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



Showing posts with label Federico de Madrazo y Kuntz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Federico de Madrazo y Kuntz. Show all posts

Friday, February 8, 2019

Actress as actress - Teodora Lamadrid in the role of Adriana Lecouvreur, a portrait by Madrazo, 1852



Teodora Lamadrid (Theodora Hervella Cano; 26 November 1820, Zaragoza - 22 April 1896, Madrid), leading actress of the romantic Spanish theater during the nineteenth century, along with her older sister Bárbara Lamadrid and her rival Matilde Díez, the most celebrated actress of the period. Throughout her career she interpreted some of the most important pieces of classical theater, both in prose and in verse, and even performed in opera and zarzuela.


Performing on stage from the age of eight, in 1832, when she was still only twelve, she moved to Madrid where, along with her sister, she was hired by the famous director and impresario Juan Grimaldi to work at the Teatro del Príncipe and the Teatro de la Cruz. Her career progressed until, in 1851, she assayed her most famous role, that of Adriana Lecouvreur, the tragic story of the early eighteenth century French actress Adrienne Lecouvreur. (Lecouvreur's story is best known from its retelling in Francesco Cilea's opera, which premiered in 1902 and is still frequently performed today.) 


Lamadrid's repertoire was large and, like many Spanish-speaking performers, she toured many of the countries of Latin America. She married composer Basilio Basili and performed in both an opera and a zarzuela that he wrote. She was also an important teacher. She died at the age of seventy-five and is buried in the the cementerio de San Isidro in Madrid.


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A copy of the Madrazo portrait by Manuel Cabral y Aguado-Bejarano, 1853.
An engraving of the portrait.
Another portrait of Lamadrid, by Prudent-Louis Leray, 1856.



Sunday, November 18, 2018

Eight ladies in white


Madame Philippe Lenoir, by Émile-Jean-Horace Vernet, 1814.
Eugenia de Montijo, condesa de Teba (the future Empress Eugénie of the French), by  Federico de Madrazo y Kuntz, 1849.
Anne Pauline Dufour-Feronce with her son, Jean-Marc-Albert, by Johann Friedrich August Tischbein, 1802.
Lady in a Salon, French school, circa 1820s.
I love the bit of wintry landscape just glimpsed through the window.
Oddly, during this period artists often painted women's feet as absurdly small. Even the most accomplished painters frequently went along with this strange trend.
Fürstin Maria Teresa von Hohenzollern, née Principessa di Borbone delle Due Sicilie, by Philip de László, 1900.
The Duquesa de Osuna, a young woman and child, by Agustín Esteve, circa 1796-97. Given the date, the child could be the duchess' youngest daughter, Manuela.
 Both ladies are wearing the Orden de las Damas Nobles de María-Luisa.
Madame Tallien (Thérésa Cabarrus; by the date of this portrait, princesse de Chimay), by Jean-Bernard Duvivier, 1806.



Sunday, April 8, 2018

Les hommes, les hommes, toujours les hommes....


"Jean Kolitsch, 1909." Courtesy Ralf De Jonge.
Count Gustaf Mauritz Armfelt in Florence, by Louis Gauffier, 1793.
"Young Peasant Laughing", by Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, 1840.
The artist Paul Victor Grandhomme, attributed to Raphaël Collin, circa 1870s.
Unknown, by Emile Legagneur, active 1892-1933. Courtesy Ralf De Jonge.
Prince Viktor Nikolaevich Gagarin, by Arturo Noci, 1907.
Portrait of a man (possible self-portrait), by Gilbert Stuart, circa 1782-9.
Portrait of a Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire (possibly Hekimoğlu Ali Pasha), by Jean-Étienne Liotard, circa 1738-43.
Jan Bernd Schaep, by Jurgen Ovens, circa 1650s.
Bela Lugosi, by Geza Kende, circa 1932.
Self-portrait, by Cedric Morris (later Sir Cedric Lockwood Morris, 9th Baronet), circa 1930.
Unknown, circa 1900-1920.
  "The Violin Student, Paris", by Stephen Seymour Thomas, 1891.
Godart Alexander Gerard Philip, Baron van der Capellen, by Cornelis Kruseman, circa 1816-20.
Frederick Douglass, 1848.
Portrait of a young man in a black suit, by Eduard Ritter, 1835.
Ernest Lee Major, by Samuel Burtis Baker, 1910.
Portrait of a young man, by François-Hubert Drouais, 1772.
Unknown, circa 1950s-early 60s.
Duke Ernst II of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha on his deathbed, unknown painter, circa 1893.
 Thomas Pope, later 3rd Earl of Downe, by William Larkin, circa 1615.
"Enrico" (?), by Arturo Noci, circa 1910-25. (I've been unable to find out more information on this portrait.)
"El marino Sánchez", Federico de Madrazo y Kuntz, 1843.
"Young Bacchus", by Sergei Solomko, 1884.
Adolfo Best Maugard, by Diego Rivera, 1913.
Lew Alcindor (later Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), by Richard Avedon, 1963.
Carlo IV Borromeo Arese, unknown Lombard painter, circa 1675.
Young man in a blue jacket, by Louis-Lié Périn-Salbreux, circa 1790. (Miniature.)
Self-portrait in a red coat, by George Romney, circa 1760.
German soldier, circa 1940-45. Courtesy Ralf De Jonge.
Portrait of a young man (possibly Alessandro de'Medici), by Jacopo Pontormo, circa 1526.
Carl, 3rd Prince of Leiningen, by Louis Ami Arlaud-Jurine, 1821. (Miniature.)
Portrait of a young man, by Jacob Ferdinand Voet, circa 1670s.
Maurice Chevalier, by Edward Steichen, 1929.