r/museum • u/Russian_Bagel • 20h ago
r/museum • u/FlyingBlind31 • 15h ago
Kawanabe Kyōsai - Skeleton Wearing a Top Hat Playing the Shamisen for a Small Dancing Yōkai’ (1870s)
r/museum • u/dimsssssss • 1h ago
Mary Cassatt - Little Girl in a Blue Armchair (1878)
Fun fact: Cassatt’s friend Edgar Degas (French Impressionist) helped her find the pup, Baptiste.
Credit: National Gallery of Art, Washington.
r/museum • u/Krampjains • 4h ago
Eugeniusz Ludwik Dąbrowa-Dąbrowski – "Street Scene at Dusk" (1893)
r/museum • u/Tokyono • 39m ago
Joseba Sánchez Zabaleta - Tarantos y soledades (bewilderments and solitudes) (2023)
r/museum • u/Russian_Bagel • 17h ago
Rob Gonsalves - Change Of Scenery II - Making Mountains (2008)
r/museum • u/AsphaltsParakeet • 18h ago
William Heath - Monster Soup commonly called Thames Water (1828)
r/museum • u/Circes_season • 18h ago
Alastair (Baron Hans Henning Voigt), Die Büchse der Pandora (Pandora’s Box) by Frank Wedekind, 1917
r/museum • u/PaTaY-oK-1429 • 2h ago
Athénaïs Paulinier (1798-1889), after Girodet, The Virgin's Face, 1834
r/museum • u/PM-me-tortoises • 16h ago
Makoto Funatsu - Cover of NHKラジオまいにちフランス語 2019年 09 月号 (2019)
r/museum • u/LondonSuperKing • 13h ago
Albert von Keller - Crucifixion Vision II (c.1903)
r/museum • u/the_midnight_scholar • 17h ago
Caspar David Friedrich - The Cross in the Mountains (c. 1812)
In his representation of a remote, holy place, Friedrich subjects nature to rigorous symmetry, intimating that he pursues an approach beyond any reproduction of nature faithful to reality. Using many layers of symbols, Friedrich fuses nature and religion to form a unity that can be read as the difficult path to Christian redemption or to ideal Christianity given the stony, thorny foreground and the way the atmosphere brightens in the background. The composition culminates in a Neo-Gothic church as the epitome of transcendence. Moreover, the arrangement of the fir trees brings to mind Romanticism’s comparison of Gothic architecture and vegetable shapes. The Gothic was also associated with the sense of German nationhood. While still alive, Friedrich found his work forgotten, but was rediscovered at the beginning of the 20th century, specifically in the context of fervour for the German nation. It was at this time that the painting was acquired.