Sunday, June 21, 2026

Aloft

Anonymous American Photographer
Rooftop view of Blimp
ca. 1925
gelatin silver print
Museum of Modern Art, New York


Murray Becker
Crash of the Hindenburg
1937
gelatin silver print
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Anonymous Dutch Sculptor
Figure
ca. 1600-1650
wood
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Aaron Siskind
Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation
1956
gelatin silver print
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Grete Stern
Sueño nro. 35
1949
photomontage
Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York

Charles Marville
Industry by Louis Petitot, Pont du Carrousel
1852
salted paper print from paper negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Joel Meyerowitz
London (Plane and Elephant)
1966
gelatin silver print
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Marc Chagall
Les Amants au Ciel Rouge
1950
oil on canvas
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Louis-Michel Eilshemius
Afternoon Wind
1899
oil on canvas
Museum of Modern Art, New York

El Greco
Adoration of the Shepherds
ca. 1596-97
oil on canvas
(bozzetto for altarpiece)
Palazzo Barberini, Rome

Fra Angelico
Postmortem Appearance of St Francis
1429
tempera on panel (predella fragment)
Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Johann Carl Loth
The Resurrection
before 1698
oil on canvas
Galleria Palatina, Palazzo Pitti, Florence

Anonymous German Painter
Christ in Limbo
ca. 1550-75
oil on panel (altarpiece fragment)
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Forrest Bess
Seascape with Star
before 1977
oil on panel
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Michael Mazur
Dante's Inferno - Paolo and Francesca
2000
etching
Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York

Andrea Sacchi
Triumph of Divine Wisdom
ca. 1629
oil on canvas
Palazzo Barberini, Rome

Matteo Rosselli
Allegory of Justice
ca. 1620-25
ceiling fresco
Galleria Palatina, Palazzo Pitti, Florence

    To extend our memories of monuments, whose death we daily pray for, and whose duration we cannot hope without injury to our expectations in the advent of the last day, were a contradiction to our beliefs.  We, whose generations are ordained in this setting part of time, are providentially taken off from such imaginations, and, being necessitated to eye the remaining particle of futurity, are naturally constituted unto thoughts of the next world, and cannot excusably decline the consideration of that duration, which maketh pyramids pillars of snow, and all that is past a moment.

– Sir Thomas Browne, from Hydriotaphia, or, Urn Burial (1658)