Richard Bergh - The Girl and Death (1888)
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Richard Bergh - The Girl and Death (1888)
Lantern studies (c. 1900) by Max Ernst Pietschmann
Ida Sherbourne Outhwaite (1888–1960)
Ferdinand Knab (1834-1902)
sapphic paintings
Pt2 (Pt1)
Washington Allston “Helena and Hermia” (1810), Giovanni Battista Gaulli “Justice, Peace, and Truth” (1672), Frank Skipworth “A Roman Holiday” (1889), Simeon Solomon “Sappho and Erinna” (1864), Tadeusz Styka “Dark and Fair” (1908), Hans Zatzka “Two Fairies Embracing” (1930s), Unknown “Boarding School Friends” (1837), Jean-Frédéric Schall “The Hug” (1800)
Falling Stars (1912) by Franz von Stuck
Santa Rosalia, Roberto Ferri
Pandora by Alexandre Cabanel (1873)
Dario Ortiz Rabledo (Colombian, b.1968)
«Disputa de la trinidad» (Trinity Dispute)
Allegories of The Five Senses, in order: Sight, Hearing, Touch, Taste, and Smell (1617-1618) by Jan Brueghel the Elder and Peter Paul Rubens, oil on panel, Museo del Prado, Madrid
At the Window, Vilhelm Hammershøi
José María Sert - The matchmaker (1932)
In just one year, 1932, he completed the frescoes in the chapel of the Liria Palace in Madrid, ceilings for the Celedonio Pereda residence in Buenos Aires, and a series of cartoons for tapestries commissioned by the Gobelins manufactory in Paris, only two of which were actually made. The matchmaker was one of this group, which comprised projects for overdoors or door hangings. The subjects of the series were all drawn from picaresque novels and featured figures regularly found in the artist’s work. The scene takes place in an interior lined with wallpaper. In front of a heavy hanging, a massive vase full of flowers stands on a piece of furniture. The protagonists’ unambiguous gestures make the scene clear: a smiling old man holds his hand out to the frightened young girl, while the matchmaker holds on to her, attempting to push her towards the man. Two young women watching the scene react in very different ways: one looks at the man with contempt, the other is amused by her companion’s vain resistance. The figures and the body language are recurrent features in the artist’s work: the woman with her hands on her hips conveys indifference, while the young woman at the centre of the drama is violently pushing the matchmaker away, her face contorted with fear and disgust. Frontally lit, the scene takes place on a small dais, further accentuating the theatrical impression created in this work. (source)
Veiled Circassian Beauty (1876) by Jean-Léon Gérôme (French, 1824 – 1904), oil on canvas, 40.7 cm (16 in) x 32.6 cm (12.8 in), Qatar Museums Authority, Doha
Richard Kühnel, 1895
Art nouveau
Giardino delle rose, Florence, Italy
Edie Seberg Everyone listens, no one understands