Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Ornamental

Anonymous Venetian Printmaker
Battle of Zonchio between Turks and Venetians
1499
hand-colored woodcut, printed on two joined sheets
British Museum


Hans Burgkmair the Elder
Virgin and Child
with St Conrad and St Pelagius

(patrons of the city of Constance)
1499
hand-colored woodcut and letterpress
British Museum

Albrecht Dürer
Constructed Figure (Female)
1500
drawing
British Museum

Hans Holbein the Younger
Studies of a Woman in an English Hood
ca. 1532-35
drawing
British Museum

attributed to Samuel van Hoogstraten
Youth with Flute
ca. 1646
drawing
British Museum

Pieter de Hooch
The Mother
ca. 1665
oil on canvas
Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Jean-François Janinet after Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini
The Three Graces
1786
color aquatint
British Museum

Richard Cosway
Love uniting War and Peace
before 1821
drawing
British Museum

John Sell Cotman
Chateau in Normandy
ca. 1835
watercolor on paper
British Museum

Winslow Homer
Watching from the Cliffs
1881
watercolor on paper
Reynolda House Museum of American Art, Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Thomas Eakins
J. Laurie Wallace as Life Model
(study for painting, Arcadia)
ca. 1883
platinum print
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

Kenyon Cox
Cover Design for McClure's Magazine
ca. 1896-97
drawing
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Kenyon Cox
Cover of McClure's Magazine for January
1897
lithograph
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

George Hurrell
Joan Crawford
1934
gelatin silver print
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

Carl Robert Holty
Abstract Painting
ca. 1935-40
oil on board
Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, Texas

Edward Hopper
First Row Orchestra
1951
oil on canvas
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

Scott Hyde
Bronx with a Ruin
1970
lithograph
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

from On the Great Frost (1634)

When heaven drops some smaller showers, our sense
Of grief's increased, being but deluded thence;
For whiles we think those drops to entertain,
They fall down pearl, which came down half-way rain.
Greenland's removal now the poor man fears,
Seeing all waters frozen but his tears.
We suffer day continual, and the snow
Doth make our little night become noon now.
We hear of some encrystalled, such as have
That which procured their death become their grave.
Bodies, that destitute of soul yet stood,
Dead, and not fallen; drowned, and without a flood.
Nay we, who breathe still, are almost as they,
And only may be styled a softer clay;
We stand like statues, as if cast, and fit
For life, not having but expecting it:
Each man's become the Stoic's wise one hence;
For can you look for passion where's no sense? 
– Which we have not, resolved to our first stone,
Unless it be one sense to feel we've none. 

– William Cartwright (published 1651)