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As of 1983, there were 9 existing drawings on the subject by Ingres. [5] In 2021, these included an 1811 work in pencil and chalk in the Scottish National Gallery [24] and a c. 1832–1834 watercolor drawing in the Harvard Art Museums. [25] Napoleon never used the bedroom for which The Dream of Ossian was intended.
Bedroom in Arles (French: La Chambre à Arles; Dutch: Slaapkamer te Arles) is the title given to three similar paintings by 19th-century Dutch Post-Impressionist painter Vincent van Gogh. Van Gogh's own title for this composition was simply The Bedroom (French: La Chambre à coucher). There are three authentic versions described in his letters ...
The Helga Pictures are a series of more than 268 paintings and drawings of German model Helga Testorf (born c. 1933 [1] [2] or c. 1939 [3] [4]) created by American artist Andrew Wyeth between 1971 and 1985.
The first known reference to dream art was in the 12th century, when Charles Cooper Brown found a new way to look at art. However, dreams as art, without a "real" frame story, appear to be a later development—though there is no way to know whether many premodern works were dream-based.
The dream of St. Joseph: 1772 Zaragoza Museum: 129 x 93 The burial of Christ [a] 1772 Lázaro Galdiano Museum, Madrid 130 x 95 Virgin with child: 1772 to 1773 Félix Palacios Collection, Zaragoza 58.3 x 83.7 Virgin with child and Saint Joseph: 1772 to 1773 Private collection Devotees at the foot of the Cross: 1772 to 1773 Private collection 131 ...
The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife is the most famous image in Kinoe no Komatsu, published in three volumes from 1814. The book is a work of shunga ( erotic art ) within the ukiyo-e genre. [ 1 ] The image depicts a woman, evidently an ama (a shell diver), enveloped in the limbs of two octopuses .
Le Rêve (English: The Dream) is a 1932 oil on canvas painting (130 × 97 cm) by Pablo Picasso, then 50 years old, portraying his 22-year-old mistress Marie-Thérèse Walter. It is said to have been painted in one afternoon, on 24 January 1932.
In a tweet from July 2024, Drew Daniel of electronic music duo Matmos described a fictional music genre he encountered in a dream entitled "hit em". Recounted to him by a nondescript woman in the dream, the genre is a type of electronic music "with super crunched out sounds" in a 5/4 time signature with a tempo of 212 beats per minute.