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 9, 2018

The exotic and the "exotic" - Merle Oberon in publicity for "Night in Paradise", 1946



Merle Oberon spent her life diverting attention away from the truth of her birth and racial background. Along with the varying fabrications related to her ancestry and childhood, the roles she would choose throughout her long career almost always served to underscore her presumed and respectable British whiteness, a whiteness rather contradicted by her dark, markedly unusual - exotic - beauty. But by the middle of the Forties, at a time when Hollywood was producing a spate of A-Thousand-and-One-Nights-style Technicolor extravaganzas, she took the role of the Persian princess Delarai in Walter Wanger's lavish production of "Night in Paradise". In spite of how well the settings and Travis Banton's elaborate and fantastical costumes complemented her particular beauty, the belated venture into full-on exoticism was not a success, and lost Universal Studios almost a million dollars at the box office; a later critic described it as a kitschy "Maria Montez vehicle without Maria Montez".

On a "leaning board" between scenes.

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The film was in Technicolor, after all.

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Friday, September 7, 2018

Las dos niñas - two paintings by José Claudio Antolínez, circa 1660



These two charming paintings - both in the collection of the Prado - are presumed to be of sisters and were, until recently, thought to be by the hand of Velázquez.


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José Claudio Antolínez (baptized 7 November 1635, Madrid – 30 May 1675, Madrid), Spanish painter of the Baroque period. He received his early training at the studio of Francisco Rizi. His mature style had a softness and sweetness reminiscent of the work of Murillo. But it seems his temperament was anything but sweet, and he was known for his arrogance and vanity, his constant sarcasm, and for playing cruel jokes on his colleagues, all of which gained him many enemies. He died at the age of only thirty-nine, apparently from a fever brought on by exhaustion and from wounds suffered in a fencing bout.



Sunday, September 2, 2018

Bringing the empire to the empress - a selection of the Indian portraits of Rudolf Swoboda, 1886-97



Rudolf Swoboda (4 October 1859, Vienna - 24 January 1914, Vienna), Austrian painter. He studied under his uncle, Leopold Carl Müller, and it was from Müller that Swoboda developed an interest in Orientalist art. In 1886, Queen Victoria commissioned Swoboda to paint several of a group of Indian artisans who had been brought to Windsor as part of the Golden Jubilee preparations. The Queen liked the resulting paintings so much that she paid for Swoboda's passage to India in order to paint more of her Indian subjects and gave him £300 to cover his traveling expenses. In return he was to provide the Queen with sketches worth £300. The artist had specific instructions: "The Sketches Her Majesty wishes to have – are of the various types of the different nationalities. They should consist of heads of the same size as those already done for The Queen, and also small full lengths, as well as sketches of landscapes, buildings, and other scenes. Her Majesty does not want any large pictures done at first, but thinks that perhaps you could bring away material for making them should they eventually be wished for." When Queen Victoria received the paintings she was very pleased and thought them, "such lovely heads… beautiful things." Swoboda would go on to work for the Queen for eleven years, producing more than forty portraits of South Asian subjects which are, today, kept at Osborne House.

Risaldar-Major Ali Muhammad Khan, 2nd Bengal Lancers.
Warseli.
Sha'ban.
Ghulam Muhammad Khan.
Sher Muhammad.
Ramlal.
Risaldar-Major Hukam Singh, Sirdar Bahadur, 16th Bengal Cavalry.
Sappi.
Jemadar Abdul Karim Khan, the Viceroy's Bodyguard.
Bulbir Gurung.
Saiyad Ahmad Hussain. (See also below, second to last painting.)
Ghulum Mustafa.
Muhammad Bey, Subadar, Bahadur, 1st Madras Lancers.
Dorsaywala Gordenji. (And, no, I don't know what the numbered slip of paper signifies....)
Sheikh Chidda.
Risaldar Nadir Khan, 9th Bengal Lancers.
Sikander Mallik.
Sunder Singh.
Saiyad Hurmat Ali.
Bhai Ram Singh.
Sarup Singh.
Saiyad Ahmad Hussain. (See full-length portrait above.)
Maulvie Raffindin Ahmad.