Framed.
SearchMovementsPalette
Log inCreate account
SearchMovementsPalette
@framedapp.art·@framedapp.art
Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceSettings© 2026 Framed

Search / Artist

Morgan Russell

+Add a painting by Morgan Russell

Artworks18 found

Cosmic Synchromy

Cosmic Synchromy

Morgan Russell
Four Part Synchromy, Number 7

Four Part Synchromy, Number 7

Morgan Russell
Synchromy

Synchromy

Morgan Russell
Synchromy

Synchromy

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

A la vie de la matière

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Archaic Composition Number 2

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Baroque Synchromy #11

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Bathers

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Color Form Sychromy (Eidos)

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Creavit Deus Hominem (Synchromy Number 3: Color Counterpoint)

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

La Ferme au Couches

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Piscine

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Quo Vadis

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Seated Nude in Landscape

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Sketch for 'Synchromie en bleu-violace'

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Synchromy in Orange: To Form

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Synchromy No. 3

Morgan Russell
Image not availablemissing or copyright protected

Synchromy No. 6

Morgan Russell
Morgan Russell

Morgan Russell

1886 – 1953·United States·Wikipedia →

Morgan Russell (January 25, 1886 – May 29, 1953) was a modern American artist. With Stanton Macdonald-Wright, he was the founder of Synchromism, a provocative style of abstract painting that dates from 1912 to the 1920s. Russell's "synchromies," which analogized color to music, were an early American contribution to the rise of Modernism.