C O L L E C T I O N
B O O K
PREHISTORIC ART
European cave art
30,000 BCE-10,000 BCE
Some of the finest European cave art was produced
in south-western France and northern Spain during
the final phase of the lce Age, from 15,000-10,000
Bison
BCE, The paintings at Altamira in Spain, which were Most cave paintings
discovered in 1879, are so wwell preserved that for show live animals, but
many years archaeologists doubted their this bisot appears to
authernticity, Most of the images depict bison, have been depicted
although there are also a number of horses and red after its death, with
deer. The paintings at Lascaux in France were its legs trussed up
discovered accidentally, by four boys playing in the The striking image
ywoods The cave, which contains more than 600 was created with just
paintings boasts some of the most spectacular three Colors-Ochre,
prehistoric artworks ever found, most notably in the red, and black:
celebrated "Hall of Bullis" This is dominated by c13,000 BCE, TOCK
pictures of four black bulls, each measuring up to painting , Altamira,
4.9m long The cave complex at Chauvet in France near Santillana del
also includes aremarkable array of animal paintings Mar, Spain
and is much older, dating back to around 30,000
BCE.
Lions
The animal paintings
at Chauvet include
bears, lions, panthers,
rhinos, and owls,
These lions are an
extinct variety, with
males that have no
manes c30,000 CE,
TOck painting,
Chauvet-Pont-d'Arc
Apeche Department
France
The shaft of dead man
Discovered in 1940, the
cave paintings at Lascaux
are often cited as the
finest examples of
prehistoric rock art in the
worid. This enigmatic
scene shows a man with
a bird-ike head along
with a bison that seems
to be disembowelied.
C17,000 BCE, FDCK
painting, Lascaux,
Dordogne, France
Australian cave art
c40,000 BCE-1780 CE
Australian art has a very long pedigree Rock engravings at Wharton Hill and Panaramitee North in South Australia are thought to be more
than 40,000 years old, while traces of pigment at Cape York in Queensland appear to date back to c25 , 000 BCE. Many Australian
Aboriginal paintings are more difficult to date, however, as they have often been retouched on several occasions. Australian Aboriginals
believed that the original designs had been formed by creation spirits during the Dreamtime -the ancestral past-when their shadows
passed over the landscape The most important concentrations of rock painting can be found at Arnhem Land and Kimberiey, near the
northern coast, and Victoria in the south-east. The images usually consist of slender, anthropomorphic figures or "X-ray" paintings of
animals.
Wandjina Paintings
The Wandjina are
ancestral figures- the
spinits of clouds, who
govern the weather.
These paintings. were
discovered in
1837.Main figure
100x78cm, Kimberley
Distriet Western
Australia
The lightning Brothers
These images come from a
rock shelter in the
ancestral territory of the
Wardaman people. The
Lightning Brothers were
two Creation heroes -
Jabaringi and Yagjagbula-
who brought lightning and
the monsoon fains Rock
painting, Ingalari
Waterhole Willero0 Station
Victoria River, Australia
African Cave and rock art
c4000 BCE-C1500 BCE
The finest surviving examples of prehistoric African art
are located in remote, mountainous regions In many
cases, the sites were occupied for centuries and
contain thousands of paintings and engravings At Tassili
NAjer in Aigeria paintings are so numerous that different
periods can be detected. The earliest feature hunters
pursuing animals that are now extinet Following this
there are scenes of herdsmen tending cattle and, finally,
The White Lady
images of more recent animais, such as horses and
camels The most intriguing paintings perhaps were
When it was first
produced by San bushmen in the Drakensberg area.
discovered, this painting
Some prehistorians believe these depict shamans and
was interpreted as a white
therianthropes (composite human and animal foms,
woman, Some now believe
involved in trance ceremonies with elands (large
however that the figure is
antelopes) The elands were thought to possess spiritual
a mnale shaman wearing
power which shamans tried to harness through ritual
white body paint c1st
dances and trances
century 8CE, rock painting.
height 40cm Tsibab
Ravine, Brandberg
Mountain, Namibia
Shamanistic Image with Eland
This prehistoric masterpiece, from the
mountainous Drakensberg region.
has been interpreted as a trance
picture. The animal is accompanied
by humans with hooves Rock painting
Game Pass, Kamberg Nature Reserve
South Africa
Hunters with Bowmen
Thousands of paintings and
engravings were produced at Tassili
N'Ajjer, a rocky plateau in the Sahara,
in a period when the climate was
more favourable than today, Early
scenes of hunters were followed by
paintings of herdsmen. c4000 BCE
rock painting, Tassili N'Ajer, near
Djanet, Algeria
Portable Figurines
The Kostionki Venus
c30,000 BCE-c10,000 BCE
The earliest surviving non-functional
obects come from the Paleolithic
Alongside their rock art, early humans also produced
period. This female fure is from the
a variety of portable objects. Weapons were often
Voronezh region in south-western
decorated with images of prey presumably as a fom
Russia c23,000 BCE, stone, height
of hunting magic There wwas also an intriguing group
10cm, Hermitage, St Petersburg,
of very ancient European sculptures known
Russia
collectively as "Venus" figurines Dating from the
Palaeolithic era (c35,000-B000 BCE most of the
statuettes represent) naked, wel-rounded women
Their purpose is unknown, although their obvious
voluptuousness has led Some archaeologists to
regard them as fertility tigures. More than a hundred
of the figures have been found at sites randing from
France to Russia. They generally have tiny legs and
arms-indeed, the arms on the Willendorf fiqure,
folded across her breasts are barely discernible Most
of the statuettes could not have stood independently,
and it is possible that they were designed to be held
in the hand,
Bison Carving
This delighttul carving was
made from a reindeer antler
and sed as a spear-thrower
It was found at La The Venus of Willendorf
Madeleine, in
France.c12,000 BCE vory The most famous of all the
length 10cm, private Venus figurines, this carving
collection takes its ame fram the
Austrian village where it was
discovered, during
construction work on a
railway. It was made from a
small stone and tinted witth
red ochre. c24,000 BCE,
limestone, height 11 cm,
Neolithic Pottery Naturhistorisches Museum,
Vienna Austria
c9000 BCE-c24000 BCE
The earliest known ceramic vessels are frorn c11,000
BCE in Eastern Sibera and Japan. Ceramic objects,
including a Venus figure and numerous animal
figurines, have been found at Dolni Vestonice in the
Olmec Baby
Chez Republic. These dat from c2400BCE. However,
the craft became much more common in Neolithic
This cerarmic baby was made
period, as nomadic hunter-gatherers were gradually
by the Olmec Culture of
suspended by farming communities, who kept
Mexico. The purpose of this
livestock and grew crops. Their settled lifestyle
and similar crying babies is
enabled them to acquire more belongings, without
unknown, but some
the worry of transporting them.
archaeologists have suggested
Initiaily, most pottery was ether modelled or built up
that the Olmec performed
in coils. In many communities, women made the pots
infant sacrifice, and the
for their own househols. However the invention of the
ceramic babies may have been
potter's wheel stimulated the growthe a specialist
connected to this practice
"industry" The wheel was introduced in Western Asia
c800BCE, earthenware with
in c3400 BCE, and reached Europe in the following
bichrome slip. 31 x 24x18cm,
millennium.
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Texas, US
Pot with Whorl Design
This comes from the Middle
J āmon period in Japan.
Characteristically, the
vessel is decorated with an
elaborate, curvilinear
design. c7500-300 BE, low-
fired ceramic clay 38x33cm
Skarpsalling Bowl
Museum of Fine Arts.
Houston, US
The decoration on some
Neolithic pots mimics other
materials. Parts of this vessel
resemble the stitching that
might have been found on
leathenork c3000 E terracotta,
height 17cm, National Museum,
Copenhagen, Denmark
Crouching Male Figure
Popularly known as The
Thinker. This famous piece is a
product of the Hamangia
Culture. C3500-3000 BCE,
pottery height 113cm, National
Museum of Art Bucharest.
Romania.
Stylized Head
This is a typical
example of the
Nok Bird-man Figure
distinctive figures
produced by the Vinta Nok figures take their name from a village
culture, which near the Niger River, where the first finds
flourished ata large from this culture were made. These consist
farming settlement on almost exclusively of ceramic sculptures,
the banks of the depicting an imaginative range of human
Danube, a few miles and animal forms. Their original purpose can
from modem-day only be guessed at. It has been suggested,
Belgrade C4500-4000 for example, that they may represent
BCE, terracotta. ancestor figures or deities, or that they were
18x15cm, Musej Kosova, used in funerary rites. c500 BCE-200 CE,
Pristina, Serbia terracotta, 47x20x22cm, private coliection
Assyrian
c1500 BCE-612 BCE
The Assyrian heartlands were in
northern Mesopotamia (modern-day
Iraq) The Assyrians took their name A King Shalmaneser III
from the land they came from around
Ashur, their religious capital, but soon This shows the king in an
built the far greater cities of Nineveh, important ritual role, as
Nimrud, and Khorsabad .. At the the protector of the Tree
height of their power (from 883 to 612 of Life. 9th century BCE,
BCE), the Assyrians commanded an ivory, Iraq Museum,
empire that stretched from Persia to Baghdad, Iraq
the Mediterranean. Assyrian art is
most notable for its relief carving and
SCulpture. The most important
theme was the lion hunt-an event
that had both royal and religious
significance Depictions of the hunt
frequently adorned royal palaces.
On a much smaller scale, the
Assyrians also produced very fine
ivory carvings on plaques, which were
mostly used as veneers on their
furniture
Winged Guardian Figure
This is one of a pair of
monumental statues from the
palace of Sargon Il at
Khorsabad. It is a Lamassu a
winged bull with a human
head. 8th century BCE,
gypseous alabaster, height
420cm, Louvre, Paris, France
Ashurnasirpal II at a
LionHunt
Lion hunting was more
than a sport of Assyrian
kings: it had religious
Connotations. 7th
century BCE, Whole
panel length 224cm,
limestone, British
Museum, London, UK
Aegean
e3000-c1100 BCE
Before the heyday of Ancient Greek art, a group of different cultures fiourished in the area around the Aegean Sea. The earliest of these
developed in the Cyclades Islands, where settlers from Asia Minor arrived in around 3000 BCE.Their most distinctive artefacts are tiny. marble
figurines, with spare, minimalistic forms that have been greatly | admired by modern sculptors. Minoan culture emerged on Crete at a similar
period. The name was coined by the archaeologist, Sir Arthur Evans, because of the island's mythical association with King Minos and his
Minotaur. Minoan art was centerd around its palaces, which were adorned with spectacular wall- paintings The Cretans also produced fine
pottery and jewelery. Mycenaean culture developed on the Greek mainland. Its outstanding artworks were discovered in the "royal" graves at
the city of Mycenae itself. These yielded up a stunning array of gold masks, jewelry, weapons, and vessels.
Minoan Pottery Jar
Cretan artists were particularly fond of Funerary Mask
decorating their pots with extravagant octopus
designs that wound around the entire vessel. This
This piece is popularly known as the
type of jar was probably used for storing or
"Mask of Agamemnon" (the Greek
transporting olive oil. C1450-1400 BCE, painted
leader in the Trojan War), It is not a
earthenware, Ashmolean, Oxford, UK
death mask-the object was created
separately and then placed over the
dead man's face. 16th century BCE,
gold, height 26cm, National
Archaeological Museum, Athens,
Greece
Greek Archaic
c750-480 BCE
The Archaic Period covers the early development of Greek art, from
around 750 BCE until 480 BCE when the Persians sacked Athens.
In sculpture, Greek artists eagerly assimilated ideas from Egypt
and the East, gradually producing their own, highly individual style.
Progress was most apparent in depictions of the kouros hude male),
and the kore (draped female) Most of these statues were used as
grave markers, although some represented gods. In the earliest
phase, the figures had stereotyped features and a rigid stance,
with their arms barely leaving their sides. Over the course of this
period, the poses became more relaxed, and the treatment of
anatomy grew more convincing. The Archaic Period was also the
golden age of vase painting Initially, the Corinthians dominated this
Antefix of a Gorgon's Head
field but by the early 6th century BCE, the lead had been taken by
Plaques of this kind were very common in
Athens Its artists became masters of the "black-figure" technique,
early Greek architecture. They were used as
highlighted in the work of Exekias, and later of the more
ornaments to mask the end of a row of roof
sophisticated "red-figure" technique, which superseded it.
tiles. The designs often featured monsters,
as it was thought that these would ward off
evil spirits. Gorgons, with their projecting
fangs, tongues, and glaring eyes, were
popular choice. c6th century BCE,
terracotta, length 25cm private collection
Achilles Slaying the
Amazon Queen, Penthesilea
This moment of high drama
The Lady of Auxerre
Anavysos Kouros was painted by Exekias,
the most famous exponent
This remarkable statuette Owes its name to
Named after the village where it was of the black-figure style of
its first known owner, a theater manager in
found, this kouros was a warior's decoration. As he delivers
Auxerre, who Used it as a prop in an
grave-marker. c530 BCE, marble, the fatal blow, Achilles
operetta. It is the finest Surviving example
height 194cm, National falls in love with his enemy,
of the "Daedalic" style of sculpture, named
Archaeological Museum, Athens, 6th century BCE, pottery.
after the mythical figure Daedalus, who was
Greece height 42cm, British
said to have created the first Greek statues.
Museum, London, UK
It was made in Crete and was originally
painted.c640 BCE, limestone, height 65cm,
Louvre, Paris, France
Nudes
The nude was central to the art of the Relief of Eve from
ancient Greeks and in their statues of Autun Cathedral
naked heroes and goddesses they
created standards of beauty that have Gislebertus Thought to be
been a challenge and an inspiration to the first European nude
later ages Many artists, however, have since antiquity,
used the nude not only to create Gislebertus's relief
images of beauty, but also to explore sculpture shows a shapely
ideas and emotions Drawing directly Eve picking an apple.
from a naked model has formed a part c1130, stone, Cathedral of
of art education for centuries, although St. Lazare, Autun, France
in certain times and places the nude
has been subject to censorship
Cavalcade
Taken from the frieze that was on the Parthenon, these horsemen form
part of a procession, Even though the carving is in very shallow relief, the
overlapping horses provide a sense of depth and movement. 447-432
BCE, marble height 106cm, British Museum, London, UK
David
This monumental emobodiment of human beauty
stood at the entrance of Florences Palazzo Vecchio
for over 300 years. 1501-04, marble, 434cm, Galleria
dell'Accademia, Florence, Italy
Panathenaic Amphora
Depicting a Boxing Contest
Greek vase- painters contributed
significantly to advances in the
Cycladic Kouros Greek depiction of musculature. C336
Greek study and development of BCE, pottery, British Museum,
Egyptian statuary led to a more London, UK
realistic figuring of the body c550
BC, marble 214cm, National
Archaeological Museum, Athens,
Greece
Byzantine
EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN, 330 CE-1453
Byzantine art flourished from 330 CE, when Constantinople was founded, until 1453, when the city
fell to the Turks. Within this huge time-span, the boundaries of the empire fluctuated considerably,
though this did not prevent Byzantine trends from affecting artistic developments as far afield as
Italy, Egypt, and Russia.
In 395, following the death of Theodosius the Great, the empire was divided and the artistic
traditions of its two halves rapidly began to diverge.In the West, constant warfare led to an era of
diminished artistic production, while in Byzantium a new order of art work emerged. Religious
icons and imperial images were venerated, and their appearance was strictly controlled. Their
forms were symbolic and stylized, and any artistic individuality was frowned upon.
In other fields, Byzantine craftsmen serviced a thriving market for luxury objects The quality of their
silks, jewelry, closure néenamels, and carved ivories was outstanding. The latter often took the
form of diptychs, adorned with religious or imperial subjects.
The Barberini Ivory
Emperor Justinian and
Attendants The central panel depicts the
Emperor Triumphant. Above, Christ
offers a blessing, flanked by winged
Justinian commissioned this
Victories; below, earthly powers pay
mosaic, shortly after his troops
homage Early 6th century ivory, 34.2x
had captured Ravenna from
26.8cm, Louvre Paris, France
the Ostrogoths. He never
visited the city, but this portrait
emphasized his official
presence in his westerm
capital. c547, mosaic, San
Vitale, Ravenna, Italy
Mosaic
7TH-13TH CENTURY
One of the distinguishing features of Islamic arhitecture is the intricate and extensive decoration
of both interior and exterior surfaces Alongside carved and painted decorations, tilework and
mosaic played a major role from the first Islamic buildings such as the Dome of the Rock in
Jerusalem (completed 691), using techniques of Byzantine mosaic but in non-"epresentational
geometric and arabesque patterns, and the Great Mosque of Damascus (715), which unusually
also has a mosaic reproducing buildings and an imaginary city. Through the 8th century, the use of
mosaic decoration spread as far afield as Spain, where it can be seen in the Great Mosque of
Córdoba and later in the Alhambra; specific styles such as zillij, using purpose-made tiles, were
developed in the Arabic Countries and North Africa; and in Eurasia in the 13th century Seljuq
mosques and palaces were decorated with richly colored glazed tiles:
The Dome of the Rock, Temple
Mount Mosaic above a doorway of
the Prayer Hall
This earliest extant example of
Islamic building is essentially Originally a Christian church, the
Byzantine in structure, but its mosaic Mezquita was rebuilt as a mosque by
decoration in repeating geometric a succession of Islamic rulers from
patterns is distinctly Islamic. The rich c785. Amang the alterations was the
blues and greens are typical of the addition of mosaics in the Prayer Hall
mosaics of early Islamic architecture. of the extension built by al-Hakam l1.
Completed 691 cE, Jerusalem Israel , 961-66 CE, Great Mosque of
Córdoba, Spain
The Aztecs
VALLEY OF MEXICO; 1325-1521
Feather mosaic Shield
The animal on this shield is an
Aztec art was almost all produced as a material
ahuizotI, a mythical "water- thorn
expression of Aztec cosmology-their vision of the
beast" that dwelt on riverbanks and
creation of the Universe. The Aztecs drew their beliefs
was said by the Aztecs to seize
from previous Mexican civilizations and believed that
people who came too close to the
their world had been created by the Sun god,
water. It gave its name to the Aztec
Huitzilopochtli, whose continuing appearance in the
emperor , Ahuizot, who reigned from
morning sky required a constant supply of hearts and
1486 to 1502, c1500, feathers, sheet-
blood from captured enemies. The Sun and other gods
gold, against paper, leather, reed
dominated everyday life, their images and the myths
70x70cm, Museum für Volkerkun de
associated with them represented in human form or as
Vienna Austria
flora or fauna. The Aztecs never carved actual portraits,
as those sculptures with a human appearance- whether
of gods, priests, or Common people-represent the
inhabitants of the sacred Universe. Repeated symbols-
often based on nature-reinforced the message of the
gods' spiritual powers. The main Aztec art form was
stone sculpture, often monumental in form, although
their craftsmen were also skilled in using wood, fired
clay, precious stones, feathers, and other materials.
However, it is mainly the sculptures that have survived,
as more vulnerable works of art, as well as any
decorative items in palaces and houses, were almost all
destroyed during the Spanish conquest
Coatlicue
The goddess of the Chacmool
Earth and patron of life
and death, Coaticue is The carved figure of Chacmool strikes a characteristic
shown here pose. He wears a feather headdress, necklaces,
decapitated and with bangles, and bracelets with bells attached. A Chacmool
Serpents entwining her figure wearsa mask, which identifies him as Tlaloc, the
body. They represent rain god. c1500, stone 74x108x45cm Museo Nacional de
the blood gushing her Antropologia Mexico City, Mexico
from her her neck her
She is wearing a
necklace of human
hands and hearts.c1500,
stone, height 257cm
Museo Nacional de
Antropologia Mexico
City, Mexico
Coyolxauhqui
The name of the moon
goddess, Coyolxauhqui
means "the one with bells on
her face", As usual, she is Grasshopper
shown decapitated and with
closed eyelids, as she was When the Aztecs first arrived in the Valley of Mexico, they
beheaded by her brother, attempted to found their capital at Chapultepec, the
Huitzilopochtli the sun "hill of the grasshopper". Pictograms always show the
warrior. c1500, diorite, hill with a grasshopper on its summit This grasshopper
80x80x65cm, Museo from Chapultepec is made from comelian quartz.c1500,
Nacional de Antropologia, cornelian, 19.5x16x47cm, Museo Nacional de
Mexico City, Mexico Antropologia, Maximo City, Mexico
The Incas
PERUVIAN ANDES%; B 1220s-1533
Inca art is more functional and less elaborate than
earlier Andean civilizations, although evidence is patchy
as much was destroyed, lost, or melted down after the
Spanish Conquest. The Inca's main skill was in
stonemasonry, using perfectly cut, massive stones fitted
without the use of mortar to create walls and buildings.
Some of these stones, as well as living rocks, were
carved with religious symbols drawn from nature. Inca
artists developed considerable skill and sophistication in
gold and other metalwork, developing a copper-arsenic
bronze into which they inlaid gold and silver. Their
textiles were finely woven using vicuna, alpaca, or llama
wool. Repeating geometrical patterns feature regularly
in this work, perhaps having a heraldic significance
Llama Figurine
This Inca llama is made
of several pieces of
sheet silver. The
blanket in cinnibar,
and the diamond
design may have been
originally inlaid with
turquoise, the blanket
trim is gold. After
1438, silver American
Museum of Natural
History, New York, US
Inca Poncho
Ponchos were worm
by all classes of
Incas, the poor
wearing alpaca
wool, the rich a
silkier vicuna wool.
The elaborate
decoration on this
poncho Suggests it
was not for everyday
use. c1500, wool
American Museum
of Natural History,
New York, US
Ancient
Egypt
A world of Symbols
For the ancient Egyptian the whole
world, as they saw it, was
represented symbolically. From the
sun and the Nile, which gave them
food and sustenance, to the animal
kingdom, wild animal kingdom, wild
and domestic, everything was imbued
with hidden meaning, Even their
architecture, and especially that
associated with funerary rites, was
full of complex meaning and
significance. As its deepest level,
symbolism was the means by which
the Egyptians expressed their
speculations about the nature of life
itself - the creation, the afterlife and
the struggle between good and evil.
Tefnut
Tefnut was the ancient
Egyptian goddess of water and
fertility. She and her brother
and husband, Shu, were
created by Atum, Ra or Amun.
Tefnut was the mother of Nut
and Geb also she is associated
with the lion. In art she is
represent as a woman with
head of the lion with Sun disc.
In this papyrus (opposite) of
the Nineteenth Dynasty, Tefnut
is represented with an ankh
symbol in the role of one of the
judges of the Underworld. She
is depicted with a ram's head
although often she had the
head of a lion.
Apis Bull
As one of the strongest procreative
symbols of ancient Egypt, the bull
could represent the composite god of
creation, the primeval waters or even
the inundation of the Nile. This
identification with the creative life
force also meant that the bull was
identified with the Egyptian king and
a number of New Kingdom monarchs
were described as 'mighty bull' or 'bull
of Horus'.
Osiris
The eternally good king'or the perfect one' under his received name of
Wennefer, Osiris was at the center of the most extensive symbolism of ancient
Egypt. He began as a fertility god with a special association with corn and
with the life-giving waters of the Nile, called the ‘efflux of Osiris’. After
receiving the rulership of the earth from his father his Geb, Osiris introduced
viticulture and agriculture to the country. All this inspired the envy of his
brother his Seth, who caused him to be drowned in the Nile, symbolizing the
flooding of the land and the new harvest. After death his god was thought to
have been dismembered, although this myth may only have arisen because so
many places claimed his remains his.
Divine mourners, and sister goddesses, Isis and Nephthys protect the djed pillar, symbol of Osiris, with their wings.
Osiris and Horus
The falcon, king of the air, was the
creature of Horus and symbol of
divine kingship. Here, this expression
of domination and triumph surmounts
the djed pillar, ancient fetish and
feature of rustic fertility rites. Given
its architectural character, the pillar
took on associations of stability and,
most interesting, become a symbol
for Osiris at the beginning of the New
Kingdom, when it was seen to
represent the god's backbone. The
raising of the pillar represented the
victory of Osiris over Seth.
Maat
Without this goddess, the whole process of
creation and constant renewal would have
been meaningless. She symbolized the
laws of existence-law, truth and the world
order- and judge were thought of as the
priests of Maat The cyclical nature of life
would have been impossible without her:
she was food and drink to Re, her her father
Of the sun god. She was represented
wearing an ostrich feather, which came to
be a symbol of truth.
Crown
The crown of the Egyptian king was looked
upon as a source of nourishment marked its
power was transferred to the ruler. Since
Egypt was a country of two lands the kings
wore the Double Crown', the pschent,
combining the symbolic flowering lotus of the
White Crown of Upper Egypt with the papyrus
plant, which represented the Red Crown of
Lower Egypt. According to the period the
crowns took different forms, from the ‘double
feathers’ crown of two upright Ostrich plumes
to the kbepresh or Blue Crown with gold
ornamentation. The royal crowns were also
seen as the eye of the sun god or as a flame
around the king.
Headdress
The close association of Egyptian deities and
animals was Constantly expressed in the
animal-headed figures in Egyptian art.
Power is Conferred by the headdress and its
form indicates the status of the wearer. A
symbol of evil among the dwellers of the
Nile Delta was Seth, a human figure with a
headdress of an indeterminate species, part
antelope, part anteater.
Vulture Headdress
When the Egyptian king went into
battle he was protected by a
vulture with a white hc address.
His own head cloth was a symbol
of the Upper Egyptian national
goddess Nekhbet, who was also
characterized by her wearing of a
vulture he address. The vulture
was, surprisingly, thought to play a
protective role in the land of the
dead. In the Late Period the bird
came to embody the female
principle, as opposed to the beete,
which was the embodiment of the
male principle. As the heraldic
animal of Upper Egypt and of the
goddess Nekhbet, the vulture
became an especially potent royal
symbol and was often represented
in royal graves. It was also the
sacred animal of the goddess Mut,
worshipped at Thebes.
Ankh
The original water, the ankwas
significance of this given by the gods to
mysterious Egyptian the king and is
symbol is not clear. usually shown in the
It has been hands of a deity or
suggested that its its associated
shape has sexual animal. This was
Connotations, one of the most
although there is powerful of all
Support for the Egyptian amulets
theory that it and retained its
represents a simple influence
sandal strap Symbol throughout ancient
of life and irresistible Egyptian history,
strength, eventually entering
representative of the Christian
life-giving attributes iconography during
of air and the Coptic period.
THE EYES OF HORUS
The right eye of the falcon god
Horus was known as the'Eye of
Re', the eye of the sun god; the
left eye, the'Eye of Horus', was
regarded as the symbol of the
moon. Of Horus it was written,
cyes he fills the universe with
light but when he shuts When he
opens his them darkness comes
into being'The leye symbol was
undoubtedly a sign of protection;
it appeared in countless articles
of jewelry, specially sacred
amulets, and two eyes were often
painted on the left side of coffins
to enable the deceased to see the
way ahead.
Cat
The image of the cat in the carliest Egyptian
symbolism was probably derived from the jungle
cat, which lived in the Nile Delta. In the New
Kingdom the male cat was seen as an incarnation of
the sun god and the she-cat as the solar eye. The
domestic cat was the sacred animal of the goddess
Bastet, usually depicted as a woman with the head
of a cat.
Scarab
Symbol of self-creation, the scarab
was believed to come directly into
being from the balls of animal dung
that it used to and larva. It was s38.
protect its associated with the sun
and therefore with life-giving warmth
and light, and pottery models of the
scarab were often placed in tombs as
a symbol of the renewal of life. In its
solar role, the scarab represented the
morning sun in its god form of Khepri.
In his beetle form, the god rose as the
morning sun from the eastern horizon.
A strong life god, Khepri also
symbolized resurrection.
FALCON
So many Egyptian
deities were associated
with the falcon that the
image of the bird came
to be virtually
synonymous with ‘god’.
Its regal flight and
aggressive qualities
made it a natural
symbol for Horus, king
of the gods, and for
divine kingship in
general. Other falcon
gods included Month,
the god of war, Re, the
sun god, and Sokar, the
god of mortuaries. The
original image of Horus
was of a falcon
protecting the heavens
and carth with
outstretched wings.
Right Bronze figure of
the falcon god Horus,
Twenty-sixth Dynasty.
Ibis
The Ibis bird was sacred to and
associated with Thoth the God of
wisdom and writing. Thoth was often
represented in the form of a man's
body with the head of the Ibis and was
the patron of the educated scribes who
were responsible for the administration
of Egypt.
Vulture
Nekhbet, in Egyptian religion, vulture
goddess who was the protector of Upper
Egypt and especially its rulers.
Nekhbet was frequently portrayed as
spreading her wings over the pharaoh while
grasping in her claw the cartouche symbol
or other emblems. She also appeared as a
woman, often with a vulture’s head,
wearing a white crown, and was sometimes
depicted suckling the pharaoh. The centre
of Nekhbet’s cult was El-K āb, but her
principal epithet made her the goddess of
Hierakonpolis (or Nekhen), the ancient town
opposite El-K āb, on the west bank of the
Nile River.
Cobra
The cobra was seen
principally as a solar
symbol, with close
connections to many
deities. One of the most
notable was the goddess
Wadjet of the city of Buto
and, through her, the cobra
came to be an emblem of
Lower Egypt.
Crocodile
The crocodile was seen as an
agent of disorder and was
associated with the evil god Seth.
So strong was crocodile imagery in
Egyptian symbolic thought that
The Egyptian Book of the Dead
contains a number of recipes for
repelling the reptiles. Yet, since it
had emerged from the waters like
the sun god, the crocodile also
had more positive Connotations as
a force for life and renewal.
In this papyrus of the Twenty-first Dynasty, a priestess drinks river water while faced with a crocodile representing the god Geb.
Lotus
As the sun rises in the morning in
the East, the water lily, the lotus,
opens itself to greet the renewal
of light. So the flower became
the symbol of the sun re-
emerging after the night and
therefore associated with the
sun god Re who is portrayed in
The Egyptian Book of the Dead
as a golden youth rising from the
lotus. Thus the flower, specially
the blue lotus, also came to
symbolize rebirth.
The portrait head
of Tutankhamun is
shown rising from
a blue lotus,
signifying his
resurrection, while
lotus inlays were a
common
decorative motif
in burial tombs.
Anubis
Usually represented in canine form-dog or jackal- Anubis
was the principal god of the dead before Osiris. He was
closely associated with the necropolis and known as ‘God
of the Hallowed Land’. Representations of Anubis were
placed in the tomb to guard the munmmification chamber
and frighten away evil.
Ba
Often inadequately translated
as 'soul', the word ba should
really be more properly thought
of as referring to a psychic
force. First ascribed to gods,
then later applied to all people,
the ba was the spiritual aspect
of the human being, which
survived death.
Artists
and their
Artwork
Giotto
b COLLE DI VESPIGNANO ?, NEAR FLORENCE, c1270; d FLORENCE, 1337
The Florentine painter and architect. Giotto di Bondone, trained under
Cimabue but, going further than his master, he replaced the Byzantine art Scrovegni Chapel
tradition with a degree of naturalism Giotto rediscovered how to make a
flat surface look three-dimensional, using artistic devices that had been
This chapel was
forgotten since the classical Greek world, however, achieving the illusion
Commissioned by a
of space, through perspective and light and shade was not an end in itself
local banker, Enrico
for Giotto. Realism was merely the tool he used for his greatest innovation
Scrovegni, and stands
his-telling a story with all its human pathos and drama. Giotto's realism
next to his palace in
was appreciated in his own lifetime, and he was famous and sought-after
Padua. Giotto's
throughout Italy. Despite the plague ravaging 14th-century Florence and
frescoes fill the
much of Europe, Italian art never looked the same after Giotto, and his
interior. 1305-06,
influence his was carried all over Europe by Simone Martini and others
Padua, Italy
The Lamentation of Christ
Giotto uses the composition to bring
out the poignancy of this scene, in
which Christ's mother and followers
mourn over his dead body. The ridge
swoops down from rght to left, and
John the Baptist's arms swept back
contribue to the downward thrust
towards the prostrate figure of
Christ. The single tree is a medieval
symbol of death and may also
represent the Tree of Knowledge in
the Garden of Eden. c1305, fresco,
Scrovegni Chapel, Padua, Italy
The Nativity
Giotto uses vivid color to make the
story of the birth of Christ come alive
The robe of Joseph, who is seated in
the foreground, is intense yellow in its
shadows and lightened with white for
highlights. c1305, frasco, Scrovegni
Chapel, Padua, Italy
Lorenzo Ghiberti
Self-portrait
b FLORENCE, c1380; d FLORENCE, 1455
North doors
Lorenzo Ghiberti's breakthrough came in 1401, when as a young and little-
Surrounded by a frieze of
known goldsmith he defeated Brunelleschi (opposite) and five others in a
foliage, the 28 relief panels
competition set by the Cloth Importers' Guild of Florence. The prize was a
illustrates a cycle of New
commission to decorate the North doors of the city's Baptistery, situationd
Testament subjects.
in front of the cathedral The reliefs for the pair of bronze doors took him 23 Ghiberti's panels were
years to complete. The result- closer to International Gothic than modelled on Andrea
Pisano's earlier doors for
Renaissance in its elegant lines, rhythmic drapery, and detailed landscape-
the Baptistery. Each panel
was so successful that the guild commissioned a further pair of doors for
is in the Gothic shape of a
the East entrance. Dubbed the "Gates of Paradise" by Michelangelo, they
quatrefoil. Consisting of
were ahead of their time for their clever spacing of figures within varying
four lobes and points -a
depths of relief. Ghiberti moved on from his Gothic roots in his designs for tricky space to fill. The
the second pair of doors. His later reliefs put him in the vanguard of the decoration surrounding the
panels incorporates the
Renaissance use of perspective. While the doors took up most of Ghiberti's
heads of prophets and
career, he claimed that "few works of importance were made in our city
sibyls and Ghibertis self-
that were not designed or devised by my hand" Indeed, some of the best
portrait. 1424, part-gilded
artists of the day trained in his workshop.
bronze, Baptistery,
Florence, Italy
Andrea del Verrocchio
b FLORENCE, c1435; d VENICE, 1488
Considered the finest sculptor of the Italian Renaissance between Donatello and Michelangelo, Andrea di Cioni adopted the nickname
Verrocchio (true eye) from the goldsmith he was originally apprenticed with. Little is known of his early life his, and few of his paintings his have
survived, although his studio his was well known at the time and attracted such distinguished students as Perugino and Leonardo da Vinci. After
Donatello's death in 1466, Verrocchio came under the patronage of the Medici. He died in Venice while working on his masterpiece, a huge
equestrian statue of Bartolommeo Colleoni. It was unveiled in 1496, eight years after his death.
Lorenzo de' Medici Equestrian monument
to Bartolomeo
Colleoni
Though some scholars
doubt Verrocchio's own
hand, the Sculptor Verrocchio's finest work,
captures his patron's this bronze statue of a
nobility. 1480, terra-cotta, Venetian general was
Palazzo Medici-Riccardi, completed by assistants
Florence, Italy after the sculptor's death.
It has a powerful sense of
movement, with the rider
standing in his stirups and
the horse turning. one hoof
raised. 1483-90, gilded
bronze, height 395cm,
Campo S. Giovanni e
Paolo, Venice, Italy
Sandro Botticelli
b FLORENCE, c1445; d FLORENCE, 1510
Portrait from Vasari's Lives
Although Sandro Botticelli was highly successful at the peak of his career, he spent the last decade of his life in obscurity, considered
outmoded compared to the new generation of artists such as Leonardo. Botticelli's work was eventually rediscovered by the Pre-Raphaelites
(pp.332-333) almost 500 years later, and he is now one of the best-loved painters of 15th-century Italy. Botticelli developed his graceful and
ornamental linear style, harming back to elements of the Gothic period and ignoring anatomical realism, during his apprenticeship with Filippo
Lippi. In his large-scale paintings, including the famous Primavera and Birth of Venus, he treated mythological subjects with as much
seriousness as religious themes. Although Botticellis most famous for his secular subjects, his late years were almost entirely devoted to
religious themes, influenced by the Dominican friar and preacher Savonarola.Other than the two years in Rome spent on the frescoes of the
Sistine Chapel, Botticelli remained in Florence all his life.
The Birth of Venus
Perhaps Botticelli's best-known
painting, it shows Venus's arrival
on the shores of Cythera, driven
by Zephyr and Aura. The
statuesque goddess of Love
stands demurely on a scallop
shell, her hair blown by the wind,
as she is welcomed by the
dancing Hora of Spring. The
painting was probably designed
to hang with Primavera (see
pp.108-111) c1485, tempera on
canvas, 180x280cm, Uffizi,
Florence, Italy
Leonardo da Vinci
b VINCI, 1452; d CLOUX, NEAR AMBOISE, 1519
Leonardo is now famous for the range and variety of his talents,
embracing science as well as art. However, most of his scientific
Work his retained hidden in his notebooks for centuries, and his
Contemporaries his knew him primarily as a painter. His output of
paintings was small (and he left several works unfinished), partly
because his mind his was constantly roaming to new interests, but
in spite of this he was immensely influential. He is regarded as the
main creator of the majestic High Renaissance style, which moved
away from the emphasis on line and decorative detail
characteristic of so much 15th-century Italian painting. Although
no-one painted detail more exquisitely than Leonardo, he combined
this with grandeur of form and unity of atmosphere, in part
achieved through his wonderfully subtle handling of light and
shade. At times Leonardo led an unsettled existence, but his career
his was divided mainly between Florence and Milan. He spent his
final years in France as an honoured guest of Francois I. By the time
of his death he had already acquired a legendary aura.
Head of a Young Woman with Tousled Hair (La
Scapigliata)
The subject of this beautifully executed study is unclear. It has
some similarities with Leonardo's portrayals of Leda. but could
also bea study for the head of the Madonna. c1508, gouache
on panel, 27x21cm, Galleria Nazionale, Parma, Italy
The Annunciation
Nothing is known of the circumstances
in which this work was created, but it is
generally regarded as Leonardo's
earliest surviving independent painting.
Probably dating from soon after he
Completed his apprenticeship with
Verrocchio. The angel's wings (which
look as if they are based on those of a
bird) and the closely observed
botanical detail indicate his scientific
curiosity. c1472-75, tempera on W0od,
98 x 217cm, Uffizi, Florence
Mona Lisa (La Gioconda)
This painting is now so famous that it is difficult to imagine how fresh and
innovative it must have looked to Leonardo's Contemporaries. The relaxed
naturalism of the pose, with the hands casualy overlapping, and the intriguing
subtlety of the expression would have made most earlier portraits look stiff. The
mysterious landscape, too, differs greatly from the plain background
characteristic of "15th century portraits. C1503-05 oil on panel, 77 x 53cm,
Louvre, Paris, France
The Mona Lisa bears a strong resemblance to many Renaissance depictions of
the Virgin Mary, who was at that time seen as an ideal for womanhood. The
woman sits markedly upright in a "pozzetto" armchair with her arms folded, a
sign of her reserved posture. Her gaze is fixed on the observer. The woman
appears alive to an unusual extent, which Leonardo achieved by his method of
not drawing outlines (sfumato). The soft blending creates an ambiguous mood
"mainly in two features: the corners of the mouth, and the corners of the eyes".
The depiction of the sitter in three-quarter profile is similar to late 15th-century
works by Lorenzo di Credi and Agnolo di Domenico del Mazziere. Zöllner notes
that the sitter's general position can be traced back to Flemish models and that
"in particular the vertical slices of columns at both sides of the panel had
precedents in Flemish portraiture." Woods-Marsden cites Hans Memling's
portrait of Benedetto Portinari (1487) or Italian imitations such as Sebastiano
Mainardi's pendant portraits for the use of a loggia, which has the effect of
mediating between the sitter and the distant landscape, a feature missing from
Leonardo's earlier portrait of Ginevra de' Benci.
The painting was one of the first portraits to depict the sitter in front of an
imaginary landscape, and Leonardo was one of the first painters to use aerial
perspective. The enigmatic woman is portrayed seated in what appears to be
an open loggia with dark pillar bases on either side. Behind her, a vast
landscape recedes to icy mountains. Winding paths and a distant bridge give
only the slightest indications of human presence. Leonardo has chosen to place
the horizon line not at the neck, as he did with Ginevra de' Benci, but on a level
with the eyes, thus linking the figure with the landscape and emphasizing the
mysterious nature of the painting.
The Last Supper
The work is assumed to have been started
around 1495–96 and was commissioned as
part of a plan of renovations to the church
and its convent buildings by Leonardo's
patron Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan.
The Last Supper portrays the reaction given
by each apostle when Jesus said one of
them would betray him. All twelve apostles
have different reactions to the news, with
various degrees of anger and shock. The
apostles were identified by their names,
using an unsigned, mid-sixteenth-century
fresco copy of Leonardo's Cenacolo.[12]
Before this, only Judas, Peter, John and Jesus
had been positively identified.
The Lady with the
Ermine (Cecilia
Gallerani)
Madonna of the Rocks
The mistress of Ludovico
The Virgin Jesus, the infant St
Sforza is innovatively
John, and an angel are arranged
depicted in three-quarter
in a pyramid-a stable
view. She turns as if
Composition. The unusual grotto
Someone, perhaps Sforza
setting Indulges Leonardo's
himself, has just entered
fascination with rocks and water,
the room. The ermine was
which stemmed from his
a symbol of purity. c1490,
birthplace of Vinci, a town built
oil on wood, 55x40cm,
above a river gorge, c1483-85,
Czartoryski Museum,
oil on panel transferred to
Krakow, Poland
canvas, 199x122cm, Louvre, Paris,
France
Michelangelo Buonarroti
b CAPRESE, NEAR AREZZ0, 1475; d ROME, 1564
Michelangelo's titanic career lasted virtually three- quarters of a century
and for most of that time he was unchallenged as the greatest artist in
Europe, his contemporaries looking on him with awe. He regarded himself
primarily as a sculptor, but he was equally outstanding as a painter,
draughtsman, and architect. His career was divided mainly between
Florence, where he was much employed by the Medici family, and Rome,
where he produced most of his greatest works in the service of the
papacy, particularly the decoration of the Sistine Chapel and the
rebuilding of St Peter's In both painting and sculpture Michelangelo
showed an unequalled mastery in portraying the nude human figure and
also an intense spirituality that reflected his own devout way of life. He
concentrated almost entirely on deeply serious subjects, treated with
superhuman beauty and grandeur, and he was unconcerned with the
anecdotal or the ornamental. In spite of his huge success and fame, he
lived modestly, completely devoted to religion and art and working
tirelessly (a contemporary biographer said that to save time he sometimes
went to bed with his boots on). His work his was immensely influential not
only on his contemporaries but also on generations of later artists.
Holy Family
(Doni Tondo)
Moses
This is Michelangelo's only known
completed panel painting. It was
This imposing figure is part of
commissioned by Agnolo Doni, a
the tomb of Pope Julius II. The
wealthy Florentine weaver,
tomb was Commissioned in
heence its name "Doni Tondo"
1505 and was conceived on an
tondo is Italian for "" round "and
immense scale, but when finally
the word is applied to circular
erected in 1545 it was in much
paintings such as this). sheer
reduced form. c1513-15,
polish of his technique is masterly.
marble, height 235 cm. S.
The frame is original and was
Pietro in Vincoli, Rome, Italy
perhaps designed by the artist.
C1503-04, oil on panel, diameter
120cm, Uffizi, Florence, Italy
David
This gigantic figure of the
biblical character David
came to symbolize the
new Republic of Florence
in its strength and
potential for powerful
action. 1501-04, marble,
height 5.18m, Galleria
dell'Accademia, Florence
Pietà
Michelangelo made his name with this work. When
critics said the Virgin looked too young to have a fully
grown Son, he said that sin was what aged people.
1498-99, marble, height 174cm, St Peter's, Vatican City
Raphael
b URBINO, 1483; B d ROME, 1520
Whereas Leonardo and Michelangelo are regarded as the great innovators of the High Renaissance, Raphael- the third member of the
triumvirate that dominated the period-was the great synthesizer, building on the ideas of others and blending they into a supremely graceful
unity. The balanced character of his art his reflected his personality for unlike Leonardo and Michelangelo-both of whom tended to be Solitary
and obsessive-Raphael was renowned for his charm and social poise. Still, he was extremely hardworking, producing a large and varied output
in his short life From an early age Raphael enjoyed a career of continual success: he was working independently when he was only 17 and was
summoned to Rome by Pope Julius || when he was 25. For the rest of his life he was employed mainly on major projects for the papacy. Most of
his work his was on religious subjects, but he was also an outstanding portraitist and a leading architect His work his become a model and
inspiration to other artists for centuries.
The School of Athens
It was painted between 1509 and
1511 as a part of Raphael's
commission to decorate the rooms
now known as the Stanze di
Raffaello, in the Apostolic Palace in
the Vatican.
The School of Athens represents all
the greatest mathematicians,
philosophers and scientists from
classical antiquity gathered
together sharing their ideas and
learning from each other. These
figures all lived at different times,
but here they are gathered
together under one roof.
Jean Goujon
b NORMANDY ?, c1510; d BOLOGNA, c1565
Very little is known of the early life of Jean Goujon, who ranks as one of the finest and most distinctive sculptors of 16th-century Framce. His
earliest known work was in Rouen, France, in 1540, but it is possible that he had travelled to Italy before then.
As a Huguenot Protestant, Goujon was at a disadvantage in Catholic France. However, he gained highly prestigious commissions in Paris,
particularly working with the architect Pierre Lescot on the sculptural decoration of the Louvre in 1546. In 1562, Goujon fled from the anti-
Protestant atmosphere of Paris, and is believed to have died in Bologna a few years later.
Reliefs from the Fountain of the Innocence
The relief panels from the Fountain
des innocence depict nymphs who
personify the rivers of France, they
are considered to be Goujon's
masterpieces. 1547-49, marble,
Louvre, Paris, France
Andrea Pozzo
b TRENTO, 1642; d VIENNA, 1709
Andrea Pozzo is a perfect example of religious faith wedded to art.
A painter and architect, he became a lay brother in the Roman
Catholic Jesuit order in his twenties After this, he completed
numerous projects for Jesuit churches, specially in and around Rome, Glory of
His masterpiece is the Glory of St Ignatius Loyola and the Missionary St.Ignatius
Work of the Jesuits in the church of S. Ignazio, Rome-one of the most Loyola and
breathtaking ceiling paintings ever created. It shows the formidable the
skill with perspective that lay at the heart of Pozzo's work In 1703 Missionary
Pozzo moved to Vienna, where he spent the rest of his life, mainly
work of
engaged on Jesuit projects. He wrote a major treatise on
the Jesuits
perspective, which was published in Latin and Italian in two volumes
Here, the
in 1693 and 1700 and was soon translated into other languages.
perspective
scheme sweeps
the viewers eye
up to the single
vanishing paint
at the central
figure of Christ.
Guardian Angel 1688-94, fresco,
vault of nave,
Even in this relatively small work, S. Ignazio,
Pozzo manages to convey a vigorous Rome, Italy
sense of movement typical of
Baroque art c1685-94, oil on canvas,
173x122cm. Musée des Beaux-Arts.
Caen, France
Pietro da Cortona
b CORTONA, 1596; d ROME, 1669
Painter, architect, and designer, Cortona ranks second only to Bernini as the most versatile genius of Italian Baroque art. Like Bernini, he spent
most of his career in Rome, but he also carried out major works in Florence. As a painter he specialized in grandiose fresco decoration in
palatial interiors: his most famous works in this vein were produced for the Barberini family in Rome (its members included Pope Urban VIlI)
and for the ruling Medici family in Florence. He often combined his frescoes with elaborate stucco ornamentation, creating a highly
sumptuous effect. Such treatment was much imitated, for example at Louis XIV's palace at Versailles. In addition to his large-scale
decorative schemes Cortona produced many smaller paintings (mainly on religious and mythological subjects) and designed tapestries and
festival decorations. He was also one of the greatest architects of his time, even though he claimed that architecture was merely a
recreation for him.
Romulus and Remus Given
Shelter by Faustulus
Expressive gestures, rich colors, and
majestic figures are characteristic
elements of Cortona's painting.
c1643, oil on Canvas, 2.5x2.6m,
Louvre, Paris, France
Sala di Apollo (detail)
The combination of painted image and
elaborate stuccowork in ceilings such as this
was highly influential.1640s, fresco PalazZo
Pitti Florence, Italy
Allegory of Divine
Providence and Barberini's
Power
Cortona's most famous work as a
painter glorifies Pope Urban VIll and
his aristocratic Barberini family.
1633-39, fresco, approx 25x15m,
Gran Salone Palazzo Barberini, Rome
Italy
Peter Paul Rubens
b SIEGEN, WESTPHALIA, 1577; d ANTWERP, 1640
"Prince of painters and painter of princes" as he was described in his lifetime, Rubens was the greatest and most influential Baroque artist in
northern Europe. The huge demand for his work could be satisfied only with the help of a workshop of pupils and assistants. Cultured,
cosmopolitan, and a gifted linguist, Rubens was employed by some of the greatest patrons in Europe. He was botha famous international
figure and a devoted family man, and his touching portraits of family members are as celebrated as his spectacular religious, mythological,
and historical paintings.
Rubens was born in Germany (where his father was a refugee from religious strife), but he returned to the family home in Antwerp when he
was 10 and spent most of his life there. However, his powerful style was shaped largely in Italy, where he was based from 1600 to 1608.
Although his artistic Output was vast and varied, Rubens also worked as a diplomat, and he was justly proud of helping to negotiate peace
between England and Spain. The kings of both countries knighted him.
An Autumn Landscape with a View of Het Steen in the
Early Morning
This magnificent panoramic landscape shows the artists country estate
at Steen, south of Antwerp, which he bought in 1635 and where he
enjoyed private times away from official duties The picture was painted
for pleasure and remained in Rubens's possession until he died. c1636,
oil on panel. 131x229cm, National Gallery, London, UK
The Rape of the Daughters of Leucippus
The Greek myth of the abduction of Helaera and Phoebe,
daughters of King Leucippus, by the demi-god twins Castor
and Pollux has been seen as an allegory for the soul's
transport into heaven. The winged cupids holding the
horses'reins may signify that lust is reined in by love. c1618,
0il on canvas, 224 × 211cm, Alte Pinakothek, Munich,
Germany
Marie de Médicis
Arriving at
Marseilles
The ex-Queen of France
commissioned Rubens to
glorify her in a vast cycle of
24 paintings. The artist used
poetic licence and
mythological figures to lend
her her life her heroic
grandeur 1622-25, oil on
Le Chapeau de Paille
canvas, 394x295cm, Louvre,
This chaming, informal portrait may depict the sister of
Paris, France
the woman who later became Rubens's second wife Her
rosy, translucent skin tones reflect the red of the silk
sleeves. Reynolds said that Rubens's figures "look as
though they fed on roses". c1622-25, oil on panel,
79x54cm, National Gallery London, UK
Jan Vermeer
b DELFT, 1632; d DELFT, 1675
After centuries of obscurity, Vermeer is now celebrated as one of the areatest of all Dutch artists. He is renowned for his serene, beautifully
composed and lit, and uncannily realistic paintings. His subject matter his is usually a woman at home in a Dutch interior, writing, reading,
playing a musical instrument -or simply posing - or a servant engaged in a domestic activity such as pouring milk. He was "discovered" in 1866
by the French writer Théophile Thoré, who called him "the Sphinx of Delft" because so little was known about him. There are few documented
facts about Vermeer's life, and only about 35 paintings are known to be by him. Vermeer was the son of an innkeeper and art dealer in Delft,
and he seems to have lived all his life in the city. Nothing is known of his youth or training his until he became a member of the painters'guild
in 1653- the same year that he married Catharina Bolnes, a Catholic. The couple had 15 children In his later years, Vermeer suffered dire
financial hardship, and he died in debt in Delft at the age of only 43 a servant engaged in
View of Delft
One of only two exterior views by Vermeer, this picture of his
hame town is a celebrated masterpiece of lighting, atmosphere,
and almost photographic realism. As townsfolk chat an the
quayside in the foraground, the busy skyline and clouids are
reflected in the gilistening water. c1660-61, oil on canvas. 96 x
117cm Mauritshuis, The Hague, Netherlands
The Milkmaid
The painting is strikingly illusionistic,
conveying not just details but a
sense of the weight of the woman
and the table. "The light, though
Girl with a Pearl Earring bright, doesn't wash out the rough
texture of the bread crusts or
Against a dark background, a girl
flatten the volumes of the maid's
turns to look, most questioningly,
thick waist and rounded shoulders",
towards the viewr. This exquisite
wrote Karen Rosenberg, an art critic
painting gains its effect through
for The New York Times. Yet with
strikingly simple composition, pearly
half of the woman's face in shadow,
lighting, and the muted harmony of
it is "impossible to tell whether her
yellow and blue. c1665-66, oil on
downcast eyes and pursed lips
canvas, 44x39cm Mauritshuis, The
express wistfulness or
Hague, Netherlands
concentration," she wrote.
The Art of Painting
Vermeer painted this picture (also known as The Artist's Studio) in his 30s, and, destroy dire financial problems, he never sold this masterpiece-
perhaps keeping it as a showpiece for prospective clients. It is larger than most of his paintings his and uses symbolism and allegory to comment
on the status of art and artists in the 17th century.
This illusionistic painting is one of Vermeer's most famous. In 1868 Thoré-Bürger, known today for his rediscovery of the work of painter Johannes
Vermeer, regarded this painting as his most interesting. Svetlana Alpers describes it as unique and ambitious; Walter Liedtke "as a virtuoso display
of the artist's power of invention and execution, staged in an imaginary version of his studio. According to Albert Blankert "No other painting so
flawlessly integrates naturalistic technique, brightly illuminated space, and a complexly integrated composition."
The painting depicts an artist painting a woman dressed in blue posing as a model in his studio. The subject is standing by a window and a large
map of the Low Countries hangs on the wall behind.
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
b MOGLIANO, NEAR VENICE, 1720; d ROME, 1778
The son of a stonemason and master builder, Piranesi trained as an architect in the workshop of his uncle, Matteo Lucchesi, in Venice He also
studied with Carlo Zucchi, learning the techniques of printmaking and perspective, Armed with these skills, Piranesi moved to Rome in 1740,
where he was employed by the Venetian ambassador. Shortly after his arrival his, he also worked for the Valeriani brothers, who were known
for their stage designs and paintings of ruins. This very varied training would stand Piranesi in good stead in his later career. In Rome, his
principal source of income his came from his prints of the city's splendours, aimed at connoisseurs on the Grand Tour. With his architect's
eye, he portrayed the antiquities with precision and a captivating sense of grandeur. Piranesi also tackled the popular theme of the
capriccio (fantasy), in his Imaginary Prisons series. These extraordinary etchings, part stage set and part grotesque fantasy, have proved to
be one of his most lasting achievements.
The Well
This is one of the
nightmarish visions
from Piranesi's
famous Imaginary
Prisons. 1761, etching,
40 x 55cm,
Calcographia dello
Stato, Rome, Italy
The Colosseum
From Piranesi's Antiquities of Rome. 1756, etching, 13x27cm, Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, London, UK
Antonio Canova
b POSSAGN0, 1757; d VENICE, 1822
The greatest and most successful sculptor of the Neoclassical era, Canova worked initially in Venice, but he made his breakthrough in Rome.
His His Theseus and the Minotaur (1781-83) brought him to the public's attention, helping him to win prestigious commissions to design two
papal tombs. After this, Canova's reputation was made He was emploved by many of the crowned heads of Europe, as well as the Church,
although his most spectacular pieces his were probably the nude statues of Napoleon and his sister. Canova was both versatile and original.
He took an unusual interest in the display of his sculptures. His Cupid and Psyche, for example, was designed to be rotated and viewed in
subdued, coloured lighting. Similarly, he preferred to show his work his to clients by candlelight.
Pauline Borghese as Venus
This daring sculpture of Napoleon's
sister was never put on public display,
t was only viewed by candlelight, by
friends of the family 1805-07, marble,
length 201cm, Galleria Borghese,
Rome, Italy
Cupid and Psyche
In one of Canova's most tender sculptures, Cupid revives his
Swooning lover with a kiss. 1787-93, marble, height 155cm,
Louvre, Paris, France
Hercules and Lichas
Mortally wounded, Hercules takes revenge on the youth who
has unwittingly poisoned him. 1795-1802, marble, height
350cm, Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna, Rome, Italy
Benjamin West
b SPRINGFIELD, PENNSYLVANIA 1738; d LONDON, 1820
Described as the "Father of American painting" Benjamin West was the
most celebrated historical painter of his day, and the first American
painter to Win an international reputation. West enjoyed early success
as a portrait painter in his home country. He then studied in Europe,
The
absorbing influences from Renaissance, Baroque, and Contemporary Woma
n
artists before settling in London, where he remained for the rest of his
Clothed
life. His colonial charm His introduced patrons and he quickly gained with
the Sun
both popular acclaim and the friendship of Joshua Reynolds, the most
Fleeth
influential of the 18th-century English painters. Royal patronage from
the
followed, enabling West to give up portraits and concentrate on the Persec
historical, religious, and mythological subjects that became his forte.
ution
of the
Although West never returned to the United States, he was a popular Dragon
mentor to visiting American artists, and his work his profoundly
influenced the development of American art in the early 19th century.
Death on the Pale Horse
This apocalyptic vision marked a departure from Neoclassicism and heralded the emotional style of the Romantics. 1796, oil on canvas, 59x129cm,
Detroit Institute of Arts, US
William Penn's Treaty with the Indians
Depicting the foundation of Pennsylvania in 1681,
this painting became part of American mass
culture, appearing on everything from Curtains to
cards.1771-72, oil on canvas, 192x274cm
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia, US
Francisco de Goya
b FUENDETODOS, 1746; B d BORDEAUX, 1828
The Spanish painter and printnmaker Goya was one of the
outstanding Tigures of the Romantic movement. His talent his
talent was slow in showing itself, however, and it wasn't until well
into his thirties that he began to produce work that set him apart
from his contemporaries. By the 1780s, his skills his as a portraitist
were gradually in demand. The results were both spectacular and
daring-the artist made little attempt to flatter his distinguished
sitters-but they were well received, as a succession of honors was
heaped upon him. Alongside these commercial efforts, Goya
worked privately on more ambitious themes, in which he gave full
rein to his imagination Beginning with Los Caprichos, his first great
series of prints, and Culminating in the magnificent Black Paintings
of his final years, he portrayed his own dark vision of the human
soul, with its petty obsessions, its cruelty, and its folly. Goya was
an exceptionally versatile artist whose output was vast, leaving
The Parasol
about 700 surviving paintings, 300 prints, and some 1,000 drawings.
Goya produced a series of ten decorative Scenes designed as
models for the royal tapestry workshop. The finished articles were
destined for a palace dining-room. 1777, oil on canvas, 104x152cm,
Prado, Madrid Spain
The Naked Maja
Female nudes were very rare in Spain and with good reason. The
Inquisition denounced this famous example as "obscene" and
summoned the artist to appear before a tribunal, to disclose the
identity of the patron and explain the painting's purpose. c1800, oil
on canvas, 98 × 191 cm, Prado, Madrid, Spain
Saturn Devouring One of His Children The Clothed Maja
This is the most gruesome of Goya's Black Paintings. The Together with its nude companion piece, this painting was
Roman god Saturn ate his children because of a prophecy that commissioned by Manuel Godoy, a royal minister. The maja
they would usurp him. Goya placed the picture in his own ("fashionable young woman") is thought to be the Duchess of Alba.
dining room as a macabre joke. 1821-23, oil on canvas, c1800, oil on canvas, 95x 190cm, Prado, Madrid, Spain
146x83cm, Prado, Madrid, Spain
Georges Seurat
b PARIS, 1859; d PARIS, 1891
Georges Seurat had a brief but astonishing career, devoting his main efforts to a few very large paintings. While studying at the Ecole des
BeauxArts in Paris, he attempted to develop a theoretical system for painting that could take Impressionism to a new level and create a template
for future artists. Seurat's technique, which he called Divisionism (more commonly known as Pointillism), was based on scientific principles of
Color complenmentarity. It involved applying small dots of primary color directly to the canvas, so that their exaggerated contrast would merge
more vividly in the viewer's eye. All Seurat's paintings were based on formal ideas of composition, and were prepared meticulously from
numerous studies. He completed around 60 studies for his masterpiece Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte (see pp.364-67).
Study for "The Channel at Gravelines, Evening"
Seurat's use of mosaic-like blobs of color is typical of his oil sketches
Bathers at Asnières
and contrasts with the smaller dots used in the final work. The
shimmering surface and calming influence of horizontal lines convey
Bathers at Asnières is an 1884 oil on canvas painting by the French a strong sense of atmosphere. 1890, oil on panel, Musée de
artist Georges Pierre Seurat, the first of his two masterpieces on the l'Annonciade, St Tropez, France
monumental scale. The canvas is of a suburban, placid Parisian
riverside scene. Isolated figures, with their clothes piled sculpturally on
the riverbank, together with trees, austere boundary walls and
buildings, and the River Seine are presented in a formal layout. A
combination of complex brushstroke techniques, and a meticulous
application of contemporary colour theory bring to the composition a
sense of gentle vibrancy and timelessness.
A Sunday on La Grande Jatte
“Bedlam,” “scandal,” and “hilarity” were among the epithets used to
describe what is now considered Georges Seurat’s greatest work, and one
of the most remarkable paintings of the nineteenth century, when it was first
exhibited in Paris. Seurat labored extensively over A Sunday on La Grande
Jatte—1884, reworking the original as well as completing numerous
preliminary drawings and oil sketches (the Art Institute has one such sketch
and two drawings). With what resembles scientific precision, the artist
tackled the issues of color, light, and form. Inspired by research in optical
and color theory, he juxtaposed tiny dabs of colors that, through optical
blending, form a single and, he believed, more brilliantly luminous hue. To
The Channel at Gravelines, Evening make the experience of the painting even more intense, he surrounded the
canvas with a frame of painted dashes and dots, which he, in turn, enclosed
The Channel at Gravelines, Evening is a Post-Impressionist Oil on with a pure white wood frame, similar to the one with which the painting is
Canvas Painting created by Georges Seurat in 1890. It lives at the exhibited today. The very immobility of the figures and the shadows they
cast makes them forever silent and enigmatic. Like all great masterpieces,
MOMA, Museum of Modern Art in New York. The image is in the Public
La Grande Jatte continues to fascinate and elude.
Domain, and tagged Boats, Divisionism and Pointillism.
Vincent van Gogh
bZUNDERT, BRABANT, 1853; d AUVERS-sUR-OISE, 1890
The son of a Dutch pastor, van Gogh worked for an art dealer, as a teacher, and as an evangelical preacher before devoting himself to art
with the same zealous intensity that he had brought to his preaching. Ina brief career lasting only about a decade, he created some 1,000
paintings. He evolved a strikingly original style, in which bold colors and forceful brushstrokes express intense emotions. One of the key figures
of Postimpressionism, he had a huge influence on modern art. Vincent's arrival in Paris in 1886 triggered a turning point in his painting. Under
the influence of Impressionism and Japanese prints, his dark pictures of peasants were replaced by the colorful paintings for which he is
remembered. Van Gogh suffered severely from mental instability, and committed suicide at the age of 37
The Bedroom at Arles
This painting shows van Gogh's bedroom at
the Yellow House, which he rented in Arles.
It was one of his favorite Compositions his
and he hoped it expresSsed "absolute
restfulness". He painted three versions of it:
the first was made in 1888 as he awaited
Gauguin's arrival, while this is one of two
Copies made in St Rémy asylum. 1889, oil on
canvas, 73x91cm, Art Institute of Chicago, US
Sunflowers
During the summer of 1888, while he eagerly awaited
Gauguin's arrival in Arles, van Gogh painted five
canvases of sunflowers as decorations for the Yellow
House. The paintings are created almost entirely of
yellow, a color that signified happiness for him and
embodied the sunshine and heat of Provence. 1888, oil
on canvas, 92 x 73 cm. National Gallery, London, UK
Self-portrait with Bandaged Ear
Painted just two weeks after he had mutilated his
ear, this dignified self-portrait shows the artist
resolved to get back to work, wrapped up against
the cold, flooded by his easel and a Japanese print.
1889, oil on canvas, 60x49cm, Courtauld Gallery,
London, UK
The Starry Night
Stars explode like fireworks in a night sky that pulsates with wave-like energy, while the twisted silhouette of a cypress tree flames upwards from
the landscape below. A mixture of observation, memory, and imagination, The Starry Night expresses van Gogh's intense response to nature. The
painting Contains elements of the actual French Provencal landscape, but the village scene is an invention, with the church spire inspired by
memories of van Gogh's native Holland. It is one of several "starry night" pictures that van Gogh painted.
In creating this image of the night sky—dominated by the bright moon at right and Venus at center left—van Gogh heralded modern painting’s
new embrace of mood, expression, symbol, and sentiment. Inspired by the view from his window at the Saint-Paul-de-Mausole asylum in Saint-
Rémy, in southern France, where the artist spent twelve months in 1889–90 seeking reprieve from his mental illnesses, The Starry Night (made in
mid-June) is both an exercise in observation and a clear departure from it. The vision took place at night, yet the painting, among hundreds of
artworks van Gogh made that year, was created in several sessions during the day, under entirely different atmospheric conditions. The
picturesque village nestled below the hills was based on other views—it could not be seen from his window—and the cypress at left appears much
closer than it was. And although certain features of the sky have been reconstructed as observed, the artist altered celestial shapes and added a
sense of glow.
The Church at Auvers
After leaving St Rémyasylum,
van Gogh moved to Auvers, a
village north of Paris, in May
1890. He worked furiously
averaging one painting a day,
before shooting himself two
months later. This painting,
with its intense colors and
twisted shapes, was one of his
final works. 1890, oil on
canvas, 94 x 74cm, Musée
d'Orsay, Paris, France
Edvard Munch
b LOTEN, 186; d OSLO, 1944
The Norwegian painter and printmaker is
regarded as one of modern art's most
influential and electrifying protagonists. The Sick Child
Munch suffered from depression and
mental illness but used them to produce
Munch described this
extraordinary, often frenzied, work. His
haunting painting as "the
pessimistic view of life was Conveyed in
breakthrough in my art"
bold colors and strong lines, anticipating
and painted six versions of
Expressionism and opening up exciting
it. Inspired by his sister's
new avenues for art. He covered
death, it Conveys the grief
existential themes such as life, death, and
and stillness of the
despair ina self-described attempt to
sickroom. Munch
"dissect souls" Munch began painting in
engraved the layers of
Oslo, but his sojourns in Paris exposed him
paint with a spatula to
to Post-Impressionist and Symbolist
create the effect of
influences, specifically the work of
gazing through a film of
Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin, and
tears. 1885-6, oil on
he began using Swirling brushwork,
canvas, 120x119cm,
simplified forms, and non-naturalistic
Nasjonalgalleriet, Oslo,
color to Convey emotion. Although
Norway
Munch realized that his genius his owed
much to his turbulent mind his, a
breakdown in 1908 inspired a change of
style, as he determined to lead a calmer
life. His output his, however, retained
prodigious. Also an acclaimed
printmaker, Munch's woodcuts-often
executed in color-helped to revive the
technique in the 20th century.
The Scream
Munch's most famous
work is brilliantly
Composed to create
maximum tension. The
shrieking colors and
violent juxtap0sition of
curved and straight
lines all flow towards
the central, screaming
figure, as though the
environment itself is
Madonna
expressing emotion
through the distorted
A compelling image of sensual ecstasy and
death-head. The
transcendence, Munch's masterpiece
painting may have
straddles 19th- and 20th-century art. Part of
been inspired by the
his Frieze of Life series, it represents the
Krakatoa eruption of
miracle of life. Munch's aim was to portray
1883, which Munch
Woman from a lover's viewpoint, at the
likened to "a great,
moment of conception. 1894, oil on canvas,
infinite scream"
90 x 71 cm. Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany
passing through
nature. 1893 oil
tempera, and pastel
on cardboard, 91
x74cm, National
Gallery, Oslo, Norway
Käthe Kollwitz
b KONIGSBERG, 1867; d MORITZBURG, 1945
Trained in Munich and Berlin, Ká the Kollwitz chose to devote herself to drawing and printmaking. Vehemently opposed to the social conditions
she witnessed in the poorest quarters of Berlin, where she lived and worked alongside her doctor husband, she placed the oppressed at the
center of her work. In numerous drawings and prints she portrayed both their personal tragedy and their suffering. She visited the Soviet
Union in 1927. Deeply concerned with women's rights, she Contributed drawings to a society protecting unmarried mothers. In 1913, she helped
found Berlin's Women's Art Union. Though she was opposed to Nazism, the regime did not declare her work her degenerate, but used it to
promote their own cause, having first removed her name.
Death Seizing a Woman
A mother clings to her child to
save it from death. Kollwitz
lost a son in World Warl and
often saw death and despair in
her husband's surgery. 1934,
lithograph print, private
collection
March of Weavers
This etching is the fourth of six
in a series entitled A Weavers'
Revolt and was based on the
social drama The Weavers
(1892), by German author
Gerhart Hauptmann. It
depicts an uprising of Silesian
workers during a famine in
1844.1897, etching, 27x36cm,
Stadtmuseum, Munich,
Germany
Pablo Picasso
b MALAGA, 1881; d MOUGINS, 1973
The prodigious career of painter and sculptor Pablo Picasso provides the backbone of 20th-century art His fame owed as much to his
constant innovation as to the critical and financial success he enjoyed. Picasso proveda precocious art student, winning academic
competitions by the age of 15. As a young artist he moved to Barcelona before settling in Paris. There, he mixed in bohemian circles and met
the artist Georges Braque. Between 1909 and 1914, the two of them were the leading figures in the development of Cubism- they took further
than any of their Contemporaries the fragmentation of form, the collapsing of perspective, and the playing with reality and illusion, which
were all aspects of this complex and enormously influential movement. For a while after World War I, Picasso took part in the widespread
revival of classicism, a tendency usually associated with political and artistic restraint. He surprised again in 1925 when he associated himself
with the Surrealists, then the most extreme wing of the Parisian avant-garde. After World War II he settled in Vallauris, where he took up
ceramics. Notorious for his womanizing His, Picasso made his wives and mistresses a frequent subject for his art. His work his went through
several recognizable phases, often triggered by his mood or environment. Never adopting a stvle or movement for long, Picasso cannibalized
ideas from everywhere-medieval and African art, bullfights, mythology, Old Masters- reprocessing them through his uniquely humorous and
original vision.
La Vie
This deeply personal and
symbolic painting
entitledLife is haunted by
the suicide of Picasso's
close friend, Casagemas,
over an unhappy affair. It
offers a commentary on
love, death, and relations
between the sexes. 1903,
oil on canvas, 196 x 129 cm,
Cleveland Museum of Art,
Ohio, US
Portrait of Dora Maar
Picasso met the
Les Demoiselles d'Avignon photographer Dora Maar in
1936. She soon appeared in a
This disturbing depiction of number of portraits, including
prostitutes in a brothel in Avignon, the Weeping Woman series.
Barcelona's red-light district, Dora's elegant pose Her
provided to be one of the most Contrasts strikingly with the
notorious pictures of the 20th century violent distortions of Some of
and was a precursor of Cubism and his other female portraits.
modern art. Its collapse of 1937, oil on canvas, 92 x
perspective and combination of 65cm, Musée Picasso, Paris,
geometric and primitivist styles- France
inspired by Iberian sculpture and
African art- were a reinvention of the
possibilities of art. 1906-07, oil on
canvas, 244 x 234cm, MOMA, New
York, US
Guernica
Some critics consider Guernica to be
the greatest painting of the 20th
century. It is certainly the most
Figures at the famous anti-war painting, being
Seashore coming as much a symbol for the
misery of modern war in general as
Picasso endlessly
for atrocity in the Spanish Civil War.
transformed the human
body, fragmenting it In January 1937, Picasso was
into its bare commissioned by the Republican
components. This government to produce a mural for
aggressive image is
the Spanish Pavilion at the Paris
charged with sexual
World Fair. Initially he had planned a
friction, and pushes his
studio scene, but the bombing of
representation of the
human form to its limits. Guernica three months later changed
1931, oil on canvas, everything, providing Picasso with his
130x195cm, Musée theme. On first showing, it came
Picasso, Paris, France
under severe criticism from fascists
("degenerate") and communists
("anti-social") alike, besides baffling
many critics and viewers
The Three
Dancers
This painting heralded
a new freedom of
Woman with expression for
Picasso, transforming
Guitar the flat patterning of
late Cubism into a
more colorful,
The stencilled letters,
Surrealist style. The
Ma Jolie (My Pretty
distorted pose of the
One), at the bottom
crazed dancer on the
of this portrait are left marked the start
an affectionate of increasingly violent
reference to dissections of the
human form, provided
Picasso's lover, Eva
by Picass0s worsening
Gouel. 1911, oil on
relationship with his
canvas, 100x65cm,
wife his wife. 1925,
MOMA, New York, oil on canvas,
US 215x142cm, Tate,
London, UK
Piet Mondrian
b AMERSFOORT, 1872; d NEW YORK, 1944
An abstract artist whose instantly recognizable style emerged
only after years of searching, Mondrian trained at Amsterdam's
Academy of Fine Arts. He initially painted still lifes and rural
scenes in a naturalistic Dutch style, but became influenced by
Impressionism and van Gogh. Despite his upbringing his in a
strict Protestant honme, Mondrian's interest in eastern beliefs
and theosophy (the study of religious philosophy) came to play
a significant role in his art. Between 1906 and 1907, he painted
a series of "evening and night landscapes" in which all details
dissolve into contours and masses. An interest in Cubism
spurred him to move to Paris in 1912, where he painted
numerous "tree" pictures in which natural forms splinter into
rhythmic patterns of curved lines. His distinctive abstract style
his -which Combines areas of solid color with austere vertical
and horizontal lines -emerged around 1920. Although he
constantly adapted these forms, he remained faithful to them
until his death.
Broadway Boogie Woogie
1942-43 In Mondrian's last completed work, the asymmetry, pulsating
lines, and solid white squares create strong directional forces that
impress themselves on the viewer. An homage to New York, his home
during World War II, the painting pays tribute to the dance-hall jazz
Mondrian loved so much. Oil on canvas, 127×127cm, MoMA, New York,
US
Tableau 1/ Composition No 1/ Composite 7
1914 Mondrian is at the very edge of total abstraction here.
The painting is still, at some distance, derived from the
complex pattern of Parisian roots. Only with the aid of a
preliminary drawing it is possible to identify the church
facade in the lower right of the painting. Oil on canvas,
120.6x100.3cm, Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas, US
Composition with Red, Black, Blue, and Yellow
1928 Limiting his palette to black, white, gray, and the three
primary colours. Mondrian constantly explored the positions
of line, colour, and mass. Oil on canvas, 45x45cm, Wilhelm-
Hack-Museum, Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Germany
Paul Klee
b MUNCHENBUCHSEE, NEAR BERNE, 1879;
d MURALTO, NEAR LOCARNO, 1940
An accomplished violinist, Paul Klee decided to forego a musical career to study art. He moved to Munich in 1898 and enrolled at the academy.
It was there that he studied under the rigorously classical Franz von Stuck. But from the very beginning, Klee's work defied convention Between
1903 and 1905 he produced a series of bitterly satirical monochrome etchings called Inventions, which featured disturbingly distorted figures He
moved from a graphic to a painterly style in 1914 following a trip to Tunisia. Klee's child-like creations and whimsically titled pictures draw on
every conceivable influence from Cubism, ancient hieroglyphs, and Mozart operas to Baroque art. In 1920, Klee joined the Bauhaus School of
Art and Design where he established an enduring friendship with Kandinsky and created a vast number of works, each of which he carefully
annotated.
Red Balloon, (no 179)
The lightness of touch and
uncluttered composition of
Klee's Tunisian paintings
gradually took on a more
precise edge. The viewer can
tell this is a townscape even
though it is veering towards
abstraction Paradoxically, it is
the red balloon that acts as the
visual anchor and unites the
different elements. 1922, oil on
muslin on cardboard, 32x31cm,
Guggenheim Museum, New
York, US
Senecio
This brightly colored face,
Untitled (Signs of Growth)
made up of gentle
geometric shapes, is named Around 1937, Klee's line became much
after a genus of plants, heavier and his colors more basic. In 1935
perhaps because it he had been diagnosed with the fatal
resembles a seed head. The disease scleroderma, and it is probable that
quizzical head has a he simplified his approach his so he could
totemic quality a focus for work more rapidly, along that time was
adoration as much as for short. 1937, oil on paper, 63 x 48 cm,
amusement. 1922, oil on Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany
canvas, 41 x38cm,
Kunstmuseum, Basel,
Switzerland
Street Cafe in Tunis, (no 55)
Klee accompanied fellow artists
August Macke and Louis Maillot on a
painting trip to Tunisia, where he
produced 30 watercolor sketches.
1914, watercolor and pencil on card,
10x22cm, Sammlung Scharf-
Gerstenberg, Berlin, Germany