Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Verticals - II

Ferdinand Hodler
View into Infinity III
1905
oil on canvas
Hamburger Kunsthalle

Ferdinand Hodler
Ergriffenheit
1900
oil on canvas
Belvedere Museum, Vienna

Renato Birolli
Flowers
1947
oil on board
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Jacopo de' Barbari
Galatea on a Dolphin
ca. 1495
oil on panel
Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden

Cigoli (Lodovico Cardi)
Figure of St Anthony Abbot
before 1613
drawing
Morgan Library, New York

Anonymous Italian Artist
Top of Trajan's Column, Rome
16th century
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

Anonymous Artist working in Ferrara
The Muse Melpomene
ca. 1458-60
tempera and oil on panel
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest

Rudolf Wacker
Still Life with Great Crested Grebe
1928
oil on panel
Leopold Museum, Vienna

Pontormo (Jacopo Carrucci)
Standing Woman
ca. 1517-20
drawing
Biblioteca Reale, Turin

Michelangelo Buonarroti
Standing Figure
ca. 1503
drawing
(formerly owned by both Peter Paul Rubens
and the famous collector Pierre-Jean Mariette)
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Kerstin Bernhard
Park of Rydboholm Castle, Sweden
1952
gelatin silver print
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Baron Adolf De Meyer
Teddie
1912
photogravure
Amon Carter Museum,
Fort Worth, Texas

Jacques-Fabien Gautier-Dagoty
Anatomical Figure
ca. 1750
watercolor and gouache on paper
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
(Achenbach Foundation)

Otto Hettner
Figure in Landscape 
1926
oil on canvas
Galerie Neue Meister (Albertinum), Dresden

Francesco Maffei
Portrait of Giambattista Bufalini
ca. 1650-60
oil on canvas
Staatsgalerie-Stuttgart

Master of the Straus Madonna
St John the Baptist
ca. 1410
tempera on panel
(altarpiece fragment)
Christ Church Picture Gallery,
Oxford

Enter Scout from the direction of the battlefield.

Scout:  Eteocles, most excellent king of the Cadmeans, I come bringing definite news from the army out there; I was myself an eyewitness of what they were doing.  Seven men, bold leaders of companies, slaughtered a bull, let its blood run into a black-rimmed shield, and touching the bull's blood with their hands swore an oath by Ares, Enyo, and blood-loving Terror, that they would either bring destruction on the city, sacking the town of the Cadmeans by force, or perish and mix their blood into the soil of this land; and with their own hands, shedding tears, they were adorning the chariot of Adrastus with mementoes of themselves* to take home to their parents.  But no word of pity passed their lips: these breathed within them a steel-hearted spirit, blazing with courage, like that of lions with the light of war in their eyes.  You have not been delayed in learning this by any slowness of mine: I left them drawing lots, so that according to the fall of the lot each should lead his company against a gate.  In view of this, you should speedily post men of excellence, the pick of the city, at the entrances of the gates; for the Argive army, fully equipped, is already coming close, raising the dust, and white foam from the horses' lungs is dripping and staining the soil.  Be like a good ship's captain and make the city tight, before the squalls of war assail her – for this army is like a roaring land-wave – and take the very quickest opportunity of doing this.  For my part, from now on, I will keep a faithful daytime scout's eye out, and through my clear reports you will know what is happening outside and not come to harm.

Exit Scout, by the way he came. 

– Aeschylus, from Seven Against Thebes (467 BC), translated by Alan H. Sommerstein (2008)

*probably locks of hair; on eight vase-paintings datable between 490 and 460, one of the Seven is shown cutting a lock