Monday, April 28, 2025

Gazing - IV

Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin
Boy with a Spinning Top
1738
oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre

Honoré Daumier
Chess Players
ca. 1863-67
oil on panel
Musée du Petit Palais, Paris

Christian Bernhard Rode
Three Vestal Virgins at a Sacrificial Altar
ca. 1753
oil on canvas
Deutsche Barockgalerie, Augsburg

 Edward Penfield 
Harper's, November
1895
lithograph (poster)
Kunstbibliothek, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Giovanni Battista Langetti
Joseph in Prison interpreting Dreams
ca. 1650
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest

Théodore Géricault
Executioner and Victim
before 1824
drawing
Musée Bonnat Helleu, Bayonne

Artus Quellinus
Samson and Delilah
ca. 1640
terracotta
Bode Museum, Berlin

Francesco Cairo
St Catherine of Alexandria
gazing at Palm of Martyrdom

ca. 1650-53
oil on canvas
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Anonymous Mexican Artist
Retablo of Marciano Alcocer Castillo
(ex-voto to the Virgin of San Juan)

1967
oil paint on metal
Princeton University Art Museum

Claude Mellan
St John the Baptist in the Wilderness
1629
engraving and etching
(dedicated to Cardinal Francesco Barberini)
Národní Galerie, Prague

Drukkerij Senefelder (printer)
Ivens & Co. Foto-Artikelen
ca. 1899
lithograph (poster)
Kunstbibliothek, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Oliviero Gatti after fresco by Pordenone
Judith with the Head of Holofernes
1606
engraving
Hamburger Kunsthalle

Giovanni da San Giovanni (Giovanni Mannozzi)
Venus combing Cupid's Hair
1627
oil on canvas
Galleria Palatina, Palazzo Pitti, Florence

Charles Turrell
Miniature Portrait of Lady Ventry and her Son
1877
watercolor on ivory
Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio

Sassoferrato (Giovanni Battista Salvi)
Adoration of the Child
ca. 1640-60
oil on canvas
Städel Museum, Frankfurt

 Francisco de Zurbarán
St Francis contemplating a Skull
ca. 1635
oil on canvas
Saint Louis Art Museum

"If shee were, O God," cri'd out Perissus, "what divelish spirit art thou, that thus dost come to torture me?  But now I see you are a woman; and therefore not much to be marked, and lesse resisted: but if you know charitie, I pray now practise it, and leave me who am afflicted sufficiently without your companie; or if you will stay, discourse not to me."

"Neither of these will I doe," said she.

"If you be then," said he, "some furie of purpose sent to vex me, use your force to the uttermost in martyring me; for never was there a fitter subject, then the heart of poore Perissus is."

"I am no furie," repli'd the divine Urania, "nor hither come to trouble you, but by accident lighted on this place; my cruell hap being such, as onely the like can give me content, while the solitarinesse of this like Cave might give me quiet, though not ease; seeking for such a one, I happened hither; and this is the true cause of my being here, though now I would use it to a better end if I might: Wherefore favour me with the knowledge of your griefe; which heard, it may be I shall give you some counsell, and comfort in your sorrow."

– from The Countesse of Mountgomeries Urania, by the right honourable the Lady Mary Wroath, daughter to the right noble Robert, Earle of Leicester, and neece to the ever famous and renowned Sʳ Phillips Sidney knight, and to ye most excellant Lady Mary Countess of Pembroke, late deceased (London: John Marriott and John Grismand, 1621)