Hum people
Chinua Achebe: Nigerian novelist, best known for his novel "Things Fall Apart," which explores the effects of colonialism in Africa.
Magdalena Abakanowicz: Polish sculptor and fiber artist known for her large-scale textile sculptures and installations.
Banksy: British street artist known for his politically charged and subversive artworks, often featuring stenciled images.
Alexander Calder: American sculptor known for his innovative mobiles and stabiles, which often incorporate abstract shapes and primary colors.
Paul Cezanne: French post-impressionist painter whose work laid the foundations for the transition from 19th-century artistic conventions to 20th-century abstract art.
Salvador Dali: Spanish surrealist artist known for his eccentric and dreamlike paintings, such as "The Persistence of Memory."
Marcel Duchamp: French-American artist associated with Dadaism and surrealism, known for his conceptual artworks such as "Fountain," a urinal he signed and presented as art.
Sigmund Freud: Austrian neurologist and founder of psychoanalysis, known for his theories on the unconscious mind and the interpretation of dreams.
Paul Gauguin: French post-impressionist painter known for his bold use of color and simplified forms in paintings inspired by his travels to Tahiti.
Frank Gehry: Canadian-American architect known for his avant-garde designs characterized by flowing, sculptural forms, such as the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.
Zaha Hadid: Iraqi-British architect known for her innovative and futuristic designs, including the Heydar Aliyev Center in Baku and the London Aquatics Centre.
James Joyce: Irish modernist writer known for his novels "Ulysses" and "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man," which employ experimental narrative techniques.
Franz Kafka: Czech writer known for his existential and surrealist novels, including "The Metamorphosis" and "The Trial."
Frida Kahlo: Mexican painter known for her vibrant and often autobiographical artworks, exploring themes of identity, pain, and Mexican culture.
Roy Lichtenstein: American pop artist known for his comic book-inspired paintings and use of Ben-Day dots to create a mechanical, mass-produced aesthetic.
Maya Lin: American architect and artist known for her minimalist designs, including the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.
Friedrich Nietzsche: German philosopher known for his critiques of traditional morality and religion, and his concept of the "ubermensch" or "superman."
I.M. Pei: Chinese-American architect known for his modernist designs, including the glass pyramid entrance to the Louvre Museum in Paris.
Pablo Picasso: Spanish painter and sculptor known for co-founding the Cubist movement and for works such as "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" and "Guernica."
Jackson Pollock: American abstract expressionist painter known for his distinctive "drip" painting technique, as seen in works like "Autumn Rhythm (Number 30)."
Diego Rivera: Mexican muralist known for his large-scale murals depicting Mexican culture and society, including those at the National Palace in Mexico City.
Mark Rothko: American abstract expressionist painter known for his large, color-field paintings characterized by soft, rectangular forms and vibrant hues.
Jean-Paul Sartre: French existentialist philosopher and writer known for his exploration of existential themes such as freedom, choice, and authenticity.
Arnold Schönberg: Austrian composer known for developing the twelve-tone technique in composition, a method of organizing music using all twelve chromatic notes equally.
Igor Stravinsky: Russian composer known for his innovative and influential works such as "The Rite of Spring" and "The Firebird," which helped shape 20th-century music.
Andy Warhol: American pop artist known for his iconic images of consumer products and celebrities, as well as his exploration of mass production techniques.
Ai Weiwei: Chinese contemporary artist and activist known for his provocative artworks and criticism of the Chinese government's human rights policies.
Frank Lloyd Wright: American architect known for pioneering the Prairie School movement and designing iconic buildings such as Fallingwater and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum