Friday, March 6, 2026

Bilateral

Etruscan Culture
Oinochoe
7th-6th century BC
core-formed glass
Getty Museum, Los Angeles


Paul Feeley
Asellus
1964
enamel on canvas
Buffalo AKG Art Museum, New York

Nicodemo Ferrucci
Franciscan Coat-of-Arms
with Tiaras of four Franciscan Pope
s
ca. 1600
fresco
Convento di San Francesco, Fiesole

Adam Fuss
From the series, My Ghost
2000
daguerreotype
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri

Ignatz Marcel Gaugengigl
The Dandy
ca. 1885
oil on panel
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Alexander Gelman
Poetry Readings at Biblio's
317 Church St, New York

1996
screenprint (poster)
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Gilbert and George
Sky Blue World
1989
collage of photographic postcards
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Gilbert and George
Thirst
1982
hand-colored photomontage
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh

Milton Glaser
Blue Shadow
1977
offset-lithograph
(advertising poster for French perfume)
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Robert Gober
The Inverted Sink
1985
plaster, wood, steel, wire, lath and paint
Buffalo AKG Art Museum, New York

Pierre Gouthière
Urn with handles à la Grecque
and Apollonian Masks

ca. 1780
marble and gilt-bronze
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Ancient Greek Culture
Alabastron
6th-5th century BC
core-formed glass
Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Marsden Hartley
Painting no. 50
1914-15
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

François-Simon Houlié
Console Table
ca. 1747-50
painted wood and marble
Musée du Louvre

Gilbert Hsiao
Disco 3000
2012
inkjet print
Phillips Collection, Washington DC

Anonymous French Makers
Canapé à la reine
ca. 1730-40
gilt beechwood with modern silk velvet
Musée du Louvre

Anonymous French Makers
Chandelier with 180 Lights
ca. 1860
steel, glass and gilt-bronze
Musée du Louvre

Phoebus was a herdsman,
    Poseidon was a horse,
Ammon was the famous snake,
    and Zeus a swan of course,
all of them after girls, or boys,
    and trying to keep it quiet,
not bedding by persuasion but
    rape without a riot.
But Euagoras is made of brass;    
    he doesn't need disguises:
he does them with no change of shape,
    both sexes and all sizes. 

– from the Greek Anthology, translated by Alistair Elliot