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Josef Wawra Portrait of a Woman 1914 drawing Belvedere Museum, Vienna |
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Arne Bendik Sjur The Skeptic 1966 drypoint Nasjonalmuseet, Oslo |
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Lucas Cranach the Younger Portrait of Maurice, Duke of Saxony ca. 1545-50 tempera on paper Musée des Beaux-Arts de Reims |
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Inta Ruka Marija Matvejuka 2005 gelatin silver print Moderna Museet, Stockholm |
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Johan Rohde Self Portrait ca. 1890 oil on canvas Hirschsprung Collection, Copenhagen |
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Paula Modersohn-Becker Self Portrait ca. 1898 oil on board Kunsthalle Bremen |
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Giambattista Moroni Portrait of Don Gabriel de la Cueva (Spanish Governor of Milan) 1580 oil on canvas Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin |
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Ferdinand Hodler Portrait of Madame de R. 1893 mixed media on panel Galerie Neue Meister (Albertinum), Dresden |
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Scott Gentling George Frideric Handel 1993 watercolor and gouache on paper Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Texas |
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Axel Fridell Self Portrait VII 1927 drypoint Moderna Museet, Stockholm |
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Uno Falkengren Berlin 1924 gelatin silver print Moderna Museet, Stockholm |
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Jean Morin Portrait of Antoine Vitré, Royal Typographer 1645 etching Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands |
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Jean-Étienne Liotard Portrait of Marie-Antoinette, future Queen of France 1762 watercolor on paper Musée d'Art et d'Histoire de Genève |
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Philipp Otto Runge Portrait of a Young Man ca. 1805 oil on paper, mounted on canvas Belvedere Museum, Vienna |
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Domenico Tintoretto Portrait of an Artist ca. 1590 oil on canvas Alte Pinakothek, Munich |
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Eva Schulze-Knabe Self Portrait 1929 oil on board Galerie Neue Meister (Albertinum), Dresden |
Clytemnestra: Now you judge me to have incurred exile from the city, the hatred of the community, and loud public curses; but you didn't show any opposition at all to this man at that former time, when, setting no special value on her – treating her death as if it were the death of one beast out of large flocks of well-fleeced sheep – he sacrificed his own child, the darling offspring of my pangs, as a spell to soothe the Thracian winds. Shouldn't you have driven him from this land in punishment for that unclean deed? But when you are a spectator of my actions, you judge them harshly. Well, I tell you, if you make such threats, to make them on the understanding that I am prepared to fight the matter out. I am content for you to rule, if you defeat me by force in fair fight; but if god decides the issue the other way, then you will be taught, and learn, good sense – though rather late in the day.
Chorus:
Your cunning is great,
and your words are very proud, just as your mind
is driven mad by your experience of flowing blood –
the flecks of blood show clearly on your eyes.
In time you must pay the price and, stripped of friends,
suffer stroke in return for stroke.
– Aeschylus, from Agamemnon (458 BC), translated by Alan H. Sommerstein (2008)