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| [[File:Guido Reni - Atalanta e Ippomene (Napoli).jpg|thumb|left]] | | [[File:Guido Reni - Atalanta e Ippomene (Napoli).jpg|thumb|left]] |
| ''Atalanta and Hippomenes'' by Guido Reni | | ''Atalanta and Hippomenes'' by Guido Reni<br> |
| | Painted c. 1618/9<br> |
| | The history of Atalanta and Hippomenes is represented. The nymph Atalanta, invincible in her career, defied any man who wanted her, her death being the punishment for those who lost. She was defeated by Hippomenes thanks to a ploy facilitated by Aphrodite: throwing golden apples from the garden of the Hesperides so that she would stop to pick them up. |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <br /> | | <br /> |
| [[File:AC2 The Judgement of Paris.jpg|thumb|left]] | | [[File:AC2 The Judgement of Paris.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| ''The Judgement of Paris'' by | | ''The Judgement of Paris'' by Peter Paul Rubens<br> |
| | Painted 1638-1639<br> |
| | Depicts the story as narrated in Lucian's 'Judgement of the Goddesses'. It shows the award of the golden apple, though alterations show Rubens first painted an earlier point in the story, when the goddesses are ordered to undress by Mercury. The 1638 version shown here, is now in the Prado and was completed shortly before his death while he was ill with gout. It was commissioned by Philip IV of Spain's brother Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria and on Ferdinand's death moved to the Spanish royal collection. In 1788 Charles III of Spain decided it was immodest and ordered it to be burned, but he died before that order could be carried out. |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <br /> | | <br /> |
| [[File:ACII DB Le Triomphe de Bacchus.png|thumb|left]] | | [[File:ACII DB Le Triomphe de Bacchus.png|thumb|left]] |
| ''Le Triomphe de Bacchus'' by Charles de La Fosse. | | ''Le Triomphe de Bacchus'' by Charles de La Fosse<br> |
| | Painted 1700<br> |
| | During the 18th century was displayed in the Château de Meudon. Depicts the triumph of Bacchus, carried on an elephant, with his tyrsus in his right hand, several Baccantes around him carrying instruments. In the foreground are two children, one mounted on a tiger, on the left one sees Silenus on the reverse. |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <br /> | | <br /> |
| [[File:ACII-Idun and the Apples.jpg|thumb|left]] | | [[File:ACII-Idun and the Apples.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| ''Idun and the Apples'' by | | ''Idun and the Apples'' by J. Doyle Penrose<br> |
| | Painted 1890<br> |
| | '''Abduction of Idun''' |
| | |
| | Odin was travelling with Loki and Haenir through the wilderness, of mountains and woods, but had difficulty in finding food, until they came across a herd of oxen. They slaughter one of the oxen and set to cook it in a earth oven. Despite their effort, the fire would not cook the meat. The gods were upset and hungry, but were helpless. |
| | |
| | Above them a giant eagle told them that he would help them cook the meat if he was given a share in the meal. The gods agreed, but when the eagle took a large share of meat, Loki became angry and struck the eagle with a pole. The pole pierced the eagle’s chest. The eagle flew away with Loki still holding the pole. |
| | |
| | Loki pleaded with the eagle to let him down, but the eagle refused, unless Loki swore to bring the goddess Idun, keeper of the apples of youth, out of Asgard, to him. As it turn out, the giant eagle was really Thiassi (Thiazi), a giant from Thrymheim. Loki had no choice but to agree, since he was no match again the giant. |
| | |
| | One day, Loki told Idun that he found some apples that she could use. As Idun followed Loki deep into the forest, Thiassi, in the form of an eagle again, snatched Idun and flew back to Thrymheim, along with the goddess’ basket of fruit. |
| | |
| | Idun was the keeper of apples of youth. These special apples were required to keep the Aesir youthful. Without the apples, the gods and goddesses would grow old and weak. |
| | |
| | The Aesir in Asgard began to grow old very quickly without the Idun’s apples. Their minds were also beginning to become feeable. Odin and the other gods managed to capture Loki and forced the Trickster to bring back Idun and her apples, or else they would torture Loki to death. |
| | |
| | Loki had no choice but to rescue Idun. Borrowing Freyja’s cloak of feathers, Loki transformed into a falcon and flew to Thrymheim. It was fortunate for Loki, because Thiassi was temporary absence. Finding Idun alone, Loki transformed the goddess into a nut and flew back to Asgard with the nut (Idun) in his claw. |
| | |
| | Thiassi immediately pursued Loki, in his gigantic eagle’s form. Loki managed to escape the eagle by flying over the wall of Asgard. When eagle (Thiassi) tried to follow, the Aesir set fire to Thiassi’s feathers so that the eagle plummeted within the wall of Asgard. The other Aesir killed Thiassi where he fell. |
| | |
| | Loki restored Idun’s form. Idun gave apples to all the gods so they were restored to their youthful looks. |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <br /> | | <br /> |
| [[File:AC2_-_Mercury_Herse_and_Aglauros.jpg|thumb|left]] | | [[File:AC2_-_Mercury_Herse_and_Aglauros.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| ''Mercury, Herse, and Aglauros | | ''Mercury, Herse, and Aglauros'' by {{Wiki|Nicolas Poussin}}<br> |
| | Painted c. 1624/6<br> |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| |-|2= | | |-|2= |
| '''Sixty-Four Squares''' | | [[File:Elizabeth I of England.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| <gallery position="center" widths="180" captionalign="center"> | | ''Elizabeth I in coronation robes'' by unknown artist<br> |
| Elizabeth I of England.jpg|QUEEN ELIZABETH I OF ENGLAND 1559 | | Painted c. 1600<br> |
| AC2 - The Emperor Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries.jpg|EMPEROR NAPOLEON I OF FRANCE 1812 | | Queen Elizabeth I of England in her coronation robes, patterned with Tudor roses and trimmed with ermine. She wears her hair loose, as traditional for the coronation of a queen, perhaps also as a symbol of virginity. The painting, by an unknown artist, dates to the first decade of the seventeenth century (NPG gives c.1600) and is based on a lost original also by an unknown artist. |
| AC2 - George Washington at Yorktown.jpg|GEORGE WASHINGTON UNITED STATES 1781 | | {{-}} |
| </gallery> | | <br /> |
| Passcode: 10352
| | [[File:AC2 - The Emperor Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | ''The Emperor Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries'' by {{Wiki|Jacques-Louis David}}<br> |
| | Painted 1812<br> |
| | French Emperor Napoleon I in uniform in his study at the Tuileries Palace. Despite the detail, it is unlikely that Napoleon posed for the portrait. It was a private commission from the Scottish nobleman and admirer of Napoleon, Alexander Hamilton, 10th Duke of Hamilton in 1811 and completed in 1812. Originally shown at Hamilton Palace, it was sold to Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery in 1882, from whom it was bought by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation in 1954, which deposited it in Washington D.C.'s National Gallery of Art, where it now hangs. |
| | |
| | Vertical in format, it shows Napoleon standing, three-quarters life size, wearing the uniform of a colonel of the Imperial Guard Foot Grenadiers (blue with white facings and red cuffs). He also wears his Légion d'honneur and Order of the Iron Crown decorations, along with gold epaulettes, white French-style culottes and white stockings. His face is turned towards the viewer and his right hand is in his jacket. |
| | |
| | Piled on the desk are a pen, several books, dossiers and rolled papers. More rolled papers and a map are on the green carpet to the left of the desk – on these papers is the painter's signature LVDci DAVID OPVS 1812. All this, along with Napoleon's unbuttoned cuffs, wrinkled stockings, disheveled hair, the flickering candles and the time on the clock (4:13 am) are all meant to imply he has been up all night, writing laws such as the Code Napoléon – the word "Code" is prominent on the rolled papers on the desk. This maintains his new civil rather than heroic (as in Canova's Napoleon as Mars the Peacemaker) or military (as in David's own Napoleon Crossing the Alps) image, though the sword on the chair's armrest still refers back to his military successes. The fleurs-de-lys and heraldic bees also imply the stability of the imperial dynasty. |
| | [[File:AC2 - George Washington at Yorktown.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | ''Washington, Lafayette & Tilghman at Yorktown'' by {{Wiki|Charles Willson Peale}}<br> |
| | Painted 1784<br> |
| | Full length portrait of George Washington with Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette and Tench Tilghman at Yorktown. |
| | {{-}} |
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| '''Descendants'''
| | [[File:AC2 - Frankin Delano Roosevelt strategic meeting.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| <gallery position="center" widths="180" captionalign="center">
| | President Franklin D. Roosevelt in conference with General Douglas MacArthur, Admiral Chester Nimitz, and Admiral William D. Leahy, while on tour in Hawaiian Islands. 1944.<br> |
| AC2 - Frankin Delano Roosevelt strategic meeting.jpg|FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT STRATEGIC MEETING. 1944 | | L-R: MacArthur, Roosevelt, Leahy, Nimitz |
| AC2 - Houdini beginning the Water Torture Cell.jpg|HARRY HOUDINI BEGINNING THE CHINESE WATER TORTURE CELL ESCAPE. 1913 | | {{-}} |
| Salt March.jpg|GANDHI DURING THE SALT MARCH. 1930 | | <br /> |
| </gallery> | | [[File:AC2 - Houdini beginning the Water Torture Cell.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| Passcode: 14523
| | Chinese Water Torture Cell, 1912<br> |
| | The Chinese Water Torture Cell is a predicament escape made famous by Hungarian-American magician Harry Houdini. The illusion consists of three parts: first, the magician's feet are locked in stocks; next, he is suspended in mid-air from his ankles with a restraint brace; finally, he is lowered into a glass tank overflowing with water and the restraint is locked to the top of the cell. |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:Salt March.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | Gandhi leading his followers on the famous salt march to break the British Salt Laws. March 1930. |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| |-|4= | | |-|4= |
| '''Infinite Knowledge'''
| | [[File:VietnamWar.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| <gallery position="center" widths="200" captionalign="center">
| | A Viet Cong base camp being burned, My Tho, South Vietnam, 1968.<br> |
| VietnamWar.jpg|BURNING VIET CONG BASE CAMP, MY THO, VIETNAM. 1968 | | Photographed by Army Specialist Fourth Class Dennis Kurpius<br> |
| AC2 - US Soldiers Brest.jpg|MEMBERS OF THE 2ND INFANTRY DIVISION ADVANCE UNDER MACHINE GUN FIRE INTO THE OUTSKIRTS OF BREST, FRANCE. 1944 | | In the foreground is Private First Class Raymond Rumpa |
| AC2 - Union forces in Beaufort.jpg|UNION TROOPS IN FORMATION. BEAUFORT, SOUTH CAROLINA, 1862. | | {{-}} |
| Buddha.jpg|THE FIRST PICTORIAL REPRESENTATION OF A GUN. 900 | | <br /> |
| </gallery>
| | [[File:AC2 - US Soldiers Brest.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| Passcode: 72114
| | Members of the 2md Infantry Division advance under machine gun fire into the outskirts of Brest, France.<br> |
| | 9 September 1944 |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:AC2 - Union forces in Beaufort.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | Beaufort, S.C. 50th Pennsylvania Infantry in parade formation (photographed by Timothy H. O'Sullivan)<br> |
| | February 1862<br> |
| | Photograph of the Federal Navy, and seaborne expeditions against the Atlantic Coast of the Confederacy -- specifically of Port Royal, S.C., 1861-1862. |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:Buddha.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | First illustration of Fire Lance and a Grenade, 10th Century, Dunhuang. Appears to be a detail from an illustration of Sakyamuni's temptation by Mara, with the demons at upper right threatening with the fire lance and other weapons while those at lower right tempt with pleasures. |
| | {{-}} |
| |-|5= | | |-|5= |
| '''Instruments of Power'''<br> | | [[File:Franz von Lenbach Bismarck.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| The power they wielded ''cut'' down their enemies.
| | ''Portrait of Otto v. Bismarck'' by {{Wiki|Franz von Lenbach}}<br> |
| <gallery position="center" widths="100" captionalign="center"> | | Painted c. 1895<br> |
| Franz von Lenbach Bismarck.jpg|OTTO VON BISMARCK, GERMANY
| | Depicts Otto von Bismarck in his retirement. |
| PerseusPainting.jpeg|PERSEUS, GREECE
| | {{-}} |
| Atli.jpg|ATTILA THE HUN, EURASIA | | <br /> |
| AC2 - Samson and Delilah.jpg|SAMSON, HEBREW | | [[File:PerseusPainting.jpeg|thumb|left]] |
| Rembrandt alexander.jpg|ALEXANDER THE GREAT, MACEDONIA | | ''The Doom Fulfilled'' by {{Wiki|Edward Burne-Jones}}<br> |
| Sigmund.png|SIGMUND, NORSE | | Painted between 1884-5<br> |
| Charlemagne.png|CHARLEMAGNE, EUROPE | | The Doom Fulfilled details a later part of the story of Perseus. Those who know the story will recall that Perseus rescued his lover from Kraken, a sea monster. In this painting, the two lovers seem to be in a cave, and the sea is not depicted. Still, Perseus tries to battle the sea monster, which is seen to be covered in metal armour or sea scales. His eyes are locked with those of Kraken, and his lover stands nude on the side. The artist employed the romanticism style in this painting. This style was quite popular in the 19th century. It challenged the rational ideal which was strongly held in the Enlightenment Age. The art form tried to show that emotion and sense were very important in understanding and experiencing the world. |
| ACII-WalterCrane-ArthurPullstheSwordfromStone.jpg|KING ARTHUR, BRITANNIA | | |
| ACII-Rubens-Jeanned'Arc.jpg|JOAN OF ARC, FRANCE | | The Doom Fulfilled is classified as a mythological painting as it is based on a Greek myth. It tells a story of the heroic triumph of good over evil. Perseus is the son of the God Zeus, and that puts him on the right side. It is worth noting that most mythological paintings of the era were based on Greek or Roman myths. This is primarily because the Italian Renaissance venerated art forms of classical antiquity. The biggest critics of the Enlightenment Age also had a strong interest in Roman and Greek mythologies. |
| AC2 - Aeneas' Flight from Troy by Federico Barocci.jpg|AENEAS, TROY | | |
| </gallery> | | The Doom Fulfilled was painted using the oil on canvas method. This painting method first grew in popularity in Europe in the 15th century. It presented major advantages over alternative painting methods. One of the biggest advantages of oil on canvas paintings was that the paint dried slowly and gave the artists time to make quick changes. The paintings also lasted for lengthy periods. |
| In their hands, the wise ''lean'' on a great force.
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:Atli.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | Attila the Hun, also known as Atli, in an illustration to the ''Poetic Edda'', the 1893 Swedish edition by Fredrik Sander. |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:AC2 - Samson and Delilah.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | ''{{Wiki|Samson and Delilah (Rubens)|Samson and Delilah}}'' by Peter Paul Rubens<br> |
| | Painted c. 1609–10<br> |
| | Rubens portrays the moment when, Samson having fallen asleep on Delilah's lap, a young man cuts Samson's hair. Samson and Delilah are in a dark room, which is lit mostly by a candle held by an old woman to Delilah's left. Delilah is depicted with all of her clothes, but with her breasts exposed. Her left hand is on top of Samson's right shoulder, as his left arm is draped over her legs. The man snipping Samson's hair is crossing his hands, which is a sign of betrayal. Philistine soldiers can be seen in the right-hand background of the painting. The niche behind Delilah contains a statue of the Venus, the Goddess of love, and her son, Cupid. Notably, Cupid's mouth is bound, rather than his eyes. This statue can be taken to represent the cause of Samson's fate and the tool of Delilah's actions. |
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| | The painting depicts an episode from the Old Testament story of Samson and Delilah (Judges 16). Samson was a Hebrew hero known for fighting the Philistines. Having fallen in love with Delilah, who has been bribed by the Philistines, Samson tells her the secret of his great strength: his uncut hair. Without his strength, Samson is captured by the Philistines. The old woman standing behind Delilah, providing further light for the scene, does not appear in the biblical narrative of Samson and Delilah. She is believed to be a procuress, and the adjacent profiles of her and Delilah may symbolise the old woman's past, and Delilah's future. |
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| | The painting was originally commissioned by Nicolaas II Rockox, Lord mayor of Antwerp, Belgium, for his Rockox House. In addition to being a patron, Rockox was a close personal friend of Rubens. |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:Rembrandt alexander.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | ''Alexand the Great'' (AKA ''Pallas Athene'') by {{Wiki|Rembrandt}}<br> |
| | Painted c. 1655<br> |
| | Pallas Athene is a c. 1655 oil on canvas painting by Rembrandt, now in the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon. The subject of the painting is also sometimes credited as Alexander the Great, although historically, Rembrandt's ''Man in Armor'' was supposedly Alexander and not this. |
| | |
| | A print of Pallas Athene in the 1659 parade for the marriage of Countess Henriette Catherine of Nassau to John George II of Anhalt-Dessau is similar in pose and costume to the painting. The goddess was played by the artist's son Titus van Rijn, which has led to the theory that he based it on Titus' appearance in the parade. Catherine II of Russia bought the painting from count Baudouin in Paris in 1781 via Melchior Grimm. She then gave it to her lover Alexander Lanskoy and it was later transferred to the Hermitage Museum. On 27 June 1930 it was bought by its present owner via Antikvariat, an art dealer. |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:Sigmund.png|thumb|left]] |
| | ''Sigmunds Schwert'' by {{Wiki|Johannes Gehrts}}, xylograph by {{Wiki|Eduard Ade}}<br> |
| | Drawn 1889<br> |
| | Gram is primarily seen in the Volsunga Saga used by men in the Volsung line after Sigmund. Sigmund receives it during the wedding feast for his sister, Signy. Part of the way through the feast a strange man appears carrying a sword. Although unknown to Sigmund, this is the god Odin. He thrusts the sword into the Barnstokkr tree that grew in the middle of the hall and said, “The man to pull out this sword from the trunk shall receive it from me as a gift and he will find out for himself that he never bore in hand a better sword than this.” Soon after he departed every man made his attempt to pull the sword out of the wood. All fail except Sigmund who easily extracts it. The sword is a fine sword, and King Siggeir is covetous of it, offering Sigmund three times its weight in gold. When he refuses, King Siggeir grows angry and secretly begins plotting to steal it from Sigmund, eventually killing his father and capturing him and all of his brothers. After this the sword disappears from the narrative until Signy secretly gives it back to Sigmund as he is buried alive with Sinfjotli. After Sigmund avenges his family, he uses the sword in several battles before it is eventually broken by Odin during Sigmund's final battle with the King Lyngvi. Hjördis, Sigmund's wife, takes up the two halves of the blade and keeps them for Sigurd, their son. |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:Charlemagne.png|thumb|left]] |
| | Portrait of: Emperor Charlemagne by Taddeo Zuccaro<br> |
| | Drawn between 1544 and 1566<br> |
| | Charlemagne confirming the Donation of Ravenna; the Emperor enthroned, surrounded by figures |
| | |
| | Pen and brown ink, with brown wash, heightened with white, over black chalk, on blue paper |
| | |
| | Verso: A standing man |
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| | Black chalk |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:ACII-WalterCrane-ArthurPullstheSwordfromStone.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | ''Arthur Draws the Sword from the Stone'' by Walter Crane.<br> |
| | 1911, illustrated for ''King Arthur's Knights: The Tales Retold for Boys and Girls''<br> |
| | The twelfth–century poet Robert de Boron adds the tale of the Sword in the Stone to the legend. After baby Arthur was born, Merlin secretly took him to be raised at the castle of Sir Ector, a loyal ally of the King's. There, the young prince was raised as the bastard child of Sir Ector's, and no one, not even Ector himself, knew the boy's true identity. But Ector also had a son, named Sir Kay. And because young Arthur was thought to be a bastard child, Sir Kay and his friends teased and taunted him, and his adopted parents looked down on him. The poor boy grew up in shame of his birth, never knowing of his royal lineage. |
| | |
| | Meanwhile, all was not well with the King. Just months after giving away his only son, Uther Pendragon turned ill, and died shortly after. With no heir to lead the kingdom, the country fell into despair. Rival dukes and lords disputed over who was the best fit to rule England. |
| | |
| | In the midst of the turmoil, the nobles called on Merlin to find a solution. Having seen to it that baby Arthur was safe, he erected a large stone, on top of which sat an anvil, in a churchyard in Westminster, a region of London. Stuck in the anvil was a sword. An inscription on its blade read: |
| | |
| | The sword was magic, Merlin explained, and only he who was fit to rule England could pull it from the stone. Nobles from far and wide came to try and pull the sword from the stone, but not even the strongest of men could accomplish the task. Eventually, the sword became forgotten, and England fell into greater ruin. |
| | |
| | As the boy Arthur grew older, Merlin introduced himself to him. Merlin and the boy would meet after he had finished his chores for Sir Ector, and the two of them became close friends. Merlin tutored the boy in many subjects, always teaching him that knowledge was greater than brute force. For, although Arthur was a small, scrawny lad scarcely capable of lifting a sword from its sheath, Merlin saw in him the potential to be a wise and just ruler who would unite Britain, and rescue her from the chaos into which she had fallen. And so, through education and experience, the wizard helped the young prince to realize his full potential: a potential of greatness. The potential to rule with justice and compassion what would become the greatest kingdom ever known. |
| | |
| | One day, when Arthur was fifteen, Merlin brought him before the Sword in the Stone. A crowd had been assembled, and was waiting anxiously. Arthur's stepbrother, Sir Kay, was the first to try and pull the sword, but it would not budge. Then Arthur tried. The sword came loose. The crowd cheered, and Arthur was crowned King of England. |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:ACII-Rubens-Jeanned'Arc.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | ''Jeanne d'Arc'' by workshop of Peter Paul Rubens<br> |
| | c. 1620<br> |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | [[File:AC2 - Aeneas' Flight from Troy by Federico Barocci.jpg|thumb|left]] |
| | ''Aeneas' Flight from Troy'' by {{Wiki|Federico Barocci}}<br> |
| | Painted 1598<br> |
| | Federico Barrocci's with Anchises, his son Ascanius and his wife Creusa is the second version painted in 1598 of a picture executed ten years earlier for Emperor Rudolf II of Austria. Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere presented Cardinal Scipione with this second version, which entered the Borghese collection before 1613. It was this painting that inspired Cardinal Scipione to commission a large marble group on the same subject from Gian Lorenzo Bernini (also in the Borghese Gallery). The myth of Aeneas, ancestor of Romulus and Remus, referred to the birth of Rome and thus confirmed the Borghese family's high status in the city. |
| | |
| | Barrocci's many drawings of nature led him to achieve a spontaneity and naturalness in movement, colour and airy effects, and a silvery luminosity that was to influence the 17th-century masters, particularly Rubens. Never before had flames been painted so close to, with an energy suggesting even the crackle of the fire, from which Ascanius seems to be protecting himself by covering his ears. But the human delicacy of Barrocci's anti-heroic and anti-rhetorical figures was not to be really appreciated in Rome, because it could not compete with the classical antique statuary. |
| | {{-}} |
| | <br /> |
| | <br /> |
| | <br /> |
| <gallery position="center" widths="100" captionalign="center"> | | <gallery position="center" widths="100" captionalign="center"> |
| Louis-xiv-lebrun.jpg|KING LOUIS XIV, FRANCE | | Louis-xiv-lebrun.jpg|KING LOUIS XIV, FRANCE |
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| </tabber> | | </tabber> |
| | |
| ===Painting gallery=== | | ===Painting gallery=== |
| <gallery captionalign="center" position="center" spacing="small" widths="180"> | | <gallery captionalign="center" position="center" spacing="small" widths="180"> |