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  2. Giovanni Baglione - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Baglione

    Baglione's best known painting, Sacred Love and Profane Love (or The Divine Eros Defeats the Earthly Eros and other variants), was a direct response to Caravaggio's Amor Vincit Omnia (1601–02). Baglione's painting exists in two versions, the earlier in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin (c. 1602–03) and the later in the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte ...

  3. Divine Love Conquering Earthly Love (Baglione) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_Love_Conquering...

    Divine Love Conquering Earthly Love is an oil on canvas painting dating to 1602–1603, that is now held in the collection of the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica in Palazzo Barberini, Rome. It was painted by Italian painter Giovanni Baglione. It is the second version that Baglione painted of this subject; the first version is now in the ...

  4. Sacred and Profane Love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_and_Profane_Love

    Sacred and Profane Love (Italian: Amor Sacro e Amor Profano) is an oil painting by Titian, probably painted in 1514, early in his career. The painting is presumed to have been commissioned by Niccolò Aurelio, a secretary to the Venetian Council of Ten, whose coat of arms appears on the sarcophagus or fountain, to celebrate his marriage to a ...

  5. Amor Vincit Omnia (Caravaggio) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amor_Vincit_Omnia_(Caravaggio)

    Amor Vincit Omnia ("Love Conquers All") in Latin, known in English by a variety of names including Amor Victorious, Victorious Cupid, Love Triumphant, Love Victorious, or Earthly Love is a painting by the Italian Baroque artist Caravaggio. Amor Vincit Omnia shows Amor, the Roman Cupid, wearing dark eagle wings, half-sitting on or climbing down ...

  6. Caravaggio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caravaggio

    Sacred Love Versus Profane Love (1602–03), by Giovanni Baglione. Intended as an attack on his hated enemy, Caravaggio, it shows a winged male youth with an arrow, most likely a representation of Eros, the god associated with Aphrodite and sexual (i.e., profane) love, on one side, a devil with Caravaggio's face on the other, and between an ...

  7. Galleria Borghese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galleria_Borghese

    Amor sacro e amor profano (Sacred and Profane Love) Description of the painting. Architecture and gardens on the Villa Borghese or Casino; Reviews of Galleria Borghese; Satellite photo — the Galleria Borghese is the villa in the center of the photograph surrounded by landscaped gardens. Roman Map of the area with related services

  8. As ‘Grotesquerie’ Uses Bloodshed to Wrestle With ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/grotesquerie-uses-bloodshed-wrestle...

    As ‘Grotesquerie’ Uses Bloodshed to Wrestle With Religion and Politics, Its Cast Finds Refuge in the Sacred and Profane: ‘The Ryan Murphy Universe Is a Blessing’ William Earl September 25 ...

  9. Artists in biographies by Giovanni Baglione - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artists_in_biographies_by...

    Baglione (1566 – 1643) was a Late Mannerist and Early Baroque painter and art historian, best remembered for his writings and his acrimonious involvement with the artist Caravaggio, by whom he was nonetheless greatly influenced. The book was first published in 1642, with a final version published in Naples in 1733, long after Baglione's death ...