Showing posts with label porcelain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label porcelain. Show all posts

Sunday, November 24, 2019

Eighteenth-Century Physiognomies Rendered by Artists

George Romney
Emma Hart (later Lady Hamilton) as Miranda
1785-86
oil on canvas
Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Kendal, Cumbria

Nicolas de Largillière
Portrait of Charles-Léonor Aubry, Marquis de Castelnau
1701
oil on canvas
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Nicolas de Largillière
Self Portrait
ca. 1725
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Rosalba Carriera
Young Girl holding a Monkey
ca. 1721
pastel
Musée du Louvre

Hyacinthe Rigaud
Portrait of Antoine Pâris
1724
oil on canvas
Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena

A Hundred Bolts of Satin

All you
have to lose
is one
connection
and the mind
uncouples
all the way back.
It seems
to have been
a train.
There seems
to have been
a track.
The things
that you
unpack
from the
abandoned cars
cannot sustain
life: a crate of
tractor axles,
for example,
a dozen dozen
clasp knives,
a hundred
bolts of satin –
perhaps you
specialized
more than
you imagined.

– Kay Ryan (2000)

Hyacinthe Rigaud
Portrait of Graf Philipp Ludwig Wenzel-Sinzendorf
1729
oil on canvas
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

John Singleton Copley
Portrait of Mrs Henry Hill (Anna Barrett)
ca. 1765-70
pastel on paper, mounted on linen
Art Institute of Chicago

John Singleton Copley
Portrait of Daniel Hubbard
1764
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

John Singleton Copley
Portrait of Mrs Daniel Hubbard (Mary Greene)
ca. 1764
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Sèvres Manufactory
Bust of Louis, Dauphin of France
1766
porcelain
Art Institute of Chicago

John Flaxman
Self Portrait
ca. 1779
drawing
Art Institute of Chicago

Jacques-André Portail
Portrait of François Boucher
before 1759
drawing
Art Institute of Chicago

Jean-Antoine Watteau
The Dreamer (La Rêveuse)
ca. 1712-14
oil on panel
Art Institute of Chicago

Pietro Antonio Rotari
Young Woman weeping over a Letter
1707
oil on canvas
Alte Pinakothek, Munich

from A Pillow Book

A Great Book can be read again and again, inexhaustibly, with great benefits to great minds, wrote Mortimer Adler, co-founder of the Great Books Foundation and the Great Books of the Western World program at the university where my husband will be going up for tenure next fall, and where I sometimes teach as well, albeit in a lesser, "non-ladder" position. Not only must a Great Book still matter today, Adler insisted, it must touch upon at least twenty-five of the one hundred and two Great Ideas that have occupied Great Minds for the last twenty-five centuries.  Ranging from Angel to World, a comprehensive list of these concepts can be found in Adler's two-volume Syntopicon: an Index to the Great Ideas, which was published with Great Fanfare, but not Great Financial Success, by Encyclopedia Britannica in 1952. Although the index includes many Great Ideas, including Art, Beauty, Change, Desire, Eternity, Family, Fate, Happiness, History, Pain, Sin, Slavery, Soul, Space, Time, and Truth, it does not, alas, include an entry on Pillows, which often strike me, as I sink into mine at the end of a long day of anything, these days, as at the very least worthy of note. Among the five hundred and eleven Great Books on Adler's list, updated in 1990 to appease his quibbling critics, moreover, only four, I can't help counting, were written by women – Virginia, Willa, Jane, and George – none of whom, as far as I can discover, were anyone's mother.

– Suzanne Buffam (2016)

Monday, October 28, 2019

Museum-Worthy

Josiah Wedgwood and Sons
Chess Piece
19th century
jasperware
Art Institute of Chicago

Anonymous Maker working in Venice
Goblet with Roses
ca. 1875
glass
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Anonymous Maker working in Naples
Cherub
ca. 1750-1800
polychromed wood
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

François Duquesnoy
Bust of Jesus as a Youth
ca. 1620-43
gilt bronze
Art Institute of Chicago

Riccio (Andrea Briosco)
Inkwell in the form of a Frog
ca. 1500
bronze
Kunstgewerbemuseum, Berlin

Anonymous Maker working in Germany
Chess Pieces
16th century
carved and painted wood with silver leaf and gold leaf
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Jacopo da Trezzo
Portrait Medallion of Ippolita Gonzaga
1548
gold
Teylers Museum, Haarlem

from The Vanity of Human Wishes

     Enlarge my life with multitude of days,
In health, in sickness, thus the suppliant prays;
Hides from himself his state, and shuns to know
That life protracted is protracted woe.
Time hovers o'er, impatient to destroy,
And shuts up all the passages of joy:
In vain their gifts the bounteous seasons pour,
The fruit autumnal, and the vernal flower,
With listless eyes the dotard views the store,
He views, and wonders that they please no more;
Now pall the tasteless meats, and joyless wines,
And Luxury with sighs her slave resigns.

– Samuel Johnson (1749)

Mirosław Bałka
Salt Seller
1988
wood, jute, steel, salt
Art Institute of Chicago

Sèvres Manufactory
Sugar Sifter
ca. 1750-65
porcelain
Art Institute of Chicago

Constantin Brâncusi
Leda
ca. 1920
marble on concrete base
Art Institute of Chicago

Antonio Calcagni
Bust of Annibale Caro
ca. 1566-72
bronze and marble
Victoria & Albert Museum

Ancient Egypt
Recumbent Jackal
ca. 1315-1081 BC
painted wood statuette
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Sèvres Manufactory
Elephant Candelabrum Vase
(Vase à Tête d'Eléphant)

1757-58
porcelain
Art Institute of Chicago

François Carlo Antommarchi
Death Mask of Napoleon
modeled 1821, cast 1833
bronze
Art Institute of Chicago

Natalia Goncharova (designer)
Embroidered Jacket
ca. 1920-30
silk
Art Institute of Chicago

Jean Démontreuil
Dead Bird
ca. 1795
carved wood relief
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Friday, August 23, 2019

Characters from Classical Antiquity in European Paintings

Hans von Aachen
Bacchus, Ceres and Amor
ca. 1595-1605
oil on canvas
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Anthony van Dyck
Paris
ca. 1628
oil on canvas
Wallace Collection, London

Jacob Jordaens
Offering to Ceres
ca. 1619
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Erasmus Quellinus
Sleeping Cupid
ca. 1636-38
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Erasmus Quellinus
Abduction of Europa
ca. 1636-38
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Erasmus Quellinus
Bacchus and Ariadne
ca. 1636-38
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Erasmus Quellinus
Sons of Boreas (Zetes and Quellinus) driving away the Harpies
ca. 1636-38
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

from Ode on the Poetical Character

The band, as fairy legends say,
Was wove on that creating day,
When He, who call'd with thought to birth
Yon tented sky, this laughing earth,
And dress'd with springs, and forests tall,
And pour'd the main engirting all,
Long by the lov'd enthusiast woo'd,
Himself in some diviner mood,
Retiring, sate with her alone,
And plac'd her on his sapphire throne,
The whiles, the vaulted shrine around,
Seraphic wires were heard to sound,
Now sublimest triumph swelling,
Now on love and mercy dwelling;
And she, from out the veiling cloud,
Breath'd her magic notes aloud:
And thou, thou rich-hair'd youth of morn,
And all thy subject life was born!
The dang'rous Passions kept aloof,
Far from the sainted growing woof:
But near it sate ecstatic Wonder
List'ning the deep applauding thunder:
And Truth, in sunny vest array'd,
By whose the tarsel's eyes were made
All the shad'wy tribes of mind,
In braided dance their murmurs join'd,
And all the bright uncounted Pow'rs
Who feed on Heav'n's ambrosial flow'rs.
Where is the bard, whose soul can now
Its high presuming hopes avow?
Where he who thinks, with rapture blind,
This hallow'd work for him design'd?

– William Collins (1747)

Erasmus Quellinus
Death of Eurydice
ca. 1636-38
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Jacob Jordaens
Offering to Ceres
ca, 1619
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Anonymous Italian Painter
Priam and Hecuba
ca. 1400-1425
tempera on panel
Princeton University Art Museum

Luca Giordano
Battle between Lapiths and Centaurs
ca. 1685-90
oil on canvas
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Gaspard Duchange after Peter Paul Rubens
Battle of the Amazons
ca. 1778-82
porcelain plaque
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

 Peter Paul Rubens
Birth of Diana and Apollo
ca. 1625
watercolor and gouache on paper
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Robert Fagan
Female Figure representing Autumn, with Hercules carrying the Cretan Bull
ca. 1793-95
oil on canvas (grisaille)
National Trust, Attingham Park, Shropshire

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Andromache - I

Leonard Baskin
Andromache
1962
lithograph (book illustration)
Art Institute of Chicago

Gilles Demarteau
Weeping Andromaque
before 1776
etching
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Pierre-Paul Prud'hon
Pyrrhus and Andromache
ca. 1793-96
drawing
Harvard Art Museums

Honoré Daumier
Racine's Andromaque on stage
1851
lithograph
Art Institute of Chicago

Joseph-Théodore Richomme after Pierre-Narcisse Guérin
Andromache with Astyanax kneeling before Pyrrhus
1825
etching and engraving
British Museum

from Andromaque

Pyrrhus:

J'irai punir les Grecs de vos maux et des miens.
Animé d'un regard, je puis tout entreprendre:
Votre Ilion encor peut sortir de sa cendre;
Je puis, en moins de temps que les Grecs ne l'ont pris,
Dans ses murs relevés couronner votre fils.

Andromaque:

Seigneur, tant de grandeurs ne nous touchent plus guère.
Je les lui promettais tant qu'a vécu son père.
Non, vous n'espérez plus de nous revoir encor,
Sacrés murs que n'a pu conserver mon Hector!
A de moindre faveurs des malheureux prétendent,
Seigneur: c'est un exil que mes pleurs vous demandent.
Souffrez que, loin des Grecs, et même loin de vous,
J'aille cacher mon fils, et pleurer mon époux.

                              *                  *               *

Pyrrhus:

I'll punish Greece for all your pain and mine.
Lit by your glance, I can take on the world.
Your Ilium can rise from ashes still.
In less time than the Greeks demolished it,
I'll build its walls again, and crown your son.

Andromache:

Such noble things can scarcely touch me now.
I promised them to him before his father died.
The sacred walls that Hector could not save
Must not now hope to look on us again.
Unhappy people ask for smaller gifts,
My lord. I plead with you for banishment.
Let me go far from Greece, and far from you,
And hide my son and mourn my husband's death.

– Jean Racine (1667), translated by Tim Chilcott (2000)

Romeyn de Hooghe
Opera of Andromache at Milan
1702
etching and letterpress (title-page)
British Museum

Élisabeth-Sophie Chéron
Andromache, Astyanax and Hector
(study after an engraved gem)
1711
drawing
British Museum

Antonio Salamanca
Andromache
before 1562
engraving
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Muriel Wheeler
Bronze Mask of Andromache
ca. 1920-30
photograph by the artist
Victoria & Albert Museum

John Keyse Sherwin
Mrs Hartley in the role of Andromache
1782
color stipple engraving
Victoria & Albert Museum

Pierre-Paul Prud'hon
Andromache and Astyanax
ca. 1798
drawing
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Pierre-Paul Prud'hon
Andromache and Astyanax
ca. 1813-24
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Derby Porcelain Factory
Andromache mourning Hector
ca. 1780
porcelain
Victoria & Albert Museum

Derby Porcelain Factory
Andromache weeping over the ashes of Hector
ca. 1775
porcelain
Victoria & Albert Museum