Friday, November 14, 2025

Olden-Days Young - III

John Singer Sargent
Portrait of a Boy
1890
oil on canvas
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh

Henri Evenepoel
Portrait of Louis-Charles Crespin
1895
oil on canvas
Musée Fin-de-Siècle, Brussels

Jean-André Rixens
Portrait of the artist's daughter Léa
1902
oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Tours

Josef Engelhart
Portrait of Michel
1908
oil on board
Belvedere Museum, Vienna

August Macke
Blonde Girl with Doll
1910
oil on canvas
Sprengel Museum, Hannover

Ivan Aguéli
Portrait Study
1915
drawing
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Lovis Corinth
Portrait of the artist's children Wilhelmine and Thomas
1916
oil on canvas
Neue Pinakothek, Munich

Max Slevogt
Nina and Wolfgang Slevogt
1917
oil on canvas
Lenbachhaus Munich

Mollie Faustman
Girl against Blue Water
ca. 1920
oil on canvas
Göteborgs Konstmuseum, Sweden

Charley Toorop
Portrait of Eddy and John Fernhout
1926
oil on canvas
Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands

Erich Ockert
Portrait of a Child (Annelies Ockert)
1927
oil on canvas
Galerie Neue Meister (Albertinum), Dresden

Arvid Fougstedt
Erik at Vickleby
1930
gouache on paper
Prins Eugens Waldemarsudde, Stockholm

Pablo Picasso
Jeunesse
1950
lithograph
Museum Folkwang, Essen

Kenneth Hood
Figure and Harbour
ca. 1951-54
oil on glass
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

Alexander Schultz
Portrait of a Boy
1956
oil on canvas
Lillehammer Kunstmuseum, Norway

Börje Almquist
Autumn
1979
gelatin silver print from infrared film
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Orestes [turning to Apollo]:  Testify now for me, Apollo, and expound whether I killed her with justice.  That I did the deed, as is the fact, I do not deny, but judge this bloodshed, whether I seem in your eyes to have done it justly or not, so that I may tell this court.

Apollo [to the court]:  I shall say to you, to this great institution ordained by Athena, "justly"; and I shall not be telling a lie.  I have never said anything on my prophetic throne – not about a man, not about a woman, not about a city – except at the bidding of Zeus, father of the Olympians.  I tell you solemnly to understand well how strong is this plea of justification, and I tell you to follow the counsel of the Father; for an oath can in no way be stronger than Zeus. 

Chorus of Furies:  Zeus, according to you, gave you this oracle to tell to this man Orestes, that in avenging the murder of his father he should take no account at all of the rights of his mother?  

Apollo:  Yes, because it is simply not the same thing – the death of a noble man, honoured with a royal sceptre granted him by Zeus, and that too at the hands of a woman, and then not by the far-shooting martial bow of, say, an Amazon, but in the manner of which you shall hear, Pallas, and you who are sitting with her to decide this case by your votes.  When he returned from his expedition, which had been for the most part a successful venture, she welcomed him with kindly words and attended him when he was having a hot bath in a silver tub, and then at the end spread a garment over him like a tent, hobbled the man in an endless robe she had craftily devised, and struck him down.

– Aeschylus, from Eumenides (458 BC), translated by Alan H. Sommerstein (2008)