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@archiveofcanvas
Beverly Buchanan
Lycian Freud.
Man in a Black Scarf (1939) will be shown publicly for the first time in an exhibition at the Garden Museum in London
della Francesca, Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta in Prayer before Saint Sigismund, 1451.
Tempio Malatestiano, Rimini.
Few Renaissance images reveal the fragile tension between power and mortality as intensely as this fresco by Piero della Francesca.
At first glance, Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta appears as the perfect ruler: composed, disciplined, wrapped in the solemn dignity of court ritual. Yet the longer one observes him kneeling before Saint Sigismund, the more the scene begins to feel deeply human rather than triumphal.
Piero constructs the encounter with extraordinary silence. The saint sits immobile, almost timeless, holding the insignia of kingship with an authority that seems eternal, while Sigismondo remains suspended in the vulnerable gesture of prayer. It is as if worldly power suddenly recognizes its own limits before a higher order.
What fascinates me most is the psychological atmosphere. The fresco does not glorify conquest or military ambition, despite Sigismondo's turbulent and controversial life. Instead, Piero strips the moment down to stillness, geometry, and introspection. Even the two hunting dogs resting quietly beside the ruler seem to soften the severity of the composition, introducing a strangely intimate dimension into this political image.
The light itself becomes moral. It does not dramatize the figures but clarifies them, almost as though truth emerges through calm rather than spectacle. Piero understood that true authority does not need theatricality. It reveals itself through balance, restraint, and silence.
Standing before this fresco, I often feel that Sigismondo is not simply praying to a saint. He is confronting the unsettling realization that every earthly legacy, no matter how powerful, ultimately seeks justification beyond itself.
antonio lavecchia68
Georg Baselitz 'Untitled',
2026. Red ink on paper. 11 3/4" x 9". Courtesy
VILHELM HAMMERSHOI (1864-1916)
Louise-Marie-Adélaïde de Bourbon-Penthièvre, Duchesse d'Orleans, by Elisabeth-Louise Vigée-Lebrun, 1789. Captain of the Guards Chamber, Versailles.
She married the duc de Chartres, Louis Philippe II d'Orléans, the soi-disant Philippe Égalité, who made great show of supporting the Revolution, but came to grief regardless. Mother of Louis Philippe, the Citizen King, King of the French, the last French king.
Château de Versailles
1985
Georg Baselitz
Untitled, 1962
India ink and wash on lined paper
Brice Marden; 2 Red Rocks 3, 2000-2002, Kremer ink on L'Aquarelle paper, 14 × 20 inches
'Fable of the dog and the prey'. 1636 - 1638. Oil on canvas. is a painting by Paul de Vos
Back of a well-traveled willem de kooning
John Opie? Or Turner?
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Gravestone, 1987
Acrylic and oil on wood
Carol Rama
G Baselitz
Anonymous painter (circle of Gerolamo Tessari), Saint Anthony Preaching to the Fish (detail), 1518, Basilica of Saint Anthony of Padua