Thursday, October 3, 2024

Privately Related

James Earl
Portrait of Frances Hortin
1792
oil on canvas
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Tennessee

Rachel Echenberg
Portrait de Famille avec Divan
2014
inkjet print
Musée National des Beaux-Arts du Québec

Sydenham Edwards
Embothrium speciosissimum (Waratah)
1808
hand-colored engraving
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Nicole Eisenman
Sketch for a Fountain
2017
bronze
Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas

Willard Frederic Elms
Art Institute by the Elevated Lines
ca. 1924
lithograph (poster)
Art Institute of Chicago

Robert Engels
Le Passant
1898
lithograph
(illustration to poem by Edmond Pilon)
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Prosper d'Epinay
Georges d'Epinay, fils de l'artiste
ca. 1884
painted terracotta
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Erté (Romain de Tirtoff)
Number Nine
1968
lithograph
Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane

Hans Eworth
Portrait of Mary Neville, Lady Dacre
ca. 1555-58
oil on panel
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

attributed to Jan van Eyck
Portrait of a Monk
ca. 1420
oil on panel
(formerly owned by the painter Ingres)
Musée Ingres Bourdelle, Montauban

Conrad Faber von Creuznach
Portrait of Heinrich vom Rhein zum Mohren
ca. 1525-30
oil on panel
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Anonymous Artist
The Messel Mica Fan
ca. 1665-1700
painted mica panels mounted on ivory sticks
Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge

Henri Fantin-Latour
Still Life with Peaches and Grapes
1873
oil on canvas
Centraal Museum, Utrecht

Dixon Farley
Untitled
1997
oil on canvas
San Jose Museum of Art, California

Julian Faulhaber
Ceiling
2006
C-print
Princeton University Art Museum

Johann Christian Fiedler
Portrait of painter Johann Alexander Thiele
ca. 1730
oil on canvas
Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel

Wise Old Men 

In our society, old men are not considered to be wise, but, rather, odd eccentric, opinionated, sloppy, foolish, forgetful, stubborn, weak, confused, clumsy, etc. This old man standing in front of me in line, that old man over there trying to open the door – what a bother, get out of our way, with your slow shuffling feet and your hesitation and your uncertainty, we say. Can't you get all the way across the street before the light changes? In another society, it is different. He is an old man, they say, ask him. 

from The People in My Dreams

I am trying to help an Englishman cross a small lake. He needs to reach a certain street on the other side. The Englishman is fussy and old, and clings to me in a way that bothers me. I leave him for a moment standing on the pier and walk up a gangplank into a large boat. Its gangways are full of mad and senile old people. I want to see if the old man might cross the lake in this large boat.
     But my dream ends abruptly there, and so the old man is left standing on the pier, alone, perhaps even more agitated and frightened, waiting for me to come back. 

– Lydia Davis, from Our Stranger: Stories (2023)