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 Queen Alexandra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queen Alexandra. Show all posts

Friday, November 30, 2018

Triples - twelve portraits of three


Three brothers, by József Czauczik, 1828.
George, 2nd Earl Harcourt, his wife Elizabeth, and brother William, by Sir Joshua Reynolds, 1780-81. The Earl and Countess are wearing their coronation robes.
Unknown. Courtesy Ralf De Jonge.
Moritz Christian, Reichsgraf von Fries, his wife Maria Theresia Josepha, and their son Moritz, by François Gérard, 1805.
The 1st Duke of Kingston-upon-Hull, the 2nd Earl of Burlington, and the 3rd Baron Berkeley of Stratton, by Michael Dahl, circa 1690-1700.
Jaromír Funke, Josef Sudek, Adolf Schneeberger, by Adolf Schneeberger, 1925.
La famille Bergeret de Grandcourt, by Jean-Laurent Mosnier, circa 1785.
Unknown, by George Hartwell, circa 1850.
Queen Alexandra with her daughters, Princess Victoria of Wales and Princess Louise, Duchess of Fife, 1905.
Triple Portrait (Sister and Brothers), by Károly Ferenczy, 1911.
The daughters of Johann Julius von Vieth und Golßenau and his wife Johanna Juliane, née Krieg von Bellicken, by Anton Graff , circa 1775.
Unknown, tintype, circa 1890.



Friday, February 23, 2018

King, Queen, Princess - three portraits by de László, 1907


Edward VII.
Queen Alexandra.
Princess Victoria.

Victoria Alexandra Olga Mary (6 July 1868 – 3 December 1935), granddaughter and namesake of Queen Victoria, fourth child and second daughter of Edward VII and Queen Alexandra, younger, beloved sister of King George V. Born while her father was Prince of Wales, she and her siblings were very close - likewise close with their extended family in Denmark, Russia, and Greece - but known for their timidity outside of the family circle. Unlike both her elder and younger sisters, she never married or had a family of her own. Though there had been no shortage of suitors for her quite prestigious hand, every prospect for marriage had been strongly discouraged by her domineering mother; she would spend her life as Alexandra's constant companion. Known in the family as "Toria" - and later, too often, as "Poor Toria" - it was only in the last ten years of her life, after the death of her mother, and already plagued with a long list of illnesses, that Princess Victoria was able to have her own home and live as she wished. She died at Coppins, her country house in Buckinghamshire, at the age of sixty-seven.

Princess Victoria was thirty-nine in the year this portrait was painted.



Friday, July 15, 2016

Horsey ladies; or, trop d'amazones - random equestriennes


Queen Victoria on horseback, a preparatory sketch by Sir Francis Grant, 1845.
Maria Theresia as Queen of Hungary on the crowning hill of Pressburg, unknown artist, circa 1741.
Unknown, ND. (This should rather be labeled a "mule-y lady.")
Laetitia, Lady Lade, by George Stubbs, 1793.
Detail of above.
Baronne X. - Amazone en chapeau haut-de-forme devant un étang, by Alfred de Dreux, circa 1845-50.
Princess Marie Henriette of Austria, after 1865 Queen of the Belgians, circa 1860. (Two images.)
Mrs. Margaretta Park Frew Riding, by Sir Alfred James Munnings, circa 1924.
The Empress Eugénie, by Charles-Édouard Boutibonne, 1856. The now lost Château de Saint-Cloud is to be seen in the background.
The Empress Elizabeth of Russia, by Georg Christoph Grooth, circa 1743-49.
Grand Duchess later Empress Maria Feodorovna, circa 1860s.
Same as above, circa 1870s.
Detail of above.
Maria Feodorovna's sister, Alexandra, Princess of Wales, and her husband the future Edward VII, Sandringham, before 1867.
Alexandra, Princess of Wales, circa 1886. (Note that she's seated on the off side; after a severe bout with rheumatic fever in 1867,
she was left with a permanently stiff right knee and thereafter had to use a sidesaddle with the pommel on the "wrong" side.)
Lady on Horseback, Joseph Campeche, 1785. (For whatever reason, her saddle is also on the "wrong" side.)
Maria Anna of Neuburg, Queen of Spain, by Luca Giordano, 1693-94.
Wilhelmine of Prussia, Queen of the Netherlands, by Tethart Philip Christian Haag, 1789. (Unusually, she is riding astride.)
Grand Duchess Alexandra Iosifovna, circa 1860s. This looks to be a photographic image of the Grand Duchess melded with a
photograph of an actual painting - a very early version of Photoshop. The Pavlovsk Palace can be seen in the background.
Unknown, ND. This appears to be some version - a preparatory sketch, using a different model? - of the following image.
Isabel II dirigiendo una revista militar, Charles Porion, 1867.
Amazone au caraco jaune, by Alfred de Dreux, circa 1840-50s.
Grand Duchesses Tatiana and Olga Nikolaevna and their aunt, Grand Duchess Eleonore of Hessen und bei Rhein, Livadia, 1912.
Madame la duchesse de la Ferté, from a series of French court ladies, all by Joseph Parrocel, circa 1670s.
Madame la duchesse d'Aumont, from the same series.
Madame la comtesse d'Armagnacq, from the same series.
Madame la duchesse de Bouillon, from the same series.
Unknown, ND.
Marie Jeanne Baptiste de Savoie-Nemours, duchessa di Savoia, the self-styled "Madama Reale", by Charles Dauphin (?), circa 1660-70s.
Woman in French Garde du Corps uniform, unknown artist, circa 1787.
Caterina Insarda marchesa di Caluso and Eleonora Delibera San Martino marchesa di Parella, unknown artist, Savoy, circa 1658-63.
Unknown, ND.
 Isabel of France, Queen of Spain and Portugal, by Diego Velázquez, 1635-36.
Margarita of Austria, Queen of Spain and Portugal, by Diego Velázquez, 1634-35. Painted more than twenty years after her death.
Empress Elisabeth at the hunt, circa 1870-80.
Queen Marie Antoinette at the hunt, by Louis-Auguste Brun, called "Brun de Versoix", 1783.
Emma Powles on her Grey Hunter accompanied by her spaniel in a river landscape, by Jaques-Laurent Agasse, circa 1810-20.
Queen María Luisa of Spain, by Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes, 1799.
The courtesan Catherine Walters aka "Skittles" (?), circa 1870s. (Notice the painted backdrop.)
The comtesse de Ranchicourt leaving for the hunt, by Théodore Chassériau, 1854.