Sunday, June 14, 2026

Cynosures

Marwan (Marwan Kassab Bachi)
Portrait of poet Bader Chaker al-Sayyab
1965
oil on canvas
Tate Modern, London


Daniel Massad
Night Piece
1987
pastel on paper
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Master of the 1540s
Portrait of a Man
1545
oil on panel
Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen

Margrethe Mather
Pierrot (actor Otto Matiesen)
ca. 1920
platinum palladium print
National Museum of American History, Washington DC

Henri Matisse
Nature Morte avec Livres
ca. 1895
oil on canvas
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam

Leonard Maurer
Proust
1973
linocut
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Gabriel Max
The Anatomist
1869
oil on canvas
Neue Pinakothek, Munich

Ludovico Mazzolino
Circumcision of Christ
1526
oil on panel (altarpiece)
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Rollie McKenna
Portrait of art historian Agnes Claflin
ca. 1955
gelatin silver print
Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York

William McTaggart
Group of Classical Casts
ca. 1860
drawing
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

Mendell & Oberer (Munich)
Gerhard Richter - Neue Bilder Galerie
1967
offset lithograph (exhibition poster)
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

William Menelaws
Portrait of Mrs John Muir
1905
oil on canvas
Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, British Columbia

Hans Mettler
Venetian Laundry II
2001
C-print
Ottawa Art Gallery, Ontario

Nicolas Mignard
Portrait présumé de
Françoise Marguerite de Sévigné, comtesse de Grignan

before 1668
oil on canvas
Musée d'Art et d'Histoire de Narbonne

Hieronymus van der Mij
Portrait of Johan van den Bergh
1746
oil on panel
Museum De Lakenhal, Leiden

Peter Milton
The Jolly Corner III (Henry James)
1971
etching and engraving
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

George Minne
De Kleine Relikwiedrager
1897
marble
Kunstmuseum, The Hague

from Minturno, or, On Beauty

(Modeled on Plato's Hippias MajorMinturno is a conversation between the philosopher Antonio Minturno and Geronimo Ruscelli, a colorful courtier and dilettante)

Giacomo Ruscelli:  If the beautiful is not what is pleasing to the senses of hearing and sight, what other definition can we find that is equally satisfactory?

Antonio Minturno:  Let's not abandon the search for one.

G.R.:  I have often read that beauty is a proportion between parts that are well arranged.  This opinion, which many have shared, is not easy to dismiss.

A.M.:  There is proportion only where there are dissimilar parts.  But if beauty were a proportion between parts that do not resemble each other, there would be no beauty in simple things, but gold and silver are beautiful, in the judgment of miserable mortals, as well as diamonds, rubies, and other precious stones; colors are beautiful, and light, in which there is no proportion at all, is very beautiful indeed.  Besides, there are times when the proportion between the parts remains – as in bodies grown old and feeble – but not beauty, which is lost with the flower of youth.  For these reasons I am not satisfied with this definition either.

G.R.:  I do not know if I can produce any other that will satisfy you more.  But you must recall the definitions of Plutarch and Plotinus.  The first is that beauty is an ornament or glory of the soul which irradiates the body, the other that it is a victory of form over matter.  To these one could add another that beauty is an appearance or an image of the good, as ugliness is a darkened face of evil.

A.M.:  I remember having read something of these things and heard them spoken about, but I find myself with the same doubts.  For if beauty is an ornament of the soul imparted to the body or a victory of form over matter, then it must exist in bodily and material things, in which there is perhaps no beauty at all, or not the kind we are seeking.  And I wonder at Nifo and the other Peripatetics, who have located beauty in the body and in matter, because by its nature matter is ugly and deformed in the extreme, or rather is ugliness itself, so that the beautiful would be found to exist in the ugly as its proper medium, which is not at all fitting, for the beautiful should issue from the beautiful as flower issues from flower.  Besides, if the opinion of those who have defined it in this way is true, the angels would not be beautiful, since in the angelic nature matter is not overcome by form, and there is no body to which the soul's quality can be imparted.  

– Torquato Tasso (ca. 1593-94), translated by Dain A. Trafton and Carnes Lord (1982)