Monday, December 22, 2025

Threes

Jan Wellens de Cock
Landsknechte
ca. 1520-25
woodcut
British Museum


Bernardino Luini
Virgin and Child with St Catherine
1525
oil on canvas
Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California

Baldassare Peruzzi
Study of Woman and Two Men
before 1536
drawing
British Museum

Hans Speckaert
Supplicants bearing Gifts
before 1577
drawing
British Museum

Hans von Aachen
The Road to Emmaus
ca. 1585
drawing
British Museum

Dietrich Krüger after Gabriel Weyer
Summer
1613
engraving
Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum, Braunschweig

Bernard Picart after François Girardon
Abduction of Proserpine
(print study after statue group at Versailles)
ca. 1705
drawing
British Museum

Willem van Mieris
Maids adorning Bathsheba after the Bath
before 1747
charcoal on vellum
British Museum

Jan Hendrik Neuman
Portrait of the Metelerkamp Family
1851-52
oil on canvas
Centraal Museum, Utrecht

Dante Gabriel Rossetti
The German Lesson
(caricature of William and Jane Morris with German-speaking Maid)
1869
drawing
British Museum

Christian Waller
Women of Faery
1932
linocut
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Helen Levitt
New York
ca. 1942
gelatin silver print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Joseph Hirsch
Naples
1944
drawing
Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington

Larry Fink
MOMA Benefit NYC
1977
gelatin silver print
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Joel Sternfeld
New Jersey (#14)
1980
inkjet print
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Ken Regan
Caroline Kennedy, JFK Jr and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
1980
gelatin silver print
National Museum of American History, Washington DC

John Thomas
Triptych with Predella
before 2000
oil on canvas
Orange County Museum of Art, Costa Mesa, California

from A Letter to a Friend upon the Occasion of the Death of his Intimate Friend

     He had wisely seen the World at home and abroad, and thereby observed under what variety Men are deluded in the pursuit of that which is not here to be found. And altho he had no Opinion of reputed Felicities below, and apprehended Men widely out in the estimate of such Happiness; yet his sober contempt of the World wrought no Democritism or Cynicism, no laughing or snarling at it, as well understanding there are not real Felicities enough in this World to satisfie a serious Mind; and therefore to soften the stream of our Lives, we are fain to take in the reputed Contentations of this World, to unite with the Crowd in their Opinion, or Co-existimation: for strictly to separate from received and customary Felicities, and to confine unto the rigor of Realities, were to contract the Consolation of our Beings unto too uncomfortable Circumscriptions. 

– Sir Thomas Browne (1656)