Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Selected Sinuosities - III

Peter Paul Rubens
Sheet of Studies
(Job's Wife, Judith and Holofernes)
ca. 1595
drawing
Morgan Library, New York

John Singer Sargent
Falling Figure
ca. 1918-19
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

John Singer Sargent
Figure Studies
ca. 1903
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

David Scott
Life Study of Model
ca. 1840
oil on paper
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

Adamo Scultori after Michelangelo
Ignudo (Sistine Ceiling)
ca. 1585
engraving
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Severo da Ravenna
Neptune on a Sea Monster
ca. 1500-1510
bronze
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Hans Speckaert
Allegory of Minerva presiding over the Muses
ca. 1575
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Bartholomeus Spranger after Jacopo Tintoretto
Figure Studies
ca. 1565-75
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Lorenz Stör
Figure Study
1576
drawing
Gemäldegalerie, Dresden

George Stubbs
Fowl - Head and Neck - Lateral View
ca. 1795
drawing
Yale Center for British Art

Giambattista Tiepolo
Study for The Martyrdom of St Sebastian
1739
oil on canvas
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

Feliks Topolski
Production of Róžewicz's Funny Old Man
at ICA Theatre, London

1977
drawing
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Giovanni Battista Trotti (il Molosso)
Miracle of San Giacinto (detail)
1596
oil on canvas
Museo Civico ala Ponzone, Cremona

Anthony van Dyck
Figure Study for Crucifixion
ca. 1630
drawing
Harvard Art Museums

Raphael Lamar West
Académie
ca. 1790
drawing
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Hamlet Winstanley
The Farnese Hercules
(study of a cast)
1717
drawing
Yale Center for British Art

The End

All those who have not died have married.
     A Pompeian pause arrests
Merton beside his window, and the view
     Below is parkland, final as none
Could be, but the moment after she
     Whose name is on the card he holds
Has gone. The sliver of pasteboard framed
     By the great window, now, forever, 
He is perfected in regret. Dalton
     Hailing the cab that will carry him
Out of the book, the motif on his lips
     (So much for London, then) for the last time,
The last chord chimes, tolling the solitudes
     Of the vast mind they moved in.
Such ends are just. But let him know
     Who reads his time by the way books go,
Each instant will bewry his symmetries
     And Time, climbing down from its pedestal
Uncrown the settled vista of his loss. 
     Is it autumn or spring? It is autumn or spring.
Before door and window, the terrible guest
     Towers towards a famine and a feast.

– Charles Tomlinson (1967)