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Latona Giving Birth to Apollo and Diana on the Island of Delos, by Diana Scultori, an Italian engraver from Mantua, after Giulio Romano. Diana is one of the earliest known women printmakers, making mostly reproductive engravings of well-known paintings or drawings.
Madonna and Child, 1580-1585, by Barbara Longhi, an Italian painter. She was much admired in her lifetime as a portraitist, although most of her works are now lost or unattributed. Her work, such as her many Madonna and Child paintings, earned her a fine reputation as an artist.
Amen in conversation, depicts the artist Julie Wolfthorn, on the far right her sister Li (Luise Wolf), in the middle "Frau Professor" Lilli Behrens, the girl on the bottom left is Petra Behrens, 1916, by Adele von Finck
English actress and aristocrat, Lady Diana Manners, 1900, by James Jebusa Shannon. As a young woman, she moved in a celebrated group of intellectuals known as the Coterie, most of whom were killed in WWI.
Iris, 1937, by Henrietta Mary Shore, a Canadian-born artist who was a pioneer of modernism. She lived a large part of her life in the United States, most notably California.
A young girl dressed up for Christmas, wearing a fur coat and muff and carrying a holly branch, 1901, by Kate Greenaway, an English Victorian artist and writer, known for her children's book illustrations.
Lady Rachel Russell, Duchess of Bridgwater, between circa 1720 and circa 1725, by Charles Jervas
Maria Wirtemberska, Duchess Louis of Württenberg, a Polish noble, writer, musician and philanthropist, by Ludwik Marteau
Princess Zofia Czartoryska, as Psyche, 1797, by Wincenty de Lesseur. She ran a salon in Warsaw, Germany for Enlightenment era reform leaders of Poland-Lithuania.
Mary, Princess Royal and Countess of Harewood, by James Jebusa Shannon, from the book 'Princess Mary's Gift book' published in 1914.