The Horned Helmet (1512) Originally forming part of an armour presented to King Henry VIII by the Emperor Maximilian I in 1514 and made by Konrad Seusenhofer.
Source https://collections.royalarmouries.org/object/rac-object-2623.html
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The Horned Helmet (1512) Originally forming part of an armour presented to King Henry VIII by the Emperor Maximilian I in 1514 and made by Konrad Seusenhofer.
Source https://collections.royalarmouries.org/object/rac-object-2623.html
Doesn't baroque literally mean tacky
you’re tacky
chanel pre-fall 2007 paris-monte carlo zodiac bag
stoppppppp
Agnolo Bronzino 16th century (ca. 1540), Italian, detail from a portrait of a woman with a little boy. National Gallery, Washington D.C.
CAVALLINO, Bernardo The Ecstasy of St Cecilia 1645 Oil on canvas Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte, Naples
Gaspar de Crayer (Formerly attributed to Juan Bautista Maíno)
1. Philip IV in Parade Armor, c. 1628
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
2. Portrait of Philip IV with Two Servants, c. 1627-1632
Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores y de Cooperación. Palacio de Viana, Madrid, Spain
“The present image of Philip IV standing in a defiant pose, clad in a striking suit of armor and holding the baton of command, with his left hand at his waist, very close to the sword, immediately brings to mind some of the most important likenesses of the Spanish Habsburgs. It particularly recalls the portraits of Emperor Charles V and King Philip II painted by Titian in the mid sixteenth century, which shaped the most widely disseminated image of the king as the principal defender of the kingdom. The young monarch, interested in establishing ties between his own reign and that of Philip II, purposely sought to revive these images. He is thus powerfully illuminated, standing out against the background of crimson drapes, with an impassive, distant, and serene expression, an embodiment of the virtues of the good governor established in the portraits of the previous century. The presence of the dwarf beside the monarch—here holding the cabasset—was also a convention of court portraiture; indeed, a portrait of Philip as prince, dated 1620 and signed by Rodrigo de Villandrando (c. 1588-1622), shows him with the dwarf Miguel Soplillo (Museo del Prado, P-1234). More novel features—no doubt attributable to the influence of Rubens and Van Dyck—are the outdoor palace setting and background landscape, and, above all, the presence of a lackey beside a white horse.
The combination of various formal references in the present portrait can be explained by its origins. It is listed in the 1637 inventory of the possessions of the Marquis of Leganés as “A portrait of our lord King Philip the fourth armed in gilt armor, a dwarf with the morion, and a lackey of his in livery with a white horse, by the hand of Gaspar de Kraer.” Given that Leganés last traveled to Flanders in 1634, it is possible that he had possessed the painting at least since then. Gaspar de Crayer did not have a chance to paint the monarch from life, as the artist never traveled to Spain. Although it has been posited that he used one of the portraits painted by Rubens as a model, the most reasonable hypothesis is that of Priscilla Muller, who links the work to a miniature on silver of Philip IV in Munich (Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, inv. no r2476). The delicately executed Munich portrait is modeled by spotlighting and gentle shading with hardly any transitions, like the present painting in the Palacio de Viana. Although this cannot be categorically affirmed, the execution of the face is more consonant with the method of compositional construction employed by Juan Bautista Maíno (1581-1649), a painter praised by his contemporaries for his small-format portraits, and to whom López-Rey attributed the present work and the version with variants in the Metropolitan Museum in New York.”
— Catalog entry (excerpt) by Leticia Ruiz Gómez in The Art of Power: Royal Armor and Portraits from Imperial Spain. Ed. Álvaro Soler del Campo. Exh. cat., National Gallery of Art. Washington, DC, 2009, pp. 1267–268.
The Daily Life of Gods II, Alekey Kendokov
Gerrit van Honthorst, Emperor Ortho, 17th century
Happy birthday to Peter Paul Rubens, the artist behind the enormous and captivating “Prometheus Bound.” See works by Rubens in “The Wrath of the Gods: Masterpieces by Rubens, Michelangelo, and Titian,” opening in September. “Prometheus Bound,” Begun c. 1611-12, completed by 1618, Peter Paul Rubens and Frans Snyders
Self-Portrait with the Portrait of his Wife, Margaretha van Rees, and their Daughter Maria (1699). Adriaen van der Werff (Dutch, 1659-1722). Oil on canvas. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.
Van der Werff was appointed by Johann Wilhelm von der Pfalzhim as his court painter and presented him with a medallion bearing his portrait on a gold chain. Van der Werff here proudly displays his paint brushes and palette, together with a gilt-framed portrait of his wife and daughter. The medallion hangs from his neck.
Caravaggio 1597
The hands of Divinity Louis, sends you the crown The scepter, the sword, the law gives to you But it is your virtues and your kindness Which assures you the throne in our hearts
–verse written in honor of the coronation of Louis XVI, 1775
The Duchess (2008)
I love you
Ah bonjour u cutie
Kate Winslet as Sabine de Barra in A Little Chaos (2015).
Schloß Ludwigsburg, Deutschland.
Peter Paul Rubens - Royal Academy Exhibition January 24th https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/exhibition/rubens-and-his-legacy