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Three Women with Parasols (French: Trois femmes aux ombrelles), also known as The Three Graces, is an 1880 oil-on-canvas painting by French artist Marie Bracquemond. The painting depicts three women wearing the then fashionable style of ruffled dresses with high bodices. [1] The woman in the middle holds a fan in the popular style of Japonisme ...
The Three Graces (Rubens, Madrid), a 1630–1635 painting by Rubens; The Three Graces, a 1765 painting by Charles-André van Loo; The Three Graces, a painting by Michael Parkes; Three Women with Parasols, also known as The Three Graces, an 1880 painting by Marie Bracquemond; Primavera, a 15th-century painting by Sandro Botticelli
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The Three Graces is a 1765 rococo oil painting by the French artist Charles-André van Loo.Depicting a scene from Greek Mythology, it portrays The Three Graces. [1] [2]Van Loo had produced an earlier version of The Three Graces which he exhibited at the Salon of 1763.
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The image depicts three of the Graces of classical mythology. It is frequently asserted that Raphael was inspired in his painting by a ruined Roman marble statue displayed in the Piccolomini Library of the Siena Cathedral—19th-century art historian [Dan K] held that it was a not very skillful copy of that original—but other inspiration is possible, as the subject was a popular one in Italy.