Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Idiosyncratic Spaces

Andrea Locatelli
Scene of Sorcery and Black Magic
ca. 1740-41
drawing
(study for painting)
Musée du Louvre

Jean-Charles Delafosse
Edward Young composing Night Thoughts
1783
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Nicolò dell'Abate
Scene of Aristocratic Dissipation
ca. 1565
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Pieter de Josselin de Jong
Iron-Workers
ca. 1880-1900
pastel
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Hubert Robert
The Artist's Studio in Rome
1760
oil on canvas
Städel Museum, Frankfurt

follower of Canaletto
Portico with a Lantern
ca. 1741-45
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Anonymous Dutch Artist
Tavern Interior
(pissing into wooden tub in foreground)
1619
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Jean-Baptiste Lallemand
Architectural Caprice inspired by Antique Baths
ca. 1750
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Léon-Augustin Lhermitte
Weaving Workshop
1893
drawing
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Anonymous Japanese Photographer
Greenhouse with Peonies
ca. 1887
hand-colored albumen print
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Anonymous Italian Photographer
Conservation Workshop in Florence, treating paintings by
Francesco Salviati, Agnolo Bronzino, Fra Angelico and Giotto
 
2006
photograph
Opificio delle Pietre Dure, Fortezza da Bassio, Florence

attributed to Louis-Jean Desprez
View of Excavated Pompei
ca. 1777-84
watercolor
Musée du Louvre

John Piper
Approach to Fonthill
1940
oil on canvas
Whitworth Art Gallery, University of Manchester

Jenaro Pérez Villaamil
Seville Cathedral
(interior with Corpus Christi procession)
1835
oil on canvas
Fundación Banco Santander, Madrid

Jean-François-Thérèse Chalgrin
Ball at Versailles
(honoring the Marriage of the Dauphin to Marie Antoinette)
1770
drawing, with watercolor
Musée du Louvre

Girolamo Marchesi (Girolamo da Cotignola)
View of a City, with Chained Bear
ca. 1520
oil on panel
Palazzo dei Diamanti, Ferrara

"The Art of Perspective, which hath the eye for its Principle, to whom Nature hath given more vivacity and more Perfections than to the other senses, and which holdeth amongst them the Rank and the Advantages that the Soul hath above the Body, is likewise the fairest and most delightful of all the Parts that the Science of the Mathematicks hath put forth into light.  This Science may will boast itself to be the soul and the life of Painting, seeing that it is it which giveth unto Painters the Perfection of their Art, which in its ordering the heights and the measures of the Figures, the Moveables, the Architectures, and other Ornaments of a Picture: It instructeth what colours he should use, lively or sad, in what place he ought to apply the one and the other, what he ought to finish, and what ought not so to be: where one is to give a light, and where there is no need of it: in a word, it is this that ought to begin and finish, seeing that it ought to go throughout all.  Without help, the best Master will make as many faults as draughts, principally in Architectures, wherewith they would enrich their Works, as I have seen in Pieces well esteemed, where they have failed so foully, that this in part hath been the motive of my design, for to cause them to know their errours without naming them, and to teach the young ones to avoid them.  How excellent a Painter soever one is, he must observe all these Rules, or he shall content none but ignorants, and a Reasonable Painter that shall know and use these well, shall do wonders to every one's content." 

– Jean Dubreuil, from Perspective Practical (1651), translated by Robert Pricke (1672)