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  2. Panchendriyas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panchendriyas

    Gyanendriya is the organ of perception, the faculty of perceiving through the senses. The first five of the seventeen elements of the subtle body are the "organs of perception" or "sense organs". [2] According to Hinduism and Vaishnavism there are five gyanendriya or "sense organs" – ears, skin, eyes, tongue and nose. [2]

  3. The Five Senses (Wautier) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Five_Senses_(Wautier)

    The Five Senses is a series of five paintings depicting allegories of sight, smell, taste, hearing, and touch, painted by Flemish artist Michaelina Wautier in 1650. Each sense is personified by a young boy. [1] The paintings have been loaned to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, by their owners, Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo. [2]

  4. The Five Senses (series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Five_Senses_(series)

    The Five Senses is a set of allegorical paintings created at Antwerp in 1617-1618 by Jan Brueghel the Elder and Peter Paul Rubens, with Brueghel being responsible for the settings and Rubens for the figures. They are now in the Prado Museum in Madrid.

  5. The Five Senses (Stoskopff) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Five_Senses_(Stoskopff)

    The Five Senses, also known as Summer is a signed and dated 1633 oil painting by Sebastian Stoskopff. It was painted at the height of the artist's stay in Paris from 1621 to 1640/1641. Together with its slightly wider pendant The Four Elements , or Winter (114 x 188 cm, or 45 x 74 in), it is today in the Musée de l'Œuvre Notre-Dame .

  6. The Senses (Rembrandt) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Senses_(Rembrandt)

    The Senses is a series of five oil paintings, completed c. 1624 or 1625 by Rembrandt, depicting the five senses. [1] The whereabouts of one, representing the sense of taste, is unknown. Another, representing smell, was only re-identified in 2015.

  7. Sensory history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensory_history

    Sensory history is often written because of a significant lack of any examination of the sensory in a particular historical area previously. [12] This means that sensory historians can simply re-examine primary and secondary sources, with a lens for the sensory, in order to support their work. [1]

  8. Sense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sense

    A typical example is Gérard de Lairesse's Allegory of the Five Senses (1668), in which each of the figures in the main group alludes to a sense: Sight is the reclining boy with a convex mirror, hearing is the cupid-like boy with a triangle, smell is represented by the girl with flowers, taste is represented by the woman with the fruit, and ...

  9. Five senses (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_senses_(disambiguation)

    Five senses refers to the five traditionally recognized methods of perception, or senses: taste, sight, touch, smell, and sound. Five senses or The Five Senses may also refer to: Five wits, a categorisation scheme originating in Shakespearean times; 5 Senses, a 1981 EP by XTC; Five Senses (Pentagon EP), 2016 EP by the South Korean male group ...