Sunday, February 22, 2026

Roses

Kerstin Bernhard
Roses
1952
gelatin silver print
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

John Hertzberg
Roses
1926
autochrome
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Gustaf Wernersson Cronquist
Untitled (Roses)
ca. 1925
autochrome
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Carl Moll
Jar of Roses
1911
oil on panel
Leopold Museum, Vienna

Henri Fantin-Latour
Roses
1877
oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon

Pierre Bourgogne
Roses
ca. 1875
oil on canvas
Musée d'Art et d'Histoire de Toul

Geertruida van Hettinga Tromp
White Roses
1910
oil on panel
Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands

Jan Voerman
Roses
ca. 1895
watercolor on paper
Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands

Sebastian Wegmayr
Studies of Roses
ca. 1810-20
watercolor on paper
Museum für Angewandte Kunst, Vienna

Raoul Martinez
Roses
1927
oil on canvas
Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands

Josef Lauer
Pink Roses
1839
oil on canvas
Belvedere Museum, Vienna

Anton Müller-Wischin
Roses
ca. 1941
oil on canvas
Belvedere Museum, Vienna

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller
Still Life with Roses
1831
oil on panel
Belvedere Museum, Vienna

Vincent van Gogh
Roses and Peonies
1886
oil on canvas
Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands

Franz Krüger
Rose in Water
1849
oil on paper, mounted on canvas
Belvedere Museum, Vienna

Wilhelm Lachnit
Still Life with Roses and Antique Casts
1945
oil on canvas
Galerie Neue Meister (Albertinum), Dresden

The tomb possesses Paterius, sweet-spoken and loveable, the dear son of Miltiades and sorrowing Atticia, a child of Athens of the noble race of the Acacidae, full of knowledge of Roman law and of all wisdom, endowed with the brilliance of all the four virtues, a young man of charm, whom Fate carried off, even as the whirlwind uproots a beautiful sapling. He was in his twenty-fourth year and left to his dear parents undying lament and mourning. 

This little stone, good Sabinus, is a memorial of our great friendship. I shall ever miss thee; and if so it may be, when with the dead thou drinkest of Lethe, drink not thou forgetfulness of me.

Here I lie, Timocreon of Rhodes, after drinking much and eating much and speaking much ill of men.

My ill-fated body was covered by the sea, and beside the waves my mother, Lysidice, wept for me much, gazing at my false and empty tomb, while my evil genius sent my lifeless corpse to be tossed with the seagulls on the deep. My name was Pnytagoras and I met my fate on the Aegean, when taking in the stern cables, because of the north wind. 

Unhappy man! why do we wander confiding in empty hopes, oblivious of painful death? Here was this Seleucus so perfect in speech and character; but after enjoying his prime but for a season, in Spain, at the end of the world, so far from Lesbos, he lies a stranger on that uncharted coast.

Even though he lies under earth, still pour pitch on foul-mouthed Parthenius, because he vomited on the Muses those floods of bile, and the filth of his repulsive elegies. So far gone was he in madness that he called the Odyssey mud and the Iliad a bramble. Therefore he is bound by the dark Furies in the middle of Cocytus, with a dog-collar that chokes him round his neck.*

– from Book VI (Sepulchral Epigrams) of the Greek Anthology, translated and edited by W.R. Paton (1917)

*This Parthenius, who lived in the time of Hadrian, was known as "the scourge of Homer."