Did you know that practicing finding letters and objects can help enhance your reading skills? By dedicating just a few minutes per day searching for hidden letters and objects, practicing can strengthen cognitive abilities while building confidence in reading skills.

Can You Find…

  • Cat with Red Fish

    Henri Matisse is widely regarded as the greatest colorist of the 20th century. The French artist used color as the foundation for his expressive, decorative and large-scale paintings. Matisse had an exceptional love for cats (and also doves).

  • POP!

    Roy Lichtenstein was an American pop artist. In the 1960s, he became a leading figure in the new art movement. His work defined the pop art through parody. Inspired by the comic strip, his work was influenced by popular advertising and the comic book style.

  • Platonic Realms

    mc echer was a Dutch graphic whose work features mathematical objects and operations including impossible objects, explorations of infinity, reflection, symmetry, perspective, truncated and stellated polyhedra, hyperbolic geometry, and tessellations.

  • Untitled- The Metropolitan Museum of Art

    Shoutout to the legendary artist Jackson Pollock who revolutionized the art world with his unique style of abstract expressionism! His drip technique left an indelible mark on art history and continues to inspire artists all over the world.

  • The Enchanted Owl

    Ashevak, an Inuit artist who captured the beauty of her Arctic homeland through stunningly intricate works of art. Born in the small community of Ikirasaq, Baffin Island, her upbringing alongside her hunter and shaman parents instilled in her a deep appreciation for the natural world.

  • This land, Your land, Our land

    Bronwyn Bancroft is an Aboriginal Australian artist, and her work focuses on her home country, its animals, the beauty of its land, and its history. Her work often reflects the climate of Australia, from the harsh deserts to the sub-tropical rainforests. Bancroft uses bold, bright colors in her paintings.

  • Cow with Parasol

    Born Movcha (Moses) Chagall in what is today Belarus. Chagall’s whimsical works longingly depict the peasant lifestyle of his home. Although he was a central figure in modernist art, Chagall’s paintings repeatedly paid tribute to tradition and the past. Chagall was the eldest of nine children.

  • Three Flags

    Three Flags is a 1958 painting by American artist Jasper Johns. The work comprises three canvases painted with hot wax. The three canvases form a tiered arrangement, with each canvas approximately 25% smaller than the one below, thereby creating a three-dimensional work.

  • Frida and her cat

    Magdalena Carmen Frida Kahlo y Calderón was a Mexican painter known for her many portraits, self-portraits, and works inspired by the nature and artifacts of Mexico. Kahlo had poor health in her childhood. She contracted polio at the age of 6 and had to be bedridden for nine months.

  • Sunday in the Park with George

    Seurat was a French post-impressionist artist. The painting shows members of each of the social classes participating in various park activities. The tiny juxtaposed dots of multi-colored paint allow the viewer's eye to blend colors optically, rather than having the colors physically blended on the canvas. It took Seurat two years to complete.

  • Cow's Skull

    She is an American modernist artist known for her paintings of enlarged flowers, animal skulls and New Mexico landscapes. Her cow's skull were a powerful image of American strength at a time when depression, economic instability and drought were threatening to undermine the very essence of the nation. Completed in the summer of 1930.

  • The Boating Party

    Known for her depictions of women and children, in relaxed, informal poses. Mary Cassatt was one of the few American artists active in the nineteenth-century French avant-garde. Born to a prominent Pittsburgh family, she traveled extensively through Europe with her parents and siblings. She studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.

  • Warrior

    Jean-Michel-Basquiat was an American artist who rose to success during the 1980s as part of the Neo-expressionism movement. Basquiat's unique style effortlessly fused graffiti, street art, and his powerful statements on race, identity, and society. His vibrant, raw paintings served as a visual language, shedding light on important social issues that still resonate today.

  • Rose Man

    Born in 2012, Mikail Akar is taking the art world by storm. Known within the art community as “the Young Picasso” and “the world’s youngest abstract artist,” Mikail creates with an understanding of the way vibrant colors and forms can complement and interplay with one another. At just four years old, he held his first exhibition in his native Germany.

  • Composition with Yellow, Blue, and Red

    Piet Mondrian is a Dutch artist best known for his abstract paintings. Art that is abstract does not show things that are recognisable such as people, objects or landscapes. Instead hr use colors, shapes and textures to achieve the effect. Mondrian did not use a ruler to measure out his lines! He thought carefully about where to place the lines,

  • Girl with the Pearl Earring

    During the height of his career, in paintings depicting women reading or writing letters, playing musical instruments, or adorning themselves with jewelry, Vermeer sought ways to express a sense of inner harmony within everyday life, primarily in the confines of a private chamber. Vermeer only achieved widespread fame several hundred years after his death.

  • Mona Lisa

    Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci lived during the Renaissance Period. He was active as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. Leonardo is widely regarded to have been a genius who epitomized the Renaissance humanist ideal. Revered for his technological ingenuity, he conceptualized flying machines, and concentrated solar power.

  • The Scream

    The Scream - Wikipedia

    The agonized face in the painting has become one of the most iconic images of art, seen as symbolizing the anxiety of the human condition. Munch's work, including The Scream, had a formative influence on the Expressionist movement.

  • Party

    Haring developed a love for drawing at a very early age, learning basic cartooning skills from his father and from the popular culture around him, such as Dr. Seuss and Walt Disney.

    Throughout his career, Haring devoted much of his time to public works, which often carried social messages. He produced more than 50 public artworks between 1982 and 1989, in dozens of cities around the world, most were created for charities, hospitals, children’s day care centers and orphanages

  • Starry Night and the Astronauts

    She was an African-American artist and teacher who lived and worked in Washington, D.C. Thomas is best known for the "exuberant", colorful, abstract paintings that she created after her retirement from a 35-year career teaching art at Washington's Shaw Junior High School.

    Thomas would not become a full-time, professional artist until she was 68 or 69 years old, in 1960, when she retired from teaching. she focused her work on creative spirit rather than race or gender.

  • Mona Lisa Bubble Gum

    The Mona Lisa blowing a bubble with bubble gum, is not an original creation by Leonardo da Vinci. It's actually a modern or contemporary artwork that takes the iconic Mona Lisa painting and adds a playful and anachronistic twist to it.

    This kind of modification or remixing of classic artworks is common in modern pop culture, where well-known images are humorously altered to create new and unexpected visual narratives.

  • Mushrooms

    Yayoi Kusama is a contemporary Japanese artist known for works that explore repeating patterns, vibrant colors and organic forms.

    Known for repetitive patterns: Kusama is known for the ability to create repetitive patterns, often using shapes such as circles, dots and lines. These patterns are often used on a large scale and on diverse surfaces such as walls, floors and objects.

  • The Persistence of Memory

    Created by Salvador Dali painted in 1931, which depicts melting clocks and a “dead” atmosphere.

    The main focus of this painting are the melting clocks, the lonely backdrop, and the mysterious piece of flesh lying on the ground. Dali has specifically said that he doesn’t know the meaning of this piece, making it all the more mysterious and interesting. However, it may be implied that Dali is trying to convey the difference between reality and fantasy.

  • Young Girl in the Cemetery

    Known as the leading figure of the French romantic era of art that took hold of the scene in the 19th century, Delacroix kept a journal in which he recounted his life and inspirations.

    On top of his prolific paintings that remain popular and recognizable, he also left more than 6,000 drawings, watercolors, and print work at the time of his death in 1863.

  • Women of Algiers in their Apartment

    Delve into the depths of Delacroix's extraordinary painting and analyze his strokes meticulously. As your eyes wander across the canvas, an elusive word awaits your discovery. Peer into every nook and cranny, closely examining the intricacies and intricately woven details. Will you be able to decipher this artistic enigma?

  • Mandrill in the Jungle

    Rousseau is a French post-impressionist painter known for his richly colored and meticulously detailed pictures of lush jungles, wild beasts, and exotic figures. He was also known as Le Douanier, a humorous description of his occupation as a toll and tax collector.

  • The Repast of the Lion

    Rousseau began painting at an advanced age, after spending seven years of his life in the Army.

    He was inspired by trips to the botanical garden in Paris, and by children's books depicting exotic island landscapes.