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Henry Lee Battle | Figurative painter
Dalai Lama: "Quando perdi, non perdere la lezione"!
• Ci sono solo due giorni all’anno in cui non puoi fare niente: uno si chiama ieri, l’altro si chiama domani, perciò oggi è il giorno giusto per amare, credere, fare e, principalmente, vivere.
• La felicità è una combinazione di pace interiore, disponibilità economiche e, soprattutto, pace mondiale.
• Benché ci si possa trovare in un ambiente ostile, se l'atteggiamento mentale è fermo e stabile, l'ostilità non sarà causa di grande disturbo.
• Di fronte alla distruzione del mio popolo, mi dedico nell'esilio alla sola linea d'azione che mi è stata lasciata: ricordare al mondo per mezzo delle Nazioni Unite e di questo libro, quel che è accaduto e sta accadendo nel Tibet: e far piani per il futuro.
Andrew Benyei
Angel Ramiro Sanchez, 1974 | Figurative painter
Venezuelan painter Angel Ramiro Sanchez was born in 1974 in Maracaibo, Venezuela. At age six was accepted with full scholarship into the Instituto the Niños Cantores del Zulia, school for musically gifted children.
At age fourteen he began five years of apprenticeship with the realist painter, Abdon J. Romero, an eminent specialist in murals for churches and public buildings.
In 1993, a study grant from Mgr. Gustavo Ocando Yamarte, Founder the Niños Cantores, enabled him to travel to Florence, Italy, where he studied at the renowned Accademia di Belle Arti, graduating Magna Cum Laude in 1997.
André Derain: "The substance of painting is light"
• "Fauvism was our ordeal by fire... colours became charges of dynamite. They were expected to charge light... The great merit of this method was to free the picture from all imitative and conventional contact".
• "It was the era of photography. This may have influenced us, and played a part in our reaction against anything resembling a snapshot of life".
André Derain | Portraits
André Derain (1880-1954) was a French painter, sculptor and co-founder of Fauvism with Henri Matisse (1869-1954).
Derain and Matisse worked together through the summer of 1905 in the Mediterranean village of Collioure and later that year displayed their highly innovative paintings at the Salon d'Automne.
The vivid, unnatural colors led the critic Louis Vauxcelles to derisively dub their works as les Fauves, or "the wild beasts", marking the start of the Fauve movement.
Francisco De Zurbarán | Baroque painter
Francisco de Zurbarán (baptized November 7, 1598 - August 27, 1664) was a Spanish painter.
He is known primarily for his religious paintings depicting monks, nuns, and martyrs, and for his still-lifes. Zurbarán gained the nickname Spanish Caravaggio, owing to the forceful, realistic use of chiaroscuro in which he excelled.
Zurbarán was born in 1598 in Fuente de Cantos, Extremadura; he was baptized on November 7 of that year.
His parents were Luis de Zurbarán, a haberdasher, and his wife, Isabel Márquez.
In childhood he set about imitating objects with charcoal.
In 1614 his father sent him to Seville to apprentice for three years with Pedro Díaz de Villanueva, an artist of whom very little is known.
Auguste Charpentier (1813-1880)
Auguste Charpentier was a French painter, engraver and designer.
Charpentier studied under the direction of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres and François Gérard at the École beaux-arts de Paris.
He exhibited at the Paris Salon from 1833-1870, and was awarded a second-class medal in 1840.
Max Liebermann (1847-1935) | Vita ed Opere
Il pittore Tedesco Max Liebermann nacque in una famiglia ebraica. Studiò a Berlino e a Weimar, poi, attratto dalle innovazioni della pittura francese, dal 1873-1878 soggiornò a Parigi.
Tornato in Germania, si stabilì dapprima a Monaco poi a Berlino.
In questi anni non fu l'impressionismo a richiamare la sua attenzione, quanto il realismo di Gustave Courbet e di Jean-François Millet, di cui apprezzò particolarmente il messaggio sociale.
Giorgio Vasari | The Adoration of the Magi, 1566-1567
Title: The Adoration of the Magi
Artist: Giorgio Vasari🎨 (Italian Mannerist Writer and Painter, 1511-1574)
Date created: 1566-1567
Medium: Oil on panel
Dimensions: 65.00 x 48.00 cm (framed: 95.00 x 69.00 x 10.00 cm)
Current location: Scottish National Gallery
This panel is an autograph, small-scale replica of an altarpiece painted in 1566-7 for the newly elected Pope Pius V, which was destined for the pope’s burial chapel in the church of Santa Croce in his native town of Bosco Marengo in Piemonte.
Ercole de' Roberti | The miracles of St Vincent Ferrer, 1473
Author: Ercole de' Roberti (Italian Early Renaissance painter, 1450-1496);
Title: The miracles of St Vincent Ferrer;
Date: 1473;
Medium:Tempera on wood;
Dimensions: 30 x 215 cm;
Current location: Vatican Museums
This work by Ercole de' Roberti forms the predella of the altarpiece painted by his teacher, Francesco del Cossa🎨, for the Griffoni Chapel in S. Petronio, Bologna in 1473.
The central panel is preserved in the National Gallery of London, while the side panels are in the Pinacoteca of Brera in Milan.
Francesco del Cossa | Saint Lucy, ca. 1473/1474
Artist: Francesco del Cossa (Italian Early Renaissance painter, 1435-1477);
Title: Saint Lucy / Santa Lucia;
Date: c. 1473-1474;
Medium: Tempera on poplar panel;
Dimensions overall: 77.2 × 56 cm (30 3/8 × 22 1/16 in.);
Sold: May 1936 to the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, New York;
Gift: 1939 to The National Gallery of Art, Washington DC;
Current location: The National Gallery of Art, Washington DC.
This work originally formed part of the Griffoni Altarpiece commissioned by Floriano Griffoni for his family chapel in the church of San Petronio in Bologna.
Moïse Kisling | Modern painter
Moïse Kisling (1891-1953), born Mojżesz Kisling, was a Polish-born French painter.
He moved to Paris in 1910 at the age of 19, and became a French citizen in 1915, after serving and being wounded with the French Foreign Legion in World War I.
He emigrated to the United States in 1940, after the fall of France, and returned there in 1946.
Born in Kraków, Austria-Hungary, he studied at the School of Fine Arts in Kraków.
His teachers encouraged the young man to go to Paris, France, considered the international center for artistic creativity in the early 20th century.
Damian Tirado, 1960 | Fashion Designer /Sculptor
Damian Tirado🎨 was born in Caracas, Venezuela. An autodidact, Triado has been passionate about painting and drawing since childhood.
He continued his studies at the school of Fine Arts "Cristobal de Rojas" in Caracas, and then began his career as a freelance visual artist. He has worked in theater world as a decorative painter and a makeup artist.
Allegory of Poetry
Auger Lucas (French Rococo Era painter, 1685-1765) | An Allegory of Poetry
As a literary device, an allegory is a metaphor in which a character, place or event is used to deliver a broader message about real-world issues and occurrences.
Allegory (in the sense of the practice and use of allegorical devices and works) has occurred widely throughout history in all forms of art, largely because it can readily illustrate or convey complex ideas and concepts in ways that are comprehensible or striking to its viewers, readers, or listeners.
Writers or speakers typically use allegories as literary devices or as rhetorical devices that convey (semi-)hidden or complex meanings through symbolic figures, actions, imagery, or events, which together create the moral, spiritual, or political meaning the author wishes to convey.
Many allegories use personifications of abstract concepts.
Giuseppe Sacconi (Italian architect, 1854-1905) | Allegory of poetry | National Museum in Warsaw, 1789
Poetry has a long history dating back to prehistoric times with hunting poetry in Africa, and to panegyric and elegiac court poetry of the empires of the Nile, Niger, and Volta River valleys.
Some of the earliest written poetry in Africa is found among the Pyramid Texts written during the 25th century BCE.
The earliest Western Asian epic poetry, the Epic of Gilgamesh, was written in Sumerian.
Early poems in the Eurasian continent evolved from folk songs such as the Chinese Shijing; or from a need to retell oral epics, as with the Sanskrit Vedas, the Zoroastrian Gathas, and the Homeric epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey.
Ancient Greek attempts to define poetry, such as Aristotle's Poetics, focused on the uses of speech in rhetoric, drama, song, and comedy. Later attempts concentrated on features such as repetition, verse form, and rhyme, and emphasized the aesthetics which distinguish poetry from more objectively-informative prosaic writing.
Poetry uses forms and conventions to suggest differential interpretation to words, or to evoke emotive responses. Devices such as assonance, alliteration, onomatopoeia, and rhythm are sometimes used to achieve musical or incantatory effects.
Raphael (Italian High Renaissance painter, 1483-1520) | The Stanza della Segnatura Ceiling: Poetry
The use of ambiguity, symbolism, irony, and other stylistic elements of poetic diction often leaves a poem open to multiple interpretations.
Similarly, figures of speech such as metaphor, simile, and metonymy create a resonance between otherwise disparate images - a layering of meanings, forming connections previously not perceived. Kindred forms of resonance may exist, between individual verses, in their patterns of rhyme or rhythm.
Some poetry types are specific to particular cultures and genres and respond to characteristics of the language in which the poet writes.
Readers accustomed to identifying poetry with Dante, Goethe, Mickiewicz, or Rumi may think of it as written in lines based on rhyme and regular meter.
There are, however, traditions, such as Biblical poetry, that use other means to create rhythm and euphony.
Much modern poetry reflects a critique of poetic tradition, testing the principle of euphony itself or altogether forgoing rhyme or set rhythm.
In today's increasingly globalized world, poets often adapt forms, styles, and techniques from diverse cultures and languages.
Woman with wax tablets and stylus, so called Sappho | Fresco | Pompeii, Naples | National Archaeological Museum
Eustache Le Sueur (French Baroque Era painter, 1616-1655) | An Allegory of Poetry
Louis Jean Francois Lagrenee (French Neoclassical painter, 1725-1805) | Poetry
Raphael (Italian High Renaissance painter, 1483-1520) | An allegorical figure of Poetry, 1509-10 | The Royal Collection Trust
Jean-Baptiste Tuby (French Baroque Era Sculptor, 1635-1700) | | Le Poème Lyrique, 1675-1680
Jean-Baptiste Tuby (French Baroque Era Sculptor, 1635-1700) | Le Poème Lyrique, 1675-1680 (detail)
Lambert-Sigisbert Adam (French Baroque Era Sculptor, 1700-1759) | Poetry, 1752 | Louvre
La poesia (dal greco ποίησις, poiesis, con il significato di "creazione") è una forma d'arte che crea, con la scelta e l'accostamento di parole secondo particolari leggi metriche (che non possono essere ignorate dall'autore), un componimento fatto di frasi dette versi, in cui il significato semantico si lega al suono musicale dei fonemi.
La poesia ha quindi in sé alcune qualità della musica e riesce a trasmettere concetti e stati d'animo in maniera più evocativa e potente di quanto faccia la prosa, in cui le parole non sottostanno alla metrica.
La lingua nella poesia ha una doppia funzione:
- Vettore di significati - con contenuti sia informativi sia emotivi;
- Vettore di suoni.
Per svolgere efficacemente questa duplice funzione, la sintassi e l'ortografia possono subire variazioni rispetto alle norme dell'Italiano neostandard (le cosiddette licenze poetiche) se ciò è funzionale (non solo estetico) ai fini della comunicazione del messaggio.
Raphael (Italian High Renaissance painter, 1483-1520) | Poetry ceiling tondo, 1509-11
A questi due aspetti della poesia se ne aggiunge un terzo quando una poesia, anziché essere letta direttamente, è ascoltata: con il proprio linguaggio del corpo e il modo di leggere, il lettore interpreta il testo, aggiungendo la dimensione teatrale della dizione e della recitazione.
Nel mondo antico - ed anche in molte culture odierne - poesia e musica sono spesso unite, come accade anche nei Kunstlieder tedeschi, poesie d'autore sotto forma di canzoni accompagnate da musiche appositamente composte.
Queste strette commistioni fra significato e suono rendono estremamente difficile tradurre una poesia in lingue diverse dall'originale, perché il suono ed il ritmo originali vanno irrimediabilmente persi e devono essere sostituiti da un adattamento nella nuova lingua, che in genere è solo un'approssimazione dell'originale.
Philippe Laurent Roland (French Sculptor, 1746-1816) | Homer, 1812 | Louvre
Salvator Rosa (Italian Baroque Era painter, 1615-1673) | Lucrezia as Poetry
Florentine, 16th Century| Allegorical portrait of Dante | Washington National Gallery of Art
Tondo Art
Woman with wax tablets and stylus, so called Sappho | Fresco | Pompeii, Naples, National Archaeological Museum
A tondo (plural "tondi" or "tondos") is a Renaissance🎨 term for a circular work of art, either a painting or a sculpture.
The word derives from the Italian rotondo, "round".
The term is usually not used in English for small round paintings, but only those over about 60 cm (two feet) in diameter, thus excluding many round portrait miniatures - for sculpture the threshold is rather lower.
Giovanni Bellini | Madonna and Child, 1470
Artist: Giovanni Bellini (Italian High Renaissance painter, ca.1430-1516)
Date:ca. 1470
Medium: Tempera, oil, and gold on wood
Dimensions: 21 1/4 x 15 3/4 in. (54 x 40 cm) (31 x 26 inches framed)
Classification: Paintings
Current location: The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
This early work by the Venetian painter, Giovanni Bellini, reveals the profound influence of his brother-in-law, the Paduan master Andrea Mantegna, both in the figure types and the inclusion of the garland.
Antonio Sicurezza (1905-1979) | Figurative painter
Antonio Sicurezza was an Italian painter🎨 representative for the contemporary figurative art of the Lazio region, Italy.
He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples, winning a scholarship as a worthy competitor among the four faculties. He obtained the diploma in painting under the guidance of the masters Carlo Siviero, Vincenzo Volpe, Vincenzo Migliaro and Paolo Vetri.
The first contact with the territory of Formia was in 1933–1934, when he was called to paint the chapel of St. Anthony in the church of Maranola. Here he met Virginia Mastrogiovanni whom he married in 1934.
Leonardo da Vinci | Virgin and laughing Child, 1465
Gerard van Honthorst | Adoration of the Christ Child, 1619-1620
The Dutch painter Gerard van Honthorst (1590-1656) was called Gherardo delle Notti (literally Gerard of the nights) because of his peculiar compositions in nocturnal lighting influenced by Caravaggio that he met in Rome in the first decades of the 17th century.
During his stay in Italy, Honthorst met Grand Duke Cosimo II de’ Medici, who bought some of his works in 1620, among which probably this Adoration of the Child.
The divine light spread from the newborn’s body softens each feature, in particular the facial ones of the Virgin.
Gerard van Honthorst | Adoration of the Christ Child, 1619-1620 | Uffizi Gallery, Florence
Michelangelo Buonarroti | Tondo Doni, 1505-1506
Michelangelo painted this Holy Family for a Florentine merchant, Agnolo Doni, whose prestigious marriage to Maddalena Strozzi in 1504 took place in a period that was crucial for early 16th-century Florentine art.
The presence in the city of Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael together, boosted the already lively Florentine art scene, which in the first decade of the century experienced a period of great cultural fervour.
Barbara Longhi (Italian Mannerist painter, 1552-1638)
Barbara Longhi was an Italian painter🎨.
She was much admired in her lifetime as a portraitist, although most of her portraits are now lost or unattributed.
Her work, such as her many Madonna and Child paintings, earned her a fine reputation as an artist.
Longhi is one of the few female artists mentioned in the second edition (1568) of Italian painter and art historian Giorgio Vasari's epic work Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects. Vasari writes that Longhi "draws very well, and she has begun to colour some things with good grace and manner".
But as Germaine Greer discussed in her The Obstacle Race: The Fortunes of Women Painters and Their Work, such "haphazard" selections of women artists including Longhi rarely offered "serious criticism of their achievement".
Greer then offered her own assessment: "Barbara's output was considerable, all small pictures, remarkable for their purity of line and soft brilliance of colour" and "Barbara Longhi brings to her extremely conservative picture-making a simplicity and intensity of feeling quite beyond her mannerist father and her dilettante brother".
The Museo d'Arte della Città di Ravenna owns seven works by Barbara Longhi, as well as eleven of her father Luca's and three by her brother Francesco.
Her work is represented in the collections of the Musée du Louvre (Paris), Pinacoteca di Brera (Milan), Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna, Museo Biblioteca del Grappa, Walters Art Museum (Baltimore, Maryland) and Indianapolis Museum of Art, and also in the Santa Maria Maggiore (Ravenna). | © Wikipedia
Barbara Longhi (Ravenna, 21 settembre 1552 - Ravenna, 23 dicembre 1638) è stata una pittrice Italiana.
Fu stimata ritrattista, ma solo poche sue opere ci sono pervenute, in parte riconducibili all'attività svolta nella bottega del padre, dove le era affidato il compito di produrre piccole tele su tema religioso, destinate alla devozione privata.
Nacque a Ravenna, dove trascorse l'intera sua esistenza.
Era figlia di Luca (1507-1580), noto pittore manierista🎨 e di Bernardina Baronzelli.
Come suo fratello maggiore Francesco (1544-1618), ricevette le prime nozioni pittoriche nella bottega paterna.
Collaborò anche alla realizzazione di pale d'altare, entrando così in contatto con il processo di commercializzazione, che allora si svolgeva attraverso mecenati.
Completò la sua formazione nel 1570, ma i suoi legami con la famiglia e con la bottega del padre rimasero forti.
Si conosce poco della sua vita e s'ignora se si sia mai sposata.
Della sua produzione come ritrattista ci è pervenuto solo il ritratto di un Monaco Camaldolese - uno dei pochi che include una data, anche se l'ultima cifra non è del tutto leggibile (1570 o 1573?) - e unico raffigurante un soggetto maschile adulto.
Lo ha ritratto nel suo studio, vestito del saio bianco camaldolese, tra i suoi libri aperti e scritti a mano. Questo dipinto si conserva oggi al Museo d'arte della città di Ravenna.
Due sue tele di piccolo formato, a soggetto religioso, sono state da lei siglate e una è datata. Una pala d'altare a Russi è firmata per esteso e datata 1618.
La Santa Caterina d'Alessandria, oggi al Museo d'arte della città di Ravenna, proviene dal monastero di Classe in Ravenna.
Nelle Nozze di Cana, dipinto ad olio su un muro del refettorio dello stesso convento di Classe, opera di Luca Longhi del 1579-1580 poi ultimata da suo figlio Francesco, secondo la tradizione riconosciuta la donna in primo piano, rivolta verso lo spettatore, sarebbe un ritratto di Barbara Longhi. | © Wikipedia
Luca Longhi (1507-1580) | Le Nozze di Cana | particolare | Ritratto della figlia Barbara, 1580
Allegory of Music
Francesco Trevisani (Italian Rococo Era painter, 1656-1746) | An allegory of music
The word Music derives from Greek μουσική (mousike; "art of the Muses").
In Greek mythology, the nine Muses were the goddesses who inspired literature, science, and the arts and who were the source of the knowledge embodied in the poetry, song-lyrics, and myths in the Greek culture.
Jean Delville (Belgian Symbolist painter, 1867-1953) | Allegory of Music
According to the Online Etymological Dictionary, the term "music" is derived from "mid-13c., musike, from Old French musique (12c.) and directly from Latin musica "the art of music", also including poetry (also [the] source of Spanish música, Italian musica, Old High German mosica, German Musik, Dutch muziek, Danish musik)".
This is derived from the "...Greek mousike (techne) "(art) of the Muses", from fem. of mousikos "pertaining to the Muses," from Mousa "Muse" Modern spelling [dates] from [the] 1630s.
In classical Greece, [the term "music" refers to] any art in which the Muses presided, but especially music and lyric poetry.
Francois Le Moyne (French Rococo Era painter, 1688-1737) | Allegory of Music
Albert Thomas (French 19th Century artist) | Allegory of Music
Laurent de La Hyre (French Baroque Era painter, 1606-1656) | Allegory of Music, 1649 | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Giuseppe Nogari (Italian Rococo Era painter, 1699-1766) | Allegory of Music
Francesco de Mura (Italian Baroque Era painter, 1696-1782) | Allegory of Music
Pietro Paolini (Italian Baroque Era painter, 1603-1681) | Allegory of Music
Simone Cantarini (Italian Baroque Era painter, 1612-1648) | Allegory of Music
Tintoretto (Italian Mannerist painter, 1518-1594) | Allegory of Music
Antoine Coypel (French Baroque Era painter, 1661-1722) | Allegory of Music
Caravaggio (Italian Baroque Era painter, 1571-1610) | Allegory of Music
Franco-Flemish School mid-16th century | Allegory of Music
Florentine School 18th Century | Allegory of Music
La Musica (dal sostantivo greco μουσική) è il prodotto dell'arte di ideare e produrre, mediante l'uso di strumenti appositi o della voce, una successione organizzata di suoni che risultino piacevoli all'orecchio.
Più tecnicamente la musica consiste nell'organizzazione dei suoni, dei rumori e dei silenzi nel corso del tempo e nello spazio.
Si tratta di arte in quanto complesso di norme pratiche adatte a conseguire determinati effetti sonori, che riescono ad esprimere l'interiorità dell'individuo che produce la musica e dell'ascoltatore; si tratta di scienza in quanto studio della nascita, dell'evoluzione e dell'analisi dell'intima struttura della musica.
Il generare suoni avviene mediante il canto o mediante l'utilizzo di strumenti musicali che, attraverso i principi dell'acustica, provocano la percezione uditiva e l'esperienza emotiva voluta dall'artista.
Filippino Lippi (Italian Renaissance painter, 1457-1504) | Allegory of Music, 1500 (detail)
Filippino Lippi (Italian Renaissance painter, 1457-1504) | Allegory of Music, 1500
Il significato del termine musica non è comunque univoco ed è molto dibattuto tra gli studiosi per via delle diverse accezioni utilizzate nei vari periodi storici.
Etimologicamente il termine musica deriva dall'aggettivo greco μουσικός/musikòs, relativo alle Muse, figure della mitologia greca e romana, riferito in modo sottinteso a tecnica, anch'esso derivante dal greco τέχνη/techne.
In origine il termine non indicava una particolare arte, bensì tutte le arti delle Muse, e si riferiva a qualcosa di "perfetto".
Le macro-categorie della colta, leggera ed etnica si articolano in diversi generi e forme musicali che utilizzano sistemi quali armonia, melodia, tonalità e polifonia.
Nell'antica Grecia nacque una materia, una scienza, che estraeva anch'essa queste ultime due, la matematica, che è parte fondamentale della musica, come Pitagora capì, per la relazione tra rapporti frazionari e suono.
Platone affermò che, come la ginnastica serviva ad irrobustire il corpo, la musica doveva arricchire l'animo.
Attribuiva alla musica una funzione educativa, come la matematica: secondo lui bisognava saper scegliere fra tanto e poco, fra più o meno, fra bene o male, per arrivare all'obiettivo finale.
James Longacre Wood (American painter, 1863-1938) | Allegory of Music
François Boucher (French Rococo Era painter, 1703-1770) | Allegory of Music
François Boucher (French Rococo Era painter, 1703-1770) | Allegory of Music
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