Category: Eye Candy for Today
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Eye Candy for Today: Weissenbruch landscape
The Trekvliet Shipping Canal near Rijswijk, Johan Hendrik Weissenbruch Also known as the “View near the Geest Bridge”, original is in the Rijksmuseum, link above is to a zoomable image. Downloadable high-resolution file on Wikimedia Commons. Wonderful light, air and painterly rendering by a 19th century Dutch painter who was influenced by the French Barbizon…
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Eye Candy for Today: Waterhouse’s Lady of Shalott
The Lady of Shalott, John William Waterhouse Original is in the Tate, Britain. There is a high-resolution zoomable image on the Google Art Project, and a downloadable version of that file on Wikimedia Commons. I almost hesitated to feature this image; Waterhouse’s interpretation of the scene from Tennyson’s poem is so commonly reproduced, it’s almost…
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Eye Candy for Today: Jeanna Bauck’s portrait of Bertha Wegmann painting a portrait
The Danish Artist Bertha Wegmann Painting a Portrait, Jeanna Bauck On Google Art Project. High resolution downloadable version on Wikimedia Commons. Original is in the Nationalmuseum Sweden. Swedish Artist Jeanna Bauck (about whom there is frustratingly little on the web) painted her friend, fellow artist and studio-mate Bertha Wegmann in the act of painting a…
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Eye Candy for Today: Daubigny’s Landscape with Sunlit Stream
Landscape with Sunlit Stream, Charles-François Daubigny In the Metropolitan Museum of art. Use zoom or download links under image. Ah, summer…..
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Eye Candy for Today: Rousseau’s Sleeping Gypsy
The Sleeping Gypsy, Henri Rousseau On Google Art Project. Hi-res downloadble file on Wikimedia Commons. Original is in the Museum of Modern Art, NY. This was at one time (and probably still is) one of the most widely reproduced images in all of art. In most of those reproductions, however, you will find the colors…
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Eye Candy for Today: Cuyp’s Maas at Dordrecht
The Maas at Dordrecht, Aelbert Cuyp On Google Art Project. Hi-res downloadable on Wikimedia Commons. Original is in the National Gallery of Art, DC. Cuyp’s 1650 portrayal of the Maas River at his hometown of Dordrecht, during a historic gathering of a military force in 1646. See my post on Aelbert Cuyp.
