Peter Paul Rubens - The Fall of Phaeton, 1604-1605 (details)
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
almost home
KIROKAZE
trying on a metaphor

blake kathryn

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

JBB: An Artblog!
we're not kids anymore.
AnasAbdin
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
h
dirt enthusiast
Jules of Nature
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

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Janaina Medeiros
NASA

⁂

Discoholic 🪩

seen from Türkiye
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@themuseumdesk
Peter Paul Rubens - The Fall of Phaeton, 1604-1605 (details)
Roelandt Savery (Flemish, 1576–1639), Seven Horses in a landscape
Olympia, Greece (by dadofekl)
classic lit hits different than modern lit not because modern lit lacks depth but because there’s something so incredible about reading something and knowing that hundreds of years before you people were living, breathing, loving, the same way you do now. like one hundred years ago someone read these same words and felt them and read them just as you do today, and you’re connected despite the times that separates you
New Orleans ❤
“I have always thirsted for knowledge, I have always been full of questions.”
(spontaneous archive moodboard for @jawnkeets)
Sorbonne University, Paris, France
🍂January skies 🍂
Details: Portrait of a Lady, 1560, by Jacopo Zucchi (Italian, 1542–1596)
Georg Backhaus (detail)
reblog if you just want to be a mountain nymph chilling with the dryads and nereids, plaiting each others’ hair and sleeping all day
art detail: blue & gold fashion
Caryatids at the Erechtheion, Acropolis, Athens, c. 5th century BC
Does anyone else have a little stack of books all half read on their nightstand? And when you finally finish a book you look at it and think “there you go little book, finally free from purgatory” and put it back with the rest of the books on the shelf?
Jesus Christ gtfo of my bedroom mate
Watchtower, 25-220, Cleveland Museum of Art: Chinese Art
In this funerary sculpture of the watchtower is a lively retinue of hunters, musicians, dancers, and domestic animals. The representation provides a vivid picture of the worldly enjoyment to be perpetuated in the otherworldly realm of the afterlife. A low-temperature lead glaze is applied to its earthenware body, enhancing the modeled forms with a brilliant, smooth coating like a layer of opaque glass. Size: Diameter: 39 cm (15 3/8 in.); Overall: 54.3 cm (21 3/8 in.) Medium: earthenware with lead glaze
https://clevelandart.org/art/1989.71
The Women of Hans Holbein Sketches
1. The sitter in the portrait is unknown, but it has been suspected to be of Amalia of Cleves, the sister of Anne of Cleves.
2. Elizabeth Audley, the wife of Thomas Audley, 1st Baron Audley of Walden
3. The sitter in the portrait is unknown, but it has been suspect to be of Anne Boleyn.
4. Alice Burgh, the wife of Thomas Burgh who was a part of the household of Prince Edward (later Edward VI).
5. Margaret Butts, a lady-in-waiting to Princess Mary (later Mary I).
6. Anne Cresarce, a ward of Thomas More.
7. Elizabeth Dauncey, a daughter of Thomas More.
8. Margaret, Marchioness of Dorset, a godmother to Princess Elizabeth (later Elizabeth I).
9. Margaret Elyot.
10. Margaret Giggs, a ward of Thomas More.
11. Cicely Heron, a daughter of Thomas More.
12. Mary Heveningham, a first cousin to Anne Boleyn and suspected mistress to Henry VIII.
13. Elizabeth Hoby, was a part of Katherine Parr’s inner circle.
14. The sitter in the portrait is unknown, but it has been suspected to be of Katherine Howard.
15. Frances, Countess of Surrey, the wife of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey.
16. Mary, Duchess of Richmond and Somerset, the wife of Henry VIII’s illegitimate son Henry Fitzroy.
17. Probably of Jane Lister.
18. Princess Mary (later Mary I).
19. Joan Meautas, lady of the privy chamber to Jane Seymour.
20. Mary Monteagle, a daughter of Charles Brandon.
21. Formerly suspected to be of Jane Boleyn, but is now believed to be of Grace Parker.
22. Could be any of the three wives of Robert Radcliffe, 1st Earl of Sussex, but is probably his third wife Mary Arundell.
23. Elizabeth Rich, the wife of Richard Rich, 1st Baron Rich.
24. Jane Seymour.
25. Unknown sitter.
26. Unknown sitter.
27. Unknown sitter.
28. Unknown sitter.
29. Unknown sitter, but has been suspected to be of Anne Herbert, the sister of Katherine Parr.
30. Unknown sitter.
31. Unknown sitter, but has been suspected to be of Maud Green, the mother of Katherine Parr.
32. Elizabeth Vaux, a first cousin to Katherine Parr.
33. Catherine Willoughby, the wife of Charles Brandon.
34. Mary Zouch, a lady-in-waiting to Jane Seymour.
35. Mary Guilford, the wife of Henry Guilford.