Luis Camnitzer - The Photograph (1981)
The Screenshot (2014)
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Luis Camnitzer - The Photograph (1981)
The Screenshot (2014)
The Reblog (2014)
Marcus Curtius ― Circle of Hendrick Goltzius
Intaglio print from William Blake’s series For the Children: The Gates of Paradise (1787-93).
More from the series here: https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/william-blakes-the-gates-of-paradise
Ganymede and the Eagle- Greco-Roman Bronze Lamp. The three-nozzles bronze lamp featuring the god Zeus in the form of an eagle, carrying the boy Ganymede off to Mount Olympus to be his cupbearer. When the lamp was lit, the beautiful youth would gleam, and the divine bird would be encircled by a glowing nimbus. Possibly Greek, from Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey), dated to 250-100 BCE. It was found in 2007 in the Golden tombs of ancient Vanya, an important settlement in the ancient kingdom of Colchis, the most famous region as the place of arrival of Jason and the Argonauts in their mythical search for the Golden Fleece - Republic of Georgia
Vani Archaeological Museum-Reserve, Georgia.
Michelangelo
Firenze - Tomba di Giuliano de Medici,
Foto di Aurelio Amendola
An allegory of the continent America, pictured riding atop an armadillo, from a late 16th-century Dutch print: https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/america-a-personification-ca-1590
Tobacco Club, a painting by Abraham Teniers, mid-17th century.
Singerie — from the French for “Monkey Trick” — is a genre of art in which monkeys are depicted mimicking human behaviour. See our top pick of examples here: https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/the-singerie-monkeys-acting-as-humans-in-art
different perspective, 2025, oil on canvas, 100 × 130 cm
Wiktor Jackowski (Polish, 1987)
Plate 11: Apollo riding his chariot in a niche, facing right, from “Mythological Gods and Goddesses”. 1526. Credit line: The Elisha Whittelsey Collection, The Elisha Whittelsey Fund, 1949 https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/368132
Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio After Rosso Fiorentino
Rembrandt van Rijn, Sleeping Puppy, etching and drypoint, c. 1640
Rijksmuseum: https://id.rijksmuseum.nl/200125287
I think we all should.
Yes, this is Luo Yi Rong, who absolutely is the same sculptor from that astonishingly inept self-own by an idiot.
René Magritte (1898–1967) Belgian
“Le Principe d’Incertitude”- The principle of uncertainty 1944
René Magritte (Belgian, 1898-1967), Le principe d'incertitude [The Uncertainty Principle], 1944. Oil on canvas, 64.8 x 50.2 cm.
Today we’re introducing an on-demand remediation tool that creates accessible versions of articles when they are requested. When a user needs an accessible PDF, the system generates it with the structure required for screen readers and makes it available for future readers. This includes adding headings, improving reading order, and creating text for scanned documents. Accessible versions are often ready within minutes or hours, and each request helps expand access across the collection over time. Accessibility is part of how people use and engage with content, and this work continues as more materials are improved. Read more on the blog.
Last Judgment [Triptiek van het Laatste Oordeel]. Ambrosius Francken I ~ 1610 Kerk Sint-Waldetrudis, Herentals • via Bibliothèque Infernale on FB
398062280_0bb4441a6d_o da Lisa Schultz Tramite Flickr: An ultra cool picture i took of the students in Borromini’s staircase at Palazzo Barberini.