|
Choice |
ID |
Image |
Painting (From A to Z) |
Details |
|
20312 |
|
Adam and Eve Expelled from Paradise (mk05) |
Copper 20 x 15''(51 x 38 cm)Collection of Louis XVI acquired in 1777 |
|
91028 |
|
Christ Taken Prisoner |
1597(1597)
Medium oil on walnut
Dimensions Height: 89 cm (35 in). Width: 62 cm (24.4 in).
cyf |
|
82990 |
|
David with the Head of Goliath |
Date 1598
cyf |
|
83202 |
|
David with the Head of Goliath |
oil on canvas by Giuseppe Cesari called Cavalier D'Arpino, 1598
Date 1598(1598)
cyf |
|
62379 |
|
Diana and Actaeon |
1603-06 Oil on copper Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest Author: CESARI, Giuseppe Title: Diana and Actaeon (detail) , 1601-1650 , Italian Form: painting , mythological |
|
62380 |
|
Diana and Actaeon |
1603-06 Oil on copper Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest Author: CESARI, Giuseppe Title: Diana and Actaeon (detail) , 1601-1650 , Italian Form: painting , mythological |
|
71486 |
|
Diana and Actaeon |
1603-1606
Oil on copper
50 x 69 cm
|
|
71546 |
|
Diana and Actaeon |
1603-1606
Oil on copper
50 x 69 cm
|
|
62382 |
|
Judith with the Head of Holofernes |
61,3 x 48 cm Berkeley Art Museum, University of California Cavaliere d'Arpino's (Giulio Cesari's) Judith with the Head of Holofernes symbolically alludes to the violent decapitation of the Assyrian general without showing the gruesome moment that both Caravaggio and Artemisia Gentileschi chose to depict. Instead a beautiful, almost demure, Judith raises Holofernes' head by his locks as her maidservant Abra looks on in puzzled reverence. Cavaliere d'Arpino's Judith is the embodiment of female virtue and moral perfection, an ideal heroine who has redeemed her people. Yet, at the same time, she seems capable of exercising her seductive powers directly upon the viewer, as if the beholder were Holofernes. She is in possession of two dangerous weapons, her sword and her sexual allure. In 1602-03 Cavaliere d'Arpino had frescoed a series of Old Testament heroines in the Villa Aldobrandini at Frascati. There he depicted Judith as a full-length figure striding across the plain in front of the enemy encampment while Abra follows behind stuffing Holofernes' head into a sack. Topologically the figures are very similar, but in the easel painting Cavaliere d'Arpino condensed the composition so that the picture essentially becomes an idealised 'portrait' of Judith. In this sense it is very close to his Diana (Pinacoteca Capitolina, Rome), in which the huntress is also reduced to a half-length idealised figure. In both these 'portraits' there is an emphasis on the decorative effects of colour and design. The brilliant reds, blues and whites of Judith's costume serve as a foil for the carefully delineated jewels and golden sword hilt. Baglione emphasised that Cavaliere d'Arpino was capable of working in two different styles, one of which was far more superficial than the other. It is likely that the more |
|
96136 |
|
Madonna and Child with Sts |
between 1608(1608) and 1609(1609)
Medium oil on canvas
cyf |
|
98155 |
|
Perseus Rescuing Andromeda |
circa 1593-1594
Medium oil on lapis lazuli
Dimensions 7 7/8 x 6 1/16 in.
cyf |
|
43843 |
|
St Clare with the Scene of the Siege of Assisi |
Oil on panel,
37 x 45 cm |
|
98443 |
|
St Francis Consoled by an Angel |
circa 1593(1593)
Medium oil on canvas
Dimensions Height: 270 cm (106.3 in). Width: 198 cm (78 in).
|
|
43837 |
|
The Betrayal of Christ |
Oil on copper,
77 x 56 cm |
|
43841 |
|
The Mocking of Christ |
c. 1598
Oil on canvas,
128 x 100 cm |