Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Genoux - III

Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio after Perino del Vaga
Hercules and Dejanira
ca. 1520-40
engraving
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Sebald Beham
The Shepherd
1525
engraving
Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum, Braunschweig

Louis-Léopold Boilly
Interior with Mother and Child
ca. 1815
oil on canvas
Neue Pinakothek, Munich

Arvid Fougstedt
Mother and Child
1946
oil on canvas
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Alvar Cawén
Woman holding Boy
ca. 1928
oil on canvas
Nasjonalmuseet, Oslo

Alice Neel
Don Perlis and Jonathan
1982
oil on canvas
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Jørgen Roed
Académie with Two Figures
1833
drawing
Hirschsprung Collection, Copenhagen

Hyacinthe Rigaud
Portrait of an Advocate
1696
oil on canvas
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Jean-Baptiste Joseph Wicar
Portrait of Cristoforo Saliceti
(Napoleonic police-enforcer in Naples)
ca. 1800
oil on canvas
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Harald Sallberg
Portrait of painter Fernand Léger
ca. 1928
etching
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Johann Ladenspelder
Evangelist St Matthew
1549
engraving
Graphische Sammlung, ETH Zürich

Alessandro Pampurino
Drapery Study for St John the Evangelist
ca. 1510-15
drawing
Kupferstichkabinett, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Tilman Riemenschneider
Evangelist St Luke
ca. 1490-92
lindenwood
(altarpiece fragment)
Bode Museum, Berlin

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Young Woman in the Studio
(Hélène Vary)

1889
oil on canvas
Kunsthalle Bremen

Emil Orlik
Woman with Newspaper
1900
color woodblock print
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Arvid Fougstedt
Seated Woman (Ellen Palm)
1940
drawing
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

And the Thebans seeing this and finding they were deceived, cast themselves into a round figure and beat them back in that part where the assault was made; and twice or thrice they repulsed them.  But at last, when both the Plataeans themselves charged them with a great clamour, and their wives also and families shouted and screeched from the houses and withal threw stones and tiles amongst them, the night having been also very wet, they were afraid and turned their backs and fled here and there about the city, ignorant for the most part, in the dark and dirt, of the ways out by which they should have been saved (for this accident fell out upon the change of the moon) and pursued by such as were well acquainted with the ways to keep them in, insomuch as the greatest part of them perished.  The gate by which they entered, and which only was left open, a certain Plataean shut up again with the head of a javelin, which he thrust into the staple instead of a bolt, so that this way also their passage was stopped.  As they were chased up and down the city, some climbed the walls and cast themselves out and for the most part died.  Some came to a deserted gate of the city and with a hatchet given them by a woman cut the staple and got forth unseen; but these were not many, for the thing was soon discovered.  Others again were slain dispersed in several parts of the city.  But the greatest part, and those especially who had cast themselves into a ring, happened into a great edifice adjoining to the wall, the doors whereof, being open, they thought had been the gates of the city and that there had been a direct way through to the other side.  The Plataeans, seeing them now pent up, consulted whether they should burn them as they were by firing the house or else resolve of some other punishment.  At length both these and all the rest of the Thebans that were straggling in the city agreed to yield themselves and their arms to the Plataeans of discretion.  And this success had they that entered into Plataea.

– from The Peloponnesian War as written by Thucydides (5th century BC) and translated by Thomas Hobbes (1628) and edited by David Grene (1959)