When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Portrait of a Man in a Red Beret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_of_a_Man_in_a_Red...

    The work has been compared to the description of the artist's appearance in old age in Vasari's Lives of the Artists as "delicate and gentle, with long and battered beard and hair, almost a saviour, different from what had been". Its attribution to Parmigianino is almost unanimous among art historians and is upheld by Fagiolo dell'Arco (1970 ...

  3. The Son of Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Son_of_Man

    Another painting from the same year, called The Great War on Facades (La Grande Guerre Façades, 1964), features a person standing in front of a wall overlooking the sea (as in The Son of Man), but it is a woman, holding an umbrella, her face covered by flowers. There is also Man in the Bowler Hat, a similar painting wherein a man's face is ...

  4. Portrait of a Man with a Blue Chaperon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_of_a_Man_with_a...

    Portrait of a Man with a Blue Chaperon (or Portrait of a Man with a Blue Hood, earlier Portrait of a Jeweller or Man with a Ring) is a very small (22.5 cm x 16.6 cm with frame) [1] oil on panel portrait of an unidentified man attributed to the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck. The painting was commissioned and completed sometime around ...

  5. 'Tronie' of a Young Man with Gorget and Beret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/'Tronie'_of_a_Young_Man...

    Even more unlikely is that it is a Rembrandt self-portrait, simply on the low level of resemblance of the face to the many certain examples. It used to be dated to about 1634, on the grounds of the age of the subject, if a self-portrait, and the lack of the moustache that Rembrandt usually has for most of the 1630s.

  6. The optical illusion hidden in the 'Mona Lisa' explained - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2015-08-22-the-optical-illusion...

    There's question as to whether it was intentional, but new research into a second painting attributed. Art historians say Leonardo da Vinci hid an optical illusion in the Mona Lisa's face: she ...

  7. The Seven Ages of Man (painting series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Seven_Ages_of_Man...

    The Infant The Schoolboy The Lover The Seven Ages of Man is a series of paintings by Robert Smirke, derived from the famous monologue beginning all the world's a stage from William Shakespeare's As You Like It, spoken by the melancholy Jaques in Act II Scene VII. The stages referred are: infant, schoolboy, lover, soldier, justice, pantaloon and old age. The set of paintings are in pen and ink ...

  8. Self-Portrait with Palette (Manet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-Portrait_with_Palette...

    The chronological proximity of the two paintings implies a direct connection between them; accordingly, they have been considered as two stages of a work in progress. In the first painting, Self-Portrait with Palette, the act of painting itself is depicted by the blurred gestures of the painter. In the latter work, the painter is shown with the ...

  9. Portrait of a Man in a Yellowish-Gray Jacket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_of_a_Man_in_a...

    The painting shows a tastefully dressed young man in a floppy hat seated in a chair facing right with his head at an angle looking at the viewer. We don't know the name of the man or the occasion for which it was painted, but the painting is probably a pendant to the portrait of a man in a black jacket, which it matches in shape, size, period ...