Ramón del Valle-Inclán, La laámpara maravillosa, ejercicios espiritualis, 1916
Amanda Kate Walker (American, 1975) - Little Mouse (2023)
Henriëtte Ronner-Knip, A dog and her puppies
sketchbook stuff
Tracy Thomason - Circumventing Her Violets, 2024 - Oil and marble dust on linen
Raoul Auger (1904–1991) - “Femmes damnées (à la pale clarté)”
vignette from Charles Baudelaire’s ‘Pièces condamnées’, Éditions Henrys Paris, 1949
Hilma Af Klint, The Swan No. 1
Sandro Botticelli
‘Svanen’ by Hilma af Klint, c. 1914.
'Getting ready for Daddy's birthday' by Mihaly Munkacsy, (1882), oil on canvas
Madonna Pietra Degli Scrovigni
Artist: Marie Spartali Stillman (British, 1844–1927)
Date: 1884
Medium; Paper; watercolour; gouache
Collection: National Museums Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom
Description
Madonna Pietra Degli Scrovigni (My Lady Stone) is a character from a poem by the Italian poet Dante Alighieri (1265–1321). The lady is described as beautiful and inspiring great passion, but 'utterly frozen… no more moved than is the stone'. The poem plays off the interaction of winter and summer, dark and light, yellow and green, themes which Stillman explores in this watercolour. She uses imagery of dead leaves, blackthorn and hellebore to symbolize coldness and winter, and the model gazes out at the viewer steadily and calmly.