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The Gloomy Day is an oil on wood painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder completed in 1565. The painting is one in a series of six works, that depict different times of the year. The scene is set around February and March, portrayed by the bleak atmosphere and leafless trees. (KHM).
@lip_smak The Ghost of a Flea (Blake)
Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 (Duchamp)
The Fall of the Rebel Angels (Bruegel)
A few fellas from Bruegel's The Fall of the Rebel Angels.
@govi47 @CaterinaCategio @migliaccio31 @martinis2018 @DavLucia @albertopetro2 @LunaLeso @MaurilioVitto @BaroneZaza70 @BrindusaB1 @mariaireneali @ValerioLivia @scastaldi9 @AlessandraCicc6 @VAlivernini @redne2013 @smarucci461 @_Vivi2013 @erminiopasquat1 @Biagio960 @VicoLudovico @marialves53 @Rebeka80721106 @ritamay1 @licprospero @cmont4560 @dianadep1 @agustin_gut @culture_more @paoloigna1 @EnricoCastrovil @djolavarrieta Pieter Bruegel the Elder Children's Games dett.
Die Krüppel (1568)
Pieter Bruegel the Elder's works -> https://t.co/DUTP7EdVW9…
#16February #16Febbraio 2021
"Strijd tussen Carnaval en Vasten" (1559)
Pieter Bruegel the Elder (c.-1525-1569) 🎨🇳🇱
oil, panel, 118x165 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna 🇦🇹
#PieterBruegeltheElder #carnival #folklorethursday #folklore #painting #art #carnevale #pittura #arte
JUST PUBLISHED: Our latest Journal article examines Bruegel’s The Census at Bethlehem, a masterpiece that was probably the first-ever painting of a White Christmas, and one of the first times that a painter ever depicted this pivotal Biblical episode https://t.co/GEYt3KSjA6
it's Bruegel time out there - 15th century light, Ridley Scott battle snow, arcing squalls - a tangle of gulls and jackdaws, heading east
The setting for Bruegel’s ‘The Blind Leading the Blind’ (1568) was based on the villages near Brussels where he lived, and include the Church of St Anna-Pede at Dilbeek (detail), which still stands today (far R) https://t.co/qDJqPIFYw6
Back in 2017 i've made an oc based on a little character from Pieter Bruegel's painting "The Triumph of Death"...I should bring him back....
Markus Andersson
patekprive
Attributed to Pieter (The Elder) Bruegel, (17th Century Flemish), "Abraham and the Three Strangers",
Some great examples of how 16th century master painter Pieter Bruegel enjoyed hiding his main characters in plain sight ~ Virgin & child in The Census at Bethlehem / the ignominious fall of Icarus / the fallen Christ in The Way to Calvary (circled + detail)
2/2 Preaching of John the Baptist. Having another little Pieter Bruegel moment with the gypsies and the mercenaries and the swell landscape, but it's by Hans Bol of Mechelen. Today is his day.
Fall of Icarus. Here, everybody stops to watch -“these must be Gods!”- as Ovid says. Not like Bruegel’s revision! By Hans Bol, born OTD in 1534.
Two more wonderful details from detail from Bruegel's 'Hunters in the Snow.'
It's like an Old Master advent calendar.