead Hare by Gustave Courbet, 1857 at The Met

    David_hockney_boodgie_and_stanley

     

    Boodgie and Stanley by David Hockney, 1993 at The Morgan Library & Museum

    Hat tip to my mom, and dog artists Barbara Grossman, and Natalie Timm for sending me links to this article.