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    Still Life with Three Puppies / 1888
Paul Gauguin

    Still Life with Three Puppies / 1888

    Paul Gauguin

    — 1 day ago
    #Paul Gauguin  #art  #painting 
    Vilhelm Rosenstand 
1886
P.S. Krøyer

    Vilhelm Rosenstand 

    1886

    P.S. Krøyer

    (Source: googleartproject.com)

    — 1 day ago
    #Vilhelm Rosenstand  #P.S. Krøyer  #portrait  #painting  #art  #artist 
    Frans Hals
Malle Babbe / around 1633

    Frans Hals

    Malle Babbe / around 1633

    (Source: googleartproject.com)

    — 6 days ago with 1 note
    #Frans Hals  #painting  #artist  #artwork  #art 
    Charles Mellin
Portrait of a Gentleman // 1630

    Charles Mellin

    Portrait of a Gentleman // 1630

    (Source: googleartproject.com)

    — 6 days ago with 1 note
    #Painting  #Charles Mellin  #artist  #artwork 
    Odilon Redon
Mystery / circa 1910
Odilon Redon’s evocative, visionary, and sometimes nightmarish images offer little indication that he was a contemporary of the impressionist painters. Finding the visual objectivity of the impressionists unchallenging and limiting, he preferred to emphasize the unseen, subconscious elements of existence. Accordingly, the symbolist and Nabis painters, who found Redon’s mystical interpretations of the essence of life appealing, eventually adopted him as their mentor during the 1890s. Pierre Bonnard wrote of his admiration for Redon’s “blending of two almost opposite features: a very pure plastic substance and a very mysterious expression.” Mystery was probably painted around 1910, during the last phase of Redon’s career, when he had abandoned the velvety blacks of his earlier creations and was working predominantly in color in order to produce more tranquil images. The intangible meaning of the painting lends itself to various interpretations, making the title especially appropriate. As Redon wrote in 1902: “The meaning of mystery is to be always in ambiguity… (to have) forms which will be, or which become according to the state of mind of the beholder.”

    Odilon Redon

    Mystery / circa 1910

    Odilon Redon’s evocative, visionary, and sometimes nightmarish images offer little indication that he was a contemporary of the impressionist painters. Finding the visual objectivity of the impressionists unchallenging and limiting, he preferred to emphasize the unseen, subconscious elements of existence. Accordingly, the symbolist and Nabis painters, who found Redon’s mystical interpretations of the essence of life appealing, eventually adopted him as their mentor during the 1890s. Pierre Bonnard wrote of his admiration for Redon’s “blending of two almost opposite features: a very pure plastic substance and a very mysterious expression.” Mystery was probably painted around 1910, during the last phase of Redon’s career, when he had abandoned the velvety blacks of his earlier creations and was working predominantly in color in order to produce more tranquil images. The intangible meaning of the painting lends itself to various interpretations, making the title especially appropriate. As Redon wrote in 1902: “The meaning of mystery is to be always in ambiguity… (to have) forms which will be, or which become according to the state of mind of the beholder.”

    — 1 week ago with 1 note
    #art  #Odilon redon  #artist  #painting 
    Odilon Redon
The Buddha / 1904

    Odilon Redon

    The Buddha / 1904

    — 1 week ago with 5 notes
    #Odilon Redon  #art  #artist  #painting 
    Odilon Redon
Figure under a blossoming tree / 1904 - 1905

    Odilon Redon

    Figure under a blossoming tree / 1904 - 1905

    — 1 week ago with 2 notes
    #Odilon Redon  #artist  #painting  #art 
    Odilon Redon
Trees on a yellow Background / 1901

    Odilon Redon

    Trees on a yellow Background / 1901

    — 1 week ago with 2 notes
    #Odilon Redon  #art  #painting  #artist 
    Vincent van Gogh
A crab on its back  / 1888 

    Vincent van Gogh

    A crab on its back  / 1888 

    — 1 week ago with 2 notes
    #Vincent van Gogh  #art  #artist  #painting 
    Odilon Redon
Closed eyes / 1889 / Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam

    Odilon Redon

    Closed eyes / 1889 / Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam

    — 1 week ago with 5 notes
    #Odilon Redon  #artist  #art  #painting 
    John Brown 1872
Ole Peter Hansen Balling


There were those who noted a touch of insanity in abolitionist John Brown; he believed he had been called by God to embark on a personal crusade to end slavery. Brown and five of his sons were actively engaged in the bloody guerrilla war being waged in Kansas in 1855-56, between proslavery and antislavery factions. But in 1857, Brown began making plans for the 1859 raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, an event that would make him both infamous and immortal. The scheme to commandeer firearms with which to arm a slave rebellion failed, and Brown was captured, tried, and hanged. His insurrection found favor among many northern abolitionists. In response, southerners viewed Brown as a sign that they must either break their allegiance to the Union or be destroyed by an increasingly fanatical North.

    John Brown 
    1872

    Ole Peter Hansen Balling

    There were those who noted a touch of insanity in abolitionist John Brown; he believed he had been called by God to embark on a personal crusade to end slavery. Brown and five of his sons were actively engaged in the bloody guerrilla war being waged in Kansas in 1855-56, between proslavery and antislavery factions. But in 1857, Brown began making plans for the 1859 raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, an event that would make him both infamous and immortal. The scheme to commandeer firearms with which to arm a slave rebellion failed, and Brown was captured, tried, and hanged. His insurrection found favor among many northern abolitionists. In response, southerners viewed Brown as a sign that they must either break their allegiance to the Union or be destroyed by an increasingly fanatical North.

    — 1 week ago with 3 notes
    #Ole Peter Hansen Balling  #John Brown  #portrait  #painting 
    Carl Sandburg 1961
William Arthur Smith


Perhaps no figure in American letters has ever identified himself more readily and affectionately with grassroots America than Carl Sandburg. From his poem “Chicago,” hailing that city as “Hog Butcher to the World,” to his efforts to preserve American folk music and his six-volume biography of Abraham Lincoln, Sandburg seemed forever dedicated to enriching popular appreciation for his country’s democratic experience. In the 1930s, as the Depression steadily eroded the optimism that had always been an underpinning of that experience, he concluded that what the public most needed from him now was a reminder of the country’s resilient virtues. By 1936, he had completed The People, Yes, a long discourse in free verse admitting to America’s failings but, more important, celebrating its overriding strengths. “A foreigner will find more of America” in it, one critic wrote, “than in any other book.”

    Carl Sandburg 
    1961

    William Arthur Smith

    Perhaps no figure in American letters has ever identified himself more readily and affectionately with grassroots America than Carl Sandburg. From his poem “Chicago,” hailing that city as “Hog Butcher to the World,” to his efforts to preserve American folk music and his six-volume biography of Abraham Lincoln, Sandburg seemed forever dedicated to enriching popular appreciation for his country’s democratic experience. In the 1930s, as the Depression steadily eroded the optimism that had always been an underpinning of that experience, he concluded that what the public most needed from him now was a reminder of the country’s resilient virtues. By 1936, he had completed The People, Yes, a long discourse in free verse admitting to America’s failings but, more important, celebrating its overriding strengths. “A foreigner will find more of America” in it, one critic wrote, “than in any other book.”

    — 1 week ago with 1 note
    #William Arthur Smith  #Carl Sandburg  #portrait  #painting  #art