Saturday, June 20, 2026

Risers

Anton Bruehl
Four Roses Whiskey: Worth Reaching For
1949
photomechanical print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York


Louis-Gabriel Moreau
Ascension of Balloon by the Montgolfier Brothers at Saint-Germain
ca. 1783
oil on board
private collection

John Duncan Fergusson
Dieppe - 14 July 1905
1905
oil on canvas
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

Jacopo Ligozzi
Assumption of the Virgin, with St Benedict
before 1627
oil on canvas
Abbazia San Fedele, Poppi

Master of the Life of the Virgin (German painter)
Ascension of Christ
1473
oil and gold on panel
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Philip-Lorca diCorcia
Joe Whitman, 24 years old, Los Angles, California, $25
1990
C-print
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Francesco Guardi
Woman with Spindle on Chair
before 1793
drawing
British Museum

Robert ParkeHarrison
Patching the Sky
1997
photogravure
Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York

Stephen De Staebler
Study for Right-Sided Angel III
1993
watercolor on paper
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Pablo Picasso
Bather with Beach Ball
1932
oil on canvas
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Nicole Eisenman
Swing
2002
gouache and ink on paper
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Gaspare Diziani
Jacob's Dream
before 1767
drawing
British Museum

Jörg Breu the Younger
The Resurrection
ca. 1535-40
woodcut
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Paris Bordone
The Resurrection
1550
oil on canvas
Museo Santa Caterina, Treviso

Garofalo (Benvenuto Tisi)
Ascension of Christ
ca. 1525
oil on panel
Palazzo Barberini, Rome

Anonymous Italian Artist
Ascension of Christ
15th century
enameled terracotta relief
Musée du Louvre

Pietro Francione (Pedro Fernandez)
Vision of Blessed Amadeus of Portugal
ca. 1514-16
oil on panel
Palazzo Barberini, Rome

    The state of mind which he wished to produce in his readers was nearly always a complicated one: they were to be impressed and elevated by a multiplicity of suggestions and a sense of mystery and awe. "Let thy thoughts," he says himself, "be of things which have not entered into the hearts of beasts: think of things long past and long to come: acquaint thyself with the choragium of the stars, and consider the vast expanse beyond them. Let intellectual tubes give thee a glance of things which visive organs reach not. Have a glimpse of incomprehensibles: and thoughts of things, which thoughts but tenderly touch."

– Lytton Strachey on Sir Thomas Browne (1906)