Showing posts with label views. Show all posts
Showing posts with label views. Show all posts

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Architectural Fragments

Anonymous Flemish Artist
Capriccio of Ruins on a Coast
ca. 1610-20
oil on copper
Galleria Sabauda, Turin

workshop of Bartholomeus Breenbergh
Italian Landscape with Ruins of the Aurelian Wall
ca. 1650-60
oil on canvas
Mauritshuis, The Hague

Paul Bril
Religious Procession among Ruins, Rome
ca. 1600-1610
oil on copper
Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Claude Lorrain
Roman Ruins on the Aventine Hill
before 1682
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Caspar David Friedrich
Ruins of the Temple of Juno at Agrigento
ca. 1828
oil on canvas
Museum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte, Dortmund

Giovanni Ghisolfi
Capriccio with Ruins
ca. 1650
drawing
Museo Poldi Pezzoli, Milan

Svein Johansen
Roman Ruins
ca. 1983
oil on canvas
Nasjonalmuseet, Oslo

Jules Laurens
Ruins of a Roman Roadhead in Bithynia
ca. 1875
oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Marseille

Jean Lemaire
Artists studying Ruins
ca. 1630
drawing
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest

Giovanni Battista Mercati
Domes of the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore rising behind Roman Ruins
1629
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

Gian Paolo Panini
Capriccio of Roman Ruins with the Pantheon
ca. 1740
oil on canvas
Hamburger Kunsthalle

Marco Ricci
Capriccio of Antique Ruins
ca. 1720-25
tempera on vellum
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart

Marco Ricci
Capriccio of Antique Ruins
ca. 1720-30
oil on canvas
Museo Civico di Modena

Hubert Robert
Artist among Ruins on the Palatine Hill, Rome
ca. 1760-65
drawing
Städel Museum, Frankfurt

Louise Joséphine Sarazin de Belmont
Ruins of Roman Theater at Taormina
1825
oil on paper
Morgan Library, New York

Jan Baptist Weenix
Study of Ruins
ca. 1646
drawing
Morgan Library, New York

He recounts that he saw other similar things, and he tells marvelous stories of having seen men and other things that no one else says he has seen or heard, and that no one else has even imagined.  The most wondrous thing of all is that in traveling north they came close to the moon, which was like a completely stripped land, and that while there they saw things that it was natural for a man to see who had invented such an exaggerated fiction.

Then the Sibyl picked up her art of divination again, with Carmanes.  After this, each person made his own prayer, and everything turned out for each of the others in accordance with his prayer, but in his case, after he woke up, he was found in Tyre in the temple of Hercules, and after he got up, he found Dercyllis and Mantinias.  They were safe and had released their parents from the long sleep or, rather, death, and were prospering in other ways as well.

These things Dinias told to Cymbas and provided cyprus tablets on which he asked Cymbas's companion Erasinides, since he was a skillful writer, to record the account.  He also showed Dercyllis to them – it was in fact she who brought the cypress tablets.  He ordered Cymbas to have the accounts written down on two sets of cypress tablets, one of which Cymbas would keep and the other of which Dercyllis was to place in a small box and set down near Dinias's grave at the time of his death.

– Antonius Diogenes, from The Wonders Beyond Thule, written in Greek, 1st-2nd century AD.  A detailed summary of the book was composed (also in Greek) in the 9th century by Photius, Patriarch of Constantinople.  The original text by Antonius Diogenes was subsequently lost; only the summary by Photius has survived.  This was translated into English by Gerald N. Sandy (1989).

Saturday, August 16, 2025

Harry Callahan

Todd Webb
Harry Callahan
1942
gelatin silver print
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC


Harry Callahan
Light Abstraction
1947
gelatin silver print
Archives of American Art,
Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Untitled
(Plaster Figure by Hugo Weber)
1948
gelatin silver print
Archives of American Art, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Lake Michigan
1949
gelatin silver print
Phillips Collection, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Card Shop, Chicago
1949
dye transfer print
Phillips Collection, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Drawing in Space with a Flashlight
ca. 1950
gelatin silver print
Archives of American Art, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Untitled
1950
gelatin silver print
Princeton University Art Museum

Harry Callahan
Chicago
ca. 1951
dye transfer print
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Harry Callahan
Ragsdale Beauty
1951
dye transfer print
Phillips Collection, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Aix-en-Provence
1957
gelatin silver print
Phillips Collection, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Providence
1961
dye transfer print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Siena
1968
gelatin silver print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Rome
1968
gelatin silver print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Cape Cod
1972
gelatin silver print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Ireland
1979
dye transfer print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Cape Cod
1980
dye transfer print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Harry Callahan
Providence
1984
dye imbibition print
Princeton University Art Museum

Harry Callahan
Providence
1984
dye imbibition print
Princeton University Art Museum

from Metamorphoses

    While thus to unknown pow'rs Cephisa pray'd,
Victorious Pan o'ertook the fainting maid.
Around her waste his eager arms he throws,
With love and joy his throbbing bosom glows;
When, wonderful to tell, her form receives
A verdant cov'ring of expanded leaves;
Then shooting downward trembling to the ground
A fibrous root her slender ancles bound;
Strange to herself as yet aghast she stands,
And to high Heav'n she rears her spotless hands;
These while she spread them still in spires extend,
Till in small leaves her taper fingers end;
Her voice she tries; but utt'rance is deny'd,
The smother'd sounds in hollow murmurs dy'd;
At length, quite chang'd, the God with wonder view'd
A beauteous plant arising where she stood;
This from his touch with human sense inspir'd,
Indignant shrinking, of itself retir'd;
Yet Pan attends it with a lover's cares,
And fost'ring aid with tender hand prepares;
The new form'd plant reluctant seems to yield,
And lives the grace and glory of the field.

– Ovid (43 BC-AD 17), translated by John Gay (before 1732)

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Frances Benjamin Johnston

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Mrs Grover Cleveland with Wives of the Cleveland Cabinet
ca. 1897
albumen silver print
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC


Frances Benjamin Johnston
Frances Folsom Cleveland
(Mrs Grover Cleveland)

1897
albumen silver print
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Frances Folsom Cleveland
(Mrs Grover Cleveland)

1897
albumen silver print
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Leonard Wood
1899
albumen silver print
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Self Portrait with Elbert Hubbard and James Pond
1900
platinum print
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Students making Barrel Furniture at Tuskegee Institute
1902
albumen silver print
Milwaukee Art Museum

Gertrude Käsebier
Frances Benjamin Johnston
1905
platinum print
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Portrait of a Woman
ca. 1917
platinum print
Princeton University Art Museum

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Brandon (Burrowsville, Virginia)
ca. 1925
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Brandon (Burrowsville, Virginia)
ca. 1925
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Brandon (Burrowsville, Virginia)
ca. 1925
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Brandon (Burrowsville, Virginia)
ca. 1925
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Reveille (Richmond, Virginia)
ca. 1925
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Reveille (Richmond, Virginia)
ca. 1925
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Shirley Plantation (Charles City, Virginia)
ca. 1925
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Sunken Garden (Montpelier Station, Virginia)
ca. 1925
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC

Frances Benjamin Johnston
Woodbury Forest (Louisa County, Virginia)
ca. 1925
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC

from The Amores

In summers heate and mid-time of the day
To rest my limbes upon a bed I lay,
One window shut, the other open stood,
Which gave such light, as twincles in a wood,
Like twilight glimps at setting of the Sunne
Or night being past, and yet not day begunne.
Such light to shamefast maidens must be showne,
Where they may sort, and seem to be unknowne.
Then came Corinna in a long loose gowne,
Her white neck hid with tresses hanging downe:
Resembling fayre Semiramis going to bed
Or Layis of a thousand lovers spread.

– Ovid (43 BC-AD 17), translated by Christopher Marlowe (before 1593)