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The Anguished Man. The Anguished Man is a painting created by an unknown artist. [1] [2] Owner Sean Robinson, from Cumbria, England, claims to have inherited the painting from his grandmother, who told him that the artist who created the painting had mixed his own blood into the paint and died by suicide soon after finishing the work.
Man painting on canvas in a well-lit room, surrounded by art supplies, focusing on his work. Image credits: terribleartbyjamielee Woman joyfully holding a viral painting of herself and husband ...
The painting depicts a grey-haired old man sitting on a chair in his sparsely furnished home, with a boy standing close before him between his spread legs holding the musical instrument. [21] Both are observing as the child carefully plucks the strings with one hand, while holding a chord with the other hand; the weight of the instrument is ...
According to Maestracci, the painting was taken from his grandfather, Jewish Parisian art dealer Oscar Stettiner, by the Nazis during the German occupation of France. [2] In 1939, Oscar Stettiner left the painting behind in France ahead of the German occupation. [3] The Nazis took administration over the painting in 1941 and auctioned it off in ...
The painting must have been substantially reduced on the left, now showing only part of the original composition; the chair on the left is probably a later addition, apparently intended to balance the composition on this side when the canvas was reduced Portrait of a Man: 1632: Oil on panel: 90.8 x 68.57: Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna: 62a
The painting shows an old man sitting in a chair (or on his throne) with his feet on a cushion. He sits beside an open window. [9] Above the man's head there hangs a painting and a statue of Saint Arnolfus. Daylight enters the room through the open window. De Braekeleer worked out the small details very carefully in this oeuvre. [10]
Breaking Home Ties is a painting by American illustrator Norman Rockwell, created for the September 25, 1954, cover of The Saturday Evening Post.The picture represents a father and son waiting for a train that will take the young man to the state university.
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