Catherine Yass Corridors 1994 C-print Tate Gallery |
Terry Evans Bur Oak, Liberty Prairie Reserve, Lake County, Illinois 1994 C-prints (triptych) Art Institute of Chicago |
Michael A. Smith Springtown, Pennsylvania 1995 gelatin silver print Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia |
Keith Carter Sleeping Swan 1995 gelatin silver print Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia |
Bruce Bernard Leigh Bowery and Nicole Bateman posing for And the Husband by Lucian Freud 1993 C-print Princeton University Art Museum |
Bruce Bernard Leigh Bowery and Nicole Bateman posing for And the Husband by Lucian Freud 1993 C-print Victoria & Albert Museum, London |
Bruce Bernard Leigh Bowery posing for Leigh under Skylight by Lucian Freud 1994 C-print Victoria & Albert Museum, London |
Bruce Bernard Nude Self Portrait, Studio of Lucian Freud 1993 C-print Princeton University Art Museum |
Lee Friedlander Stems 1994 gelatin silver print Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio |
Barbara Bosworth Untitled (series, Bitterroot River) ca. 1995 gelatin silver print Princeton University Art Museum |
Matthew Barney Cremaster 1: Ms. Goodyear Chorus 1995 C-print Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio |
Catherine Opie Frankie 1994 C-print Los Angeles County Museum of Art |
Duane Michals O Tan-Faced Prairie Boy (poem by Walt Whitman) 1995 gelatin silver print Princeton University Art Museum |
Joel Sternfeld Mount Rushmore National Monument, Black Hills National Forest, South Dakota 1994 C-print Art Institute of Chicago |
SebastiĆ£o Salgado Churchgate Station, Bombay 1995 gelatin silver print Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio |
Aeneas (for his father's love could not
permit his mind to rest) now quickly sends
Achates to the Trojan ships, to carry
these tidings to Ascanius, to lead
Aeneas' son up to the walls of Carthage:
all his paternal love and care are for
Ascanius. He also tells Achates
to bring back gifts snatched from the wreck of Troy:
a tunic stiff with images of gold,
and then a veil whose fringes were of saffron
acanthus – these once worn by Argive Helen,
who had borne them off to Troy and her unlawful
wedding when she had fled Mycenae – splendid
gifts of her mother Leda; and besides,
the scepter that had once been carried by
Ilione, eldest of Priam's daughters,
a necklace set with pearls, and then a crown
that had twin circlets set with jewels and gold.
And hurrying to do all he was told,
Achates made his way down to the boats.
– Aeneas summons Ascanius, from Book I of Virgil's Aeneid, translated by Allen Mandelbaum (1971)