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Anguissola, Three Sisters Playing Chess and Phillip II of Spain

Art History Beyond Europe:

Art History Books, reading list from art history teachers

Art History Videos on YouTube

Bingham, Fur Traders Descending the Missouri

Bonheur, Plowing in the Nivernais

Bonheur, The Horse Fair

Botticelli Primavera

Caravaggio Art Exhibition, Rome, 2010

Caravaggio, Fashion and Art History

Caravaggio, Conversion of St. Paul

Caravaggio, Judith Beheading Holofernes

Caravaggio, Young, Sick Bacchus and Basket of Fruit

Caravaggio, Cardsharps and Fortune Teller

Caravaggio, Taking of Christ (Kiss of Judas)

Cave Paintings

Cezanne, Bathers

Cezanne, Card Players

Cezanne, Most Famous Paintings 

Controversial Paintings

Copley, Paul Revere

David, Death of Marat

David, Death of Socrates

David, Napoleon Crossing the Alps

de Kooning, Retrospective at MoMA (Part I)

de Kooning, Excavation and Painting, 1948

de Kooning, Woman I

Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People

Durer, The Four Apostles

FontanaPortrait of a Noblewoman

Frankenthaler, Mountains and Sea

Gentileschi, Artemisia.  Judith Beheading Holofernes

Gentileschi, Artemisia.  Self-Portrait as an Allegory of Painting

Ghent Altarpiece.  See Ghent Altarpiece via zoom

Giorgione, Three Philosophers

Google Art Project, Art Museums Up Close

Goya, Family of Charles IV

Goya, The Third of May 1808

Hals, The Laughing Cavalier

Kahlo, Renowned Frida Kahlo Paintings

Leonardo, Painter at the Court of Milan, National Gallery, London

Leonardo, La Bella Principessa

Leonardo, Benois Madonna and Madonna Litta

Leonardo, Savior of the World (Salvator Mundi)

Leonardo, The Virgin and Child with St. Anne

Leyster, Famous Female Painters

ManetA Bar at the Folies-Bergere

Manet, Luncheon in the Studio

Manet, The Old Musician

Manet, Street Singer

Mantegna, Dead Christ

Matisse, The Dance, The Music

Matisse, The Cone Collection

Michelangelo, Crucifixion with the Madonna

Michelangelo, Famous Paintings

Michelangelo, La Pieta with Two Angels (latest attribution?)

Michelangelo, St. John the Baptist Bearing Witness

Modersohn-Becker, Famous Female Painters

Monet, Waterlilies

Morisot, Famous Paintings

Morisot, More Famous Paintings

Most Controversial Paintings in Art History

O'Keeffe, Jack in the Pulpit

Picasso, Nude, Green Leaves and Bust

Picasso, Portrait of Gertrude Stein

Picasso, Las Meninas

Poussin, Assumption of the Virgin

Rembrandt, Aristotle with a Bust of Homer

 

Rembrandt, Night Watch

Rubens, Venus and Adonis

Sargent, Madame X

Steen, The Christening Feast

 

Tanner, The Banjo Lesson and The Thankful Poor

Titian, Bacchus and Ariadne

Titian, Man with a Glove

Titian, Nymph and Shepherd, Allegory of Prudence, Jacopa Strada, St. Jerome, Slaying of Marysas

Titian, Rape of Europa

Uccello, Battle of San Romano

van der Weyden, St. Luke Drawing the Virgin

van Eyck, Arnolfini Portrait

van Eyck, Adoration of the Lamb

van Eyck, Ghent Altarpiece

van Gogh, The Potato Eaters

van Gogh, Memory of Garden at Etten; Tatched Cottages; White House

van Gogh,  Portrait of Madam Trabuc; Morning: Going Out

van Gogh, Starry Nights

Velazquez, Juan de Pareja

Vermeer, The Kitchen Maid;

Vermeer, The Allegory of Painting 

Vermeer, Girl with the Red Hat

Warhol, Campbell's Soup Cans

Warhol, Marilyn Diptych and Gold Marilyn

Art History Topics

Famous Paintings by Art Museums

Which famous paintings are must-see at individual art museums? We'll share what art history pros recommend seeing, and share some analysis of famous paintings at:

Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Famous Paintings at Albright-Knox and More Famous Artwork at Albright-Knox

Louvre: discover Louvre paintings not to miss - get the ebook, Famous-Paintings-Louvre

Metropolitan Museum of Art: download this ebook, Famous-Paintings-Metropolitan-Museum, to get a starting itinerary for one of the world's largest art museums.

National Gallery, LondonFamous-Paintings-National-Gallery

Washington, D.C. Art Museums: Explore forty famous paintings in Washington, DC in this ebookincluding those in the amazing National Gallery of Art

Art History Blogs

ArtDaily: daily breaking news about art museums and art history.

Art Blog by Bob: this brilliant art history blogger also writes Picture This on Big Think.

Art History Resources. Unwieldly but informative.

Best 50 Art History Blogs: according to mastersdegrees.net, as of January 2011.

The Earthly Paradise: check out its monthly Art History Carnival.

Mother of all Art & Art History Links: extensive list of online art history resources (including images, research resources, and art history depts.)

smARThistory. Think online art history textbook.  Brilliant. 

Three Pipe Problem.  In its author's words, "Art.  History.  Mystery"

Your Daily Art: an art history blog by Martha Lattie (a guest blogger here!)

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Famous Paintings: Arnolfini Portrait

An art history blog post from Famous Paintings Reviewed.

Among the most famous paintings in Renaissance artArnolfini Portrait has been enigmatic since Jan van Eyck (ca. 1370/90 - 1441) painted it over 450 years ago. He left no documents to clarify its meaning; little is known of van Eyck's early life or training.  From court and legal documents, scholars have determined that van Eyck was retained in 1425 by Philip the Good, the duke of Burgundy (best known for having captured Joan of Arc). 

Although art historians generally attribute 25 Renaissance paintings to Jan van Eyck, that number is somewhat uncertain because signatures are rare on 15th century paintings. Instead, painters signed the frames but they were often lost or

van eyck margaret the wife Right: Jan van Eyck. Margaret, The Artist's Wife, 1439.  Oil on oak, 1439.  Approx. 13" x 10". On loan at National Gallery, London, from City Museums (Bruges)

replaced.  In the case of van Eyck's Renaissance paintings, at least two bear his signature: Man in a Red Turban, believed to be a self-portrait (below) and Margaret, The Artist's Wife (right).

 van eyck man in a red turban

Jan van Eyck.  Man in a Red Turban (Self Portrait?), 1433. Tempera and oil on wood.  13 1/8" x 10 1/8".  National Gallery, London.

In both cases, the original frame bears van Eyck's motto, "Als ik kan", or the pun, "As I or Eyck can". While Arnolfini Portrait lacks its original frame, art historians agree that it's a Jan van Eyck painting, but disagree about its interpretation.

Above the concave mirror on the back wall, van Eyck has inscribed, "Johannes de eyck fuit hic 1934", which translates as "Jan van Eyck was here, 1434". Typically, though, a painting in 15th century Flanders would have been signed, "Jan van Eyck made this". 

jan van eyck arnolfini portrait
 

Jan van Eyck.  Arnolfini Portrait, 1434.  Oil on wood.  32 1/4" x 23 1/2".  National Gallery, London.

The verbiage Jan van Eyck used is what an eyewitness to a legal document would've used, fueling controversy about whether this is a wedding portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and his wife, Giovanna Cenami, or a "power of attorney" painting in which the husband grants legal permission for his wife to act on his behalf during an absence. If this is a wedding portrait, we can safely surmise that Giovanni is 30 years old or younger: in 15th century Flanders, a marriage ultimatum was given to unmarried men who were thirty, with names of those who failed to marry recorded in the dreaded "Book of Disgrace".  

arnolfini-portraitThe German scholar Erwin Panofsy asserted in 1934 that Arnolfini Portrait was indeed a wedding portrait, with van Eyck seen in the mirror's reflection and his signature verifying his presence.  Various Arnolfini Portrait features are associated with matrimony, corroborating Panofsy's claim:

  • the couple has removed their shoes in recognition of the sanctity of the bedchamber, turning it into a holy place;

  • the bedpost finial is a wooden statue of the patron saint of childbirth, Saint Margaret, a nod to the fertility sought in marriage;

  • the fruit on the windowsill and chest allude to abundance or fertility;

  • honoring customs of the Renaissance, the woman's robe is cinched above her stomach, giving the appearance of pregnancy but intended to emphasize fertility

  • while the dog is a rare breed (affenpinscher) indicating the couple's prosperity, it is also a traditional symbol of fidelity (thanks to Gardner's Fred Kleiner for noting that the common dog name "Fido" comes from the Latin fido, to trust, the root of ‘fidelity);

  • the ten roundels surrounding the mirror show the Passion of Christ, suggesting the Christian idea that the "eye of God" will watch the newlywed couple. 

Research by Lorne Campbell in 1998, however, contends that Arnolfini Portrait is a double portrait and not a wedding picture. Campbell states that the wedding ceremony Panofsky cited in his argument occurred in 1447 -- four years after Jan van Eyck signed Arnolfini Portrait, and also six years after van Eyck's death.

Barring newly discovered historical documents, Arnolfini Portrait will remain enigmatic, with the intentions of the artist and patron unclear. 

Note: I was amused and amazed to learn that Margaret, The Artist's Wife, was considered a 33 year old beauty attired in finery of the day -- her crimson gown lined with fur, and her fluted veil were signs of her wealth. A reminder that times do change!

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Comments

Not «The Arnolfini Portrait» but «The Van Eyck Wedding» - News about a Critical Essay, proposing the painting is a self-portrait of the painter with his spouse Margaretha: On the paternity of this work and on the date there is no doubt, since we can see the signature, but there is no certainty of the two people represented. Crowe and Cavalcaselle in 1857 set the painting in relation to the inventory of the paintings owned by Margherita of Austria in 1516 were the following words were written “Ung grant tableau qu’on appelle Hernoul le Fin, avec sa femme dedens une chambre” Hernol le Fin was interpreted as a common form of the surname Arnolfini, and since then the depicted couple were identified as Giovanni Arnolfini, a rich merchant living in Bruges, advisor of the Duke of Burgundy and his wife Giovanna Cenami. 
 
 
 
Since 1847 the director of the National Gallery had timidly proposed that the painting may have represented Jan and Margaretha Van Eyck, but the most acclaimed art critics, like Ruskin and De Labourde were absolutely convinced of the Arnolfini thesis until 1934, when Panofsky closed the question by affirming that this was the truth since the painter married in 1433 and not in 1434. 
 
 
 
Marco Paoli returns on this question, confirming that there are no documents that put Van Eyck in relation to the Arnolfini family. In this situation there is no reference, even indirect, in the family tree of the supposed commissioners, nor to their land and their original cultural level; the couple also have no resemblance to the Mediterranean physical aspect. In conclusion, there is no other reason for the attribution except the fact that there is an assonance between Hernol le Fin and Arnolfini. 
 
http://www.loschermo.it/articolo.php?idart=25082 
 
Posted @ Monday, March 01, 2010 3:59 AM by Iac
Spectacular -- thanks for providing the latest information about this famous painting. 
 
Susan Benford, Masterpiece Cards
Posted @ Tuesday, March 30, 2010 12:01 PM by Susan Benford
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