Charles Henry Buckius Demuth was an American painter who specialized in watercolors and turned to oils late in his career, developing a style of painting known as Precisionism.
Self-Portrait, 1907
I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold 1928, collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City
In Vaudeville (Dancer with Chorus), 1918, in the Philadelphia Museum of Art
The Jazz Singer (1916)
Watercolor or watercolour, also aquarelle, is a painting method in which the paints are made of pigments suspended in a water-based solution. Watercolor refers to both the medium and the resulting artwork. Aquarelles painted with water-soluble colored ink instead of modern water colors are called aquarellum atramento by experts. However, this term has now tended to pass out of use.
An artist working on a watercolor using a round brush
Love's Messenger, an 1885 watercolor and tempera by Marie Spartali Stillman
Albrecht Dürer, Young Hare, 1502, watercolor and body color, Albertina, Vienna
Thomas Girtin, Jedburgh Abbey from the River, 1798–99, watercolor on paper