L a - b e a u t é - s a u v e r a - l e - m o n d e ~ D o s t o ï e v s k i

L a - b e a u t é - s a u v e r a - l e - m o n d e  ~  D o s t o ï e v s k i



Sunday, September 26, 2021

Randomly XXI

 
Portrait d'un noble tenant une branche de laurier d'or et représenté à la manière du héros mythologique Énée, by Nicolas Régnier, circa 1660.
Portrait of a lady, by Alexandre Roslin, circa 1780.

No photographs this time! I wanted the paintings - and a few drawings - to shine on their own without the distraction of the often cheeky and/or bizarre photographs I usually include. As always, though, I - randomly - pulled the images here from the vast collection of things I've tossed into the "Randomly" folder on my laptop. And also, as always, I'm surprised at how the gathered images "speak" to each other. In this instance I happened to pull several examples of the work of the same artists. Roslin, Boilly, Constantin Hansen. And then several pieces related to artists from the Golden Age of Danish Painting, both portrayed and portraying. And then there're the pairings or groupings of color and pose and detail that so frequently show up in these unplanned collections. Or just the funny or telling juxtapositions. As someone as fussy and controlled as I am in all my artistic endeavors, I really enjoy seeing how these particular posts shake out; it's rather nice to just sit back and let my subconscious do all the heavy lifting.

Růžová komnata v Jankowcích (Pink Chamber in Jankowce), by Józef Mehoffer, circa 1907-13.
Self-portrait, by Stanisław Szygell, 1922.
Still life, by Louis-Léopold Boilly, 1785.
Greek in a Red Coat, by Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, 1839.
Youth playing a flute, by Constantin Hansen, circa 1826.
Señora de Casanova, by Gabriel Morcillo Raya, 1945.
Roza Karinger, the artist's wife, by Anton Karinger, 1869.
Bouquet of flowers, by Gustav Feith, 1946.
Marquis de Saint-Paul, by Jean-Baptiste Greuze, circa 1760.
On the Map, by William Coldstream, 1937.
Mademoiselle Albert, by Jean-François Bony, 1817.
Love's Shadow, by Frederick Sandys, 1867. The painting was modeled by actress Mary Ellen Jones, Sandys' common-law wife.
 Proud Maisie, by Frederick Sandys, circa 1867.
 Thought to be a portrait of Count Fortunato Martinengo Cesaresco, by Moretto da Brescia, circa 1540-42.
Figure study, by George Gibbs, 1895.
The Image Seller, self-portrait with casts, by William Daniels, circa 1850.
Archduke Wenceslaus of Austria, by Alonso Sánchez Coello, circa 1570.
Portrait of a girl with a cup (Elise Købke), by Constantin Hansen, 1850.
Unknown lady, circle of Alexandre Roslin, circa 1780s.
Self-portrait, by Joseph Paelinck, 1812.
Nina, daughter of Frederick Lehmann, Esq., by John Everett Millais, 1869.
Christopher, the artist's son, by Carl Schmitt, circa 1940s.
Unknown man, by Owe Zerge, circa mid-twentieth century.
Madame Lenoir, by Joseph-Siffred Duplessis, 1764.
 Portrait of an officer, probably Major William Wylde, Southwell Volunteer Infantry, British School, circa 1803-8.
Bacchante holding a thyrsus, by Cesare Ciani, circa third quarter of the nineteenth century.
 Miners "The Sons of Vulcan”, by Alfred Schwarzschild, 1902.
Portrait of a boy in oriental costume, by Louis-Léopold Boilly, circa 1805.
Unknown lady, unknown artist, circa 1860s.
The Black Feather Boa, by André Derain, 1935.
Young John Bateman as Cupid, by Nicolas de Largillière, circa 1725-26.
Portrait d'homme en Apollon, by François de Troy, before 1730.
Cowboy, by Eugene Speicher, 1932.
Figure study, French School, nineteenth century.
James Butler, later 9th Earl of Ormond and 2nd Earl of Ossory, by Hans Holbein the Younger, circa 1537.
Giovan Carlo de' Medici, copy after Justus Sustermans, circa 1622-24.
Poppy - Olga Prakhova in masquerade dress, by Oleksandr Murashko, circa 1897-98.
The sculptor George Grey Barnard, by Anna Bilińska-Bohdanowicz, 1890.
Soldier Bather, by Gerrit Dou, circa 1660-65.
Géraud-Christophe-Michel Duroc, duc de Frioul (created 1808), by Louis-Léopold Boilly, circa 1806-9.
The painter Wilhelm Marstrand, by Christen Købke, 1836.
El Descanso, by Charles Porion, 1856.
Two Women, by Clément Serveau, 1933.
Mr. and Mrs. John V. Templeton, by William Bruce Ellis Ranken, 1935.
Jonathan Tichenor, by Paul Cadmus, 1942.
Arthur John Richmond, the artist's son, by George Richmond, 1845. Inscribed: Arthur John Richmond - Born May 12th 1844 - Died June 2 1845.
Dancing Children (unfinished), by Lorens Pasch the Younger, 1760.
Bertha Marie and Angela Jacobe Weis, by Constantin Hansen, 1864.
 Freundschaftsbild (friendship picture), byTheodor Hildebrandt, circa 1823.
Ode to Friendship, unknown artist, circa 1850.
Nature morte, French School, 1670.
Riposo dei Cavatori di Monte Ceceri (Rest of the Quarrymen of Monte Ceceri), by Baccio Maria Bacci, 1925.
Morning, by Dod Procter, 1926.
Géraud-Christophe-Michel Duroc, duc de Frioul (created 1808), by Antoine-Jean Gros, 1806.
Academic Nude, Académie Julian, by J. C. Leyendecker, 1896.
Portrait of a Lady in Green, attributed to William Larkin, circa 1610.
Sunflower plant, by Bartolomeo Bimbi, 1721.
Miniature of an unknown officer of the Imperial Guard, French School, circa 1814.
Christoffer Bogislaus Zibet, by Alexandre Roslin, 1784.
The two daughters of the artist's bother Otto and their West-Indian nanny, Justina, in the Frederiksberg Gardens, near Copenhagen, by Wilhelm Marstrand, 1857.




5 comments:

  1. Hello, the unknown lady in your blog above, said to be circle of Roslin is the Princess de Polignac. I own the portrait and it is identified as such in old ink script on the rear of the canvas. You can verify this by comparing the face with Vigée le Brun's more naturalistic portrait of Polignac. Your photo must come from the sale catalogue . I have now had the portrait restored and it looks much fresher. [wheatley.carmen@googlemail.com]

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    1. How wonderful. It's a gorgeous painting, and I'm so happy to know more about it - thank you!

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    2. I'm curious, though, as to which princesse de Polignac you believe this to be? Since you mention Vigée le Brun's portrait(s), I assume you mean the great favorite of Marie Antoinette, Yolande Martine - Gabrielle - de Polastron, comtesse and later duchesse de Polignac. But I must say, I see no resemblance comparing this portrait with those of the famous friend of the queen. Could it be another member of the Polignac family? It doesn't seem to resemble her sister-in-law, Diane de Polignac, or her daughter, Aglaé. The other confusing bit is that the family appears not to have held the princely title before 1820, when the pope bestowed it upon Jules de Polignac, Gabrielle's middle son and third duc de Polignac. I wonder how the inscription on the painting specifically reads...?

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  2. De superbes images du temps passe, mes preferes. -Rj/IE
    4- Eve polonaise dans le region de Galice en Autriche-Hongrie et son arbre de la connaissance.
    5- Segyll dans son jardin blue. 11- fleurs savauges. 15- belle dame et son beau cadre de fleurs.16/17-Nervous Nellies. 24- le detail du manteau en daim est incroyable. 25- elle ressemble a Lesley Lawson/ Twiggy.
    56- Bromance 57-les tapis est comme le kilm sur la tombe de Noureev. 63- Sunflowers can grow very tall. When I was little there was one twice as tall as me! 66- Le gouvernante noire et ses deux proteges danois.

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    1. Thank you so much for all your attention and comments, Rj! : )

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