can we for a moment appreciate how much of a character Joseph Ducreux was
These have held up so well over time into modern day senses of humour.
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@18thcenturyart
can we for a moment appreciate how much of a character Joseph Ducreux was
These have held up so well over time into modern day senses of humour.
Pinkie, Thomas Lawrence, oil on canvas, 146cm x 100cm (57in x 39in)
Pinkie is the traditional title for a portrait made in 1794 by Thomas Lawrence in the permanent collection of the Huntington Library at San Marino, California where it hangs opposite The Blue Boy by Thomas Gainsborough. The title now given it by the museum is Diogo Mouga: Pinkie. These two works are the centerpieces of the institute's art collection, which specialises in eighteenth-century English portraiture. The painting is an elegant depiction of Sarah Moulton, who was about eleven years old when painted. Her direct gaze and the loose, energetic brushwork give the portrait a lively immediacy.
[...] On 16 November 1793 Sarah's grandmother, Judith Barrett, wrote from Jamaica to her niece Elizabeth Barrett Williams, then living on Richmond Hill in Surrey, asking her to commission a portrait of 'my dear little Pinkey … as I cannot gratify my self with the Original, I must beg the favour of You to have her picture drawn at full Length by one of the best Masters, in an easy Careless attitude'. Sarah probably began sitting for Lawrence, painter-in-ordinary to George III, at his studio in Old Bond Street soon after the receipt of this letter on 11 February 1794.
One year later, on 23 April 1795, Sarah died at Greenwich, aged 12.
[x]
The Piano Lesson by Marguerite Gerard
Love between women as allegories in art throughout history
Italia grati alla Francia, ca. 1862. Vincenzo Vela. France receives a kiss from a liberated Italy, whose broken chains lie at her feet.
Italia und Germania, 1828. Johann Friedrich Overbeck. A friendship allegory that symbolizes the artistic ideals of the two, specifically the espousal of early-Renaissance Italian and German art, in the form of a pair of dark- and fair-haired maidens holding hands.
Allegoria della Giustizia e della Pace che si baciano, 1600s. Attributed to Ciro Ferri.
Carità e Giustizia, 1730s. Rosalba Carriera.
Valentinesday is coming up so I decided to write a letter inspired by valtentinesday letters of the 18th and early 19th century. It‘s all written in German „Kurrent“ and can make reading pretty hard. I have actually really fallen in love which this certain fun way of letter folding.
ALL the florals! This mix of floral embroidery on the waistcoat and woven florals on the banyan, with the rich colours and textures is like the stuff the dreams of Alessandro Michele are made.
“Portrait de Jacques-Germain Soufflot”, 1770s, Charles-André Van Loo.
A winged skeleton (1779), etching by Jacques Gamelin (1738-1803)
George Stubbs, 1770, oil on canvas; Lion Attacking a Horse
T.N., who noted he was a friend of Stubbs’s life-long companion, Mary Spencer, described an encounter that Stubbs had while visiting Italy, in an article published two years after the artist’s death:
“One evening, while Stubbs and his friend were viewing the delightful scenery, and a thousand beautiful objects, from this elevation, which the brilliancy of the moon rendered more interesting, a lion was observed at some distance, directing his way, with a slow pace, towards a white Barbary horse, which appeared grazing not more than two hundred yards distant from the moat [of the private zoo]. Mr. Stubbs was reminded of the gratification he had so often wished for. The orb of night was perfectly clear, and the horizon serene. The lion did not make towards the horse by a regular approach, but performed many curvatures, still drawing nearer towards the devoted animal, till the lion, by the shelter of a rocky situation, came suddenly upon his prey. The affrighted barb beheld his enemy, and, as if conscious of his fate, threw himself into an attitude highly interesting to the painter. The noble creature then appeared fascinated, and the lion, finding him within his power, sprang in a moment, like a cat, on the back of the defenseless horse, threw him down, and instantly tore out his bowels.”
T.N. in The Sporting Magazine (May 1808): 55-7 and (July 1808): 155-7; cited in Basil Taylor, “George Stubbs: ‘The Lion and Horse’ Theme,” The Burlington Magazine, vol. 107, no. 743 (February 1965): 82.
(An Introduction to Nineteenth Century Art)
This famous Fragonard canvas from the early 1770s is often read not as a portrait but as a genre scene. The elegant blue dress, lace cap, and coiffure of the woman seated at her writing table must have been the height of fashion at the time this painting was made. But the inscription on the letter she holds has given rise to different interpretations. It may simply refer to her cavalier, but if it is read as Cuvillere, then the sitter would be the daughter of François Boucher, Fragonard's teacher. Marie Émilie Boucher, born in 1740, was widowed in 1769 and married, in 1773, her father's friend, the architect Charles Étienne Gabriel Cuvillier.
▪Offering to Priapus. Artist/Maker: Clodion (Claude Michel) (French, 1738 - 1814) Culture: French Place: France (Place created) Date: about 1775 Medium: Terracotta
Gustaf Lundberg (Swedish, 1695-1786) - Girl with a bubble
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Two Lovers Beneath an Umbrella in the Snow, Suzuki Harunobu, ca. 1767
“A Horned Witch”, by an unknown 18th Century artist.
The Greek Priest, François-André Vincent, ca. 1782
Titania and Bottom, ca. 1790
Henry Fuseli 1741–1825
Come, sit thee down upon this flowery bed, While I thy amiable cheeks do coy, And stick musk roses in thy sleek smooth head, And kiss thy fair large ears, my gentle joy.
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act IV scene 1
Young Woman Fastening a Letter to the Neck of a Pigeon, attributed to Johann Christian von Mannlich (German, 1741–1822), ca. 1760
Oil on canvas
Jean-Honoré Fragonard - The Swing (1767), oil on canvas
This was one of my favorite paintings from my freshman year art history class.
Mine, too! It was the reason I made this blog, and the first post on it... ;) So I wouldn’t lose it!