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“The Machine” Brian Cage @MrGMSI_BCage ⚙️💪🏻
@AEWrestling @AEWonTNT @OfficialTAZ @WarriorWrstlng @FiteTV @LuchaElRey
Rembrandt revisited subject “The Stoning of St. Stephen” for etching in 1635.
@metmuseum
French Romantic painter Eugène Delacroix (1798–1863) was dedicated & innovative draftsman. Over 100 works on paper—finished watercolors, copies after Old Master prints, preparatory sketches for large projects—were on view in 2018 exhibition @metmuseum exploring his drawings.
Eugène Delacroix, “Lion of the Atlas” (1829) Copies @artsmia @PDXArtMuseum @StlArtMuseum
@YaleArtGallery @metmuseum Lithography, printing technique invented in 1796, allowed for Delacroix’s Romantic sensibility to be displayed. He was drawn to strength & violence of wild animals.
Peter Paul Rubens, “Hunt of the Calydonian Boar" (c.1611-12) In a scene from Metamorphosis of Ovid, warrior-prince Meleager delivers fatal thrust to wild beast with vigor that alludes to Rubens’ wielding of brush in intense Baroque style. @GettyMuseum
https://t.co/tdemnLpokw
Henri Rousseau was essentially self-taught naïve painter who began serious work when retired at age 49.
“Fight Between a Tiger & a Buffalo” (1908) @ClevelandArt; “Tiger & Hunters” (1907) & “Tiger Attack” (1904) [Private collections]; “The Snake Charmer” (1907) @MuseeOrsay
Peter Paul Rubens,
“The Entombment” (c.1614)
@NatGalleryCan
After his return to Antwerp, Rubens painted this version of the burial of body of the crucified Christ. Rubens emphasized the closeness of those sharing in this task of devotion.
Jean-Honoré Fragonard, né le 5 avril 1732, "Les hazards heureux de l'escarpolette [The Swing]" (1767) @WallaceMuseum
“Secrets of the Wallace: The Swing by Jean-Honoré Fragonard”
https://t.co/zDXg3umEvY
https://t.co/6XnpAnPiKN
Giotto, “The Ascension ”
(c.1305) from “Scenes from the Life of Christ” series of frescoes in the Scrovegni (Arena) Chapel, Padua
🔹https://t.co/5Mc6eMQaIq
🔹https://t.co/t4QDPpHgXE
🔹https://t.co/SGmXBjfjfc
🔹https://t.co/08kGd45xLc