Title: Causeway from the Doctors of the World Collection
Author: Helen Frankenthaler
Date: 2001
Location: Private collection
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@theideaofart
Title: Causeway from the Doctors of the World Collection
Author: Helen Frankenthaler
Date: 2001
Location: Private collection
Title: Rising, Falling, Flying
Author: Sophie Taeuber-Arp
Date: 1934
Location: Basel Kunstmuseum (Switzerland)
Title: Stringled Figure (Curlew) (Version I)
Author: Barbara Hepworth
Date: 1956
Location: Private Collection
Title: Mother with Dead Child
Author: Käthe Kollwitz
Date: 1903
Location: National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. (USA)
Dinner Party (1974) by Judy Chicago
Title: Le Lancement du filet
Author: Suzanne Valadon
Date: 1914
Location: Georges Pompidou Center, Paris (France)
Title: The Horse Fair
Author: Rosa Bonheur
Date: 1852-55
Location: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (USA)
Title: Julie Le Brun looking in a mirror
Author: Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun
Date: ca. 1786
Location: Private collection
Title: Self-Portrait Hesitating between the Arts of Music and Painting
Author: Angelika Kauffmann
Date: 1791
Location: The National Trust, the Saint Oswald Collection, Nostell Priory (UK)
Title:Summer’s Day
Author: Berthe Morisot
Date: a. 1879
Location: National Gallery, London (UK)
With this painting we annaunce the changing of this tumblr’s point of view, before it was (like our education in Art’s History had taugh us) an exhibition of art made by “the Great Masters” or “Geniuses” aka male artists. “Why have there been no great women artists?” (1978) the article written by Linda Nochlin has inspired us to start to reflect our feminist ideals in this blog and to give a place where women artists are valued as much as male have always been.
Title: Violante
Author: Tiziano Vecellio (1488 - 1576)
Date: 1510/15
Location: Kunsthistorische Museum, Vienna
Named after the violet in her cleavage, Titian’s Violante is a classic example of the “belle donne” portraits so popular in 16th century Venice. The sensual physical beauty - the skin that seems to breathe, the silkily shimmering hair - is enhanced by the splendid dress with its richly nuanced material. Characteristics of Titian’s early style are evident here: the partially very delicate brush-work, the tracery of the details, as well as the colours made intensely luminous by the us of wood as the picture’s surface.
Title: Young Woman at her Toilette
Author: Giovanni Bellini (1430 - 1516)
Date: 1515
Location: Kunsthistorische Museum, Vienna
Title: Self Portrait
Author: Sophonisba Anguissola (1531/35- 1625)
Date: ca. 1554
Location: Kunsthistorische Museum, Vienna
Born into a noble family from Cremona, Sophonisba was active as an internationally-renowned portrait painter until the end of her long life. She spent the years between 1560 and 1572 at the Spanish court as a lady-in-waiting and drawing teacher of Queen Isabelle de Valois. Unassuming yet self-assured, the artist is pointing at her name in the book she is holding. Despite its miniature-like format this self-portrait reflects the seriousness and ethos of her art: the faithful - unvarnished - rendering of Nature.
Title: Pietà
Author: Annibale Carracci (1560- 1609)
Date: ca. 1603
Location: Kunsthistorische Museum, Vienna
Overwhelmed by her helplessness and pain, Mary holds her dead son in her lap. Pale colours and the pothos of marbles by Michelangelo and from antiquity one concentrated into a scene suffused with the silence of death. A crown of thorns and bloody nails in the gloom of the tomb point to the agonies suffered; at the same time, they offer the devout believer reference points for prayers and spiritual immersion, as befitted the intentions of the Counter-Reformation.
Title: Archduchess Claudia Felicitas
Author: Carlo Dolci (1616- 1686)
Date: 1672
Location: Kunsthistorische Museum, Vienna
The young, pale woman with the sad, tired eyes is a daughter from the marriage of Archduke Ferdinand Charles of Tyrol to Anna de’ Medici, who was a daughter of Cosimo II, Grand Duke of Tuscany, and Archduchess Maria Magdalena. Claudia Felicitas (1653-1676), here aged nineteen, became the second wife of Emperor Leopold I in 1673.
Title: Schönbrunn Palace: court façad
Author: Bernardo Bellotto (1721- 1780)
Date: 1759/61
Location: Kunsthistorische Museum, Vienna
Bellotto depicts the palace designed by Fischer von Erlach for Emperor Joseph I in 1693/94 after it was remodelled by Pacassi 1744-1749. At that time the central exterior stairway over the carriage entrance was built, and the adjacent building with the Parade Court was connected with the main building. At the same time, the painting also records an actual historical event: on 16 August 1759, during the Seven Years’ War, Empress Maria Theresa received news of the victory of the Austrian army over the Prussians at Kunersdorf.
Title: The Imperial Palace Hof: garden side
Author: Bernardo Bellotto (1721- 1780)
Date: 1759/61
Location: Kunsthistorische Museum, Vienna
Bellotto was the nephew and pupil of Antonio Canal, and during his long career as Europ’s most sought-after painter of vedut (Italian for views), he called himself “Canaletto” like his uncle. During his two-year stay in Vienna, Bellotto painted views of Vienna and imperial palaces in the surrounding area for Empress Maria Theresa. This view of Hof palace towards the west makes the once-famous gardens the principal motif of the picture.