Chaim’s work is defined by its painter sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

Dead Fowl
Chaim Soutine Born Minsk (Russian Empire, now Belarus), 1893; died Paris, 1943

Landscape at Cagnes
Chaim Soutine French, born Minsk, Russia (present-day Belarus), 1893–1943

Tumblers
Chaim Gross American, born Austria, 1904–1991

Untitled
Chaim Gross American, born Austria, 1904-1991

Chaim and Renée Gross, New York City
Arnold Newman American, 1918–2006

Seated Figure
Jacques Lipchitz (Chaim Jacob Lipchitz) French and American, born Lithuania, 1891–1973

Rabbi Chaim Adelman at Eratz HaChaim, Sunderland, Massachusetts, from the series "Sweet Earth: Experimental Utopias in America"
Joel Sternfeld American, born 1944

Untitled
Chaim Gross American, born Austria, 1904-1991

Self-Portrait
Walter Shirlaw (American, 1838–1909)

Martin Vanden Bogaert Desjardins
Gérard Edelinck (French, born Flanders, 1640-1707) after Hyacinthe Rigaud (French, 1659-1743)

Remembrance of Italy
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (French, 1796-1875) printed by Auguste Delâtre (French, 1822-1907) published by Cadart et Chavalier, Editeurs (French, 1801-1900)

Priest and Boy
Lawrence Carmichael Earle American, 1845-1921

A Sunday on La Grande Jatte — 1884
Georges Seurat (French, 1859–1891)

Fishing Craft near the Cliffs at Collioure
Adolphe Appian French, 1818-1898

Interior of St. Mark's, Venice
David Dalhoff Neal (American, 1838–1915)

Nighthawks
Edward Hopper (American, 1882–1967)

Lion (One of a Pair, South Pedestal)
Edward Kemeys (American, 1843–1907) American Bronze Founding Company (American, founded 1886) Chicago

American Gothic
Grant Wood (American, 1891–1942)

The Fall of the Giants
Salvator Rosa Italian, 1615-1673

It Rocks but is Not Sunk
Charles Meryon French, 1821-1868