Monday, May 27, 2024

Figures - I

Hubert Robert
Figure Study
ca. 1755-65
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Benjamin West
Académie
ca. 1785
drawing
(with tiny head added by another hand)
Morgan Library, New York

Federico Barocci
Figure Studies
ca. 1565-67
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Luca Cambiaso
Sibyl with Scroll
ca. 1555
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Anonymous Italian Artist
Académie
17th century
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Wilhelm Lehmbruck
Bather with Head on Knee
1913
drypoint
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

John Singer Sargent
Figure Study for Apollo and the Muses
ca. 1921
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Gabriel de Saint-Aubin
Figure Sketches
ca. 1750
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Giambattista Tiepolo
Figure with Bent Head wearing a Cloak
ca. 1750
drawing
Morgan Library, New York

John Skippe after Andrea del Sarto
Two Figures
1783
chiaroscuro woodcut
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Alfred George Stevens
Académie
ca. 1860
drawing
Princeton University Art Museum

Sébastien Leclerc
Seated Figure
1700
engraving
(leaf from drawing manual)
Gemäldegalerie, Dresden

Clare Leighton
Illustration to Thomas Hardy's
Return of the Native

1929
woodcut
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Willem Panneels
Académie
ca. 1626-29
drawing
Statens Museum for Kunst,
Copenhagen

Lodewijk Toeput (Ludovico Pozzoserrato)
Torso of Young Man from the Back
ca. 1580
drawing
Morgan Library, New York

Salvator Rosa
Seated Soldier Resting
ca. 1665
drawing
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

     "History may well be like geology; deep stratifications and configurations are not easily seen.  Nonetheless, "the study of earthquakes or tremors is the most effective means we have for learning about the inside of our planet, within which these phenomena occur." Perhaps by analogy, the examination of certain great catastrophes is an effective means for uncovering those forces within the overall upheaval of a society that had once assured its relative cohesiveness, and for identifying among the instinctive reactions of fear, grief, and shame impulses that are rarely perceptible. Their crude reality is revealed in the conflict between social groups and the lust for possessions common to any collectivity. It would be naive, however, to believe that these factors along explain everything. Before, during, and after a great collective tragedy, irrepressible gusts of fantasy are released, like waves of suffocating heat during a conflagration. In the convulsions of cruelty and terror that take place, the modalities of this fantasy emerge in all their power and all their potential for growth. In this sense, the sack of Rome has been revelatory."

– André Chastel, The Sack of Rome, 1527, translated by Beth Archer, 1983 (expanded from the A.W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts, 1977, and published by Princeton University Press and the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.)