Ferdinand Roybet, Ritratto di Juana Romani, 1901ca, localizzazione sconosciuta.
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Australia
seen from Germany
seen from Algeria

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Belgium

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Nicaragua
seen from Namibia
seen from China
seen from Pakistan
seen from China

seen from Germany
Ferdinand Roybet, Ritratto di Juana Romani, 1901ca, localizzazione sconosciuta.
Fernand Cormon (French, 1845-1924)
Portrait of a young oriental girl, 1895
Oil on canvas signed with monogram
L'atelier de Fernand Cormon (circa 1885) présenté à la conférence “Toulouse-Lautrec et les Frères Van Gogh” de Nienke Bakker - conservatrice au Van Gogh Museum d'Amsterdam - autour de l'exposition “Toulouse-Lautrec. Résolument Moderne” au Grand Palais, novembre 2019.
Odalisquebull (Cormon, Odalisque)
Don Carlo source- Philippe II by M. E. Cormon
Here is the 19th-century French play Philippe II, from which the first act of the five act Don Carlo is drawn (it’s the prologue, called “L’Etudiant d’Alcala”). The play is fairly similar to Don Carlos, with Posa replaced by Egmont’s son. In fact, some lines are word-for-word the same. Then in Act Five it goes in a completely different direction, with the Inquisition trial of Carlos onstage, Philippe pulling a knife on Elisabeth, and Carlos being shot while trying to escape dressed as a monk. Finally, Philippe says, “I am alone...alone, on the foremost throne in the world.”
Fernand Cormon: Jean-Léon Gérôme in his Studio, 1891.