Monday, December 29, 2025

Singularities

Alec Soth
Charles, Vasa MN
2003
C-print
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York


Paul Wunderlich
Figure against Black
before 1970
lithograph
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

August Sander
Paul Hindemith
1926
gelatin silver print
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

John Singer Sargent
Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney
ca. 1913
drawing
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Félicien Rops
Seated Peasant wearing cast-off Tailcoat
before 1898
drawing
British Museum

John Roddam Spencer Stanhope
Night
1878
oil on panel
Fralin Museum of Art, Charlottesville, Virginia

Thomas Rowlandson after Joshua Reynolds
Emily Potts as Thais
before 1827
watercolor on paper
British Museum

George Romney
Sketch of a Woman
before 1790
drawing
British Museum

Thomas Stothard
Allegorical Figure
ca. 1775
drawing
British Museum

Johann Heinrich Schönfeld
Allegorical Figure of Summer
ca. 1680
drawing
British Museum

Salvator Rosa
Study of Draped Woman in Motion
ca. 1655
drawing
British Museum

Raffaello Vanni
Study of Kneeling Woman
ca. 1650
drawing
British Museum

Ventura Salimbeni
Study of a Monk
ca. 1610
drawing
British Museum

Raffaello Schiaminossi
Persian Sibyl
1609
etching
British Museum

workshop of Bartholomeus Spranger
St Paul
ca. 1600-1625
drawing
British Museum

Hans Schäufelein
Landsknecht
ca. 1507-1508
drawing (print study)
British Museum

Marco Zoppo
Study of Bound Figure
before 1478
drawing
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

from Of the Answers of the Oracle of Apollo at Delphos to Croesus King of Lydia

    Sometime more beholding unto memorie than invention, hee delighted to expresse himself in the bare verses of Homer; but that hee principally affected poetrie, and the preists not only nor allwayes composed his prosall deliveries into verse, seemes plaine from his necromanticall prophecyes. The dead head in Phlegon delivers a long prediction in verse, and at the raysing of the ghost of Commodus unto Caracalla, when none of his ancestors would speake, the divining spirit versified his infelicitie; herin complying unto the apprehension of elder times, which conceaved not only a majestie, butt something of divinitie in poetrie; and wherin the old Theologians delivered their inventions. 

    Critical considerators might looke for rare poetrie, and expect in his oraculous verses a more than ordinarie strayne and high spirit of Apollo; nor bee content to find that spirits make verses like men, beating upon filling epithites, nor omitting the licence of Dialects and lower helpes common unto human poetrie; wherin since Scaliger, who hath scarce spared any of the Greek poets, hath thought it wisdome to bee silent, wee shall make no animadversion.  

– Sir Thomas Browne (1656)