Louise Glück, “October”
Mike Driver
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Louise Glück, “October”
Valencia, October 2019.
at the art museum working myself into a rage when i feel a work is concerned with the carnal and not the sublime
Presentation Scene with Saint Peter Martyr and Three Donors, Giovanni di Balduccio, ca. 1340, Metropolitan Museum of Art: Cloisters
The Cloisters Collection, 2001 Size: Overall: 31 ½ x 33 7/8 x 5 11/16in. (80 x 86 x 14.5cm) Medium: Marble
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/473465
By clairelou_weekendwander
Saints//Rome
Saint Jerome and the Lion, 1450, Rogier Van Der Weyden
Medium: oil,panel
Baroque Pearl Mounted as a Grotesque Beast, 1590, Art Institute of Chicago: Arms, Armor, Medieval, and Renaissance
Gift of Marilynn B. Alsdorf Size: 2.1 × 3.1 cm (13/16 × 1 1 /4 in.) Medium: Gold, enamel, diamonds, and baroque pearl
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/119245/
Vancouver artist Andy Dixon
At the Hippodrome
Gifford Beal, 1915 Oil on Canvas
Intaglio with Male Portrait Bust, 500s, Cleveland Museum of Art: Medieval Art
Size: Overall: 4.3 x 2.5 cm (1 11/16 x 1 in.) Medium: amethyst with gold mount
https://clevelandart.org/art/1954.4
Charles Courtney Curran - The Lanterns, c.1910
Grave Stele (Relief), c. 50 BC, Cleveland Museum of Art: Greek and Roman Art
The multiple figures, inscription, use of perspective, and architectural frame distinguish this ambitious relief as one of the most important of its type. The Greek inscription on the base reads, “To Sbardia, also named Tate, Eumelos, son of Aphrodisios, her father, [set this up].” The deceased is shown seated on an elaborate chair. A servant girl holding a fan suggests Sbardia’s high social standing. At the bottom right corner, a hen perches on an upturned basket, a symbol of “the good life.” The stele incorporates a “springing” gable supported by engaged half columns with simplified Corinthian capitals. Other features relate to beliefs about mortality and the afterlife. Above and to the left of her chair is her winged psyche (soul) shown leaving her body. Figures of the three fates are shown in the pediment above, reminding us that human life is finite. Size: Overall: 73.6 x 42.5 cm (29 x 16 ¾ in.) Medium: marble
https://clevelandart.org/art/2005.52
Louis Ammy Blanc (1810 - 1885)
The Churchgoer
Watch (circa 1665) by Henry Jones (British, 1632–1695).
Metal case, silver lining.
Images and text information courtesy The Met.
The Salute, Venice John Singer Sargent (American; 1856–1925) ca. 1904–7 Watercolor, with graphite underdrawing Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut
À bientôt (detail), Valentine Cameron Prinsep