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19th; 20th; 21st; 22nd; 23rd; 24th ... Pages in category "19th-century portraits" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 212 total.
Gallery of Beauties The Nymphenburg Palace seen from its park. The Gallery of Beauties (German: Schönheitengalerie) is a collection of 38 portraits of the most beautiful women from the nobility and bourgeoisie of Munich, Germany, gathered by King Ludwig I of Bavaria in the south pavilion of his Nymphenburg Palace. [1]
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:19th-century artists. It includes artists that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Subcategories
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She was one of the "New Women" of the 19th century successful, highly trained women artists who never married, like Ellen Day Hale, Mary Cassatt, Elizabeth Coffin and Cecilia Beaux. [8] Hale, Nourse, and Coffin "created compelling self-portraits in which they fearlessly presented themselves as individuals willing to flout social codes and ...
Zaida Ben-Yusuf (1869–1933), portraits of notable Americans at the turn of the 19th–20th century, portrait gallery in New York from 1897; Lynne Bentley-Kemp (born 1952), fine arts photographer, photography educator, and researcher; Berry Berenson (1948–2001), freelance photographer publishing in Life, Glamour, Vogue and Newsweek
Woman Reading is a 19th-century (portrait painting) by Susan Macdowell Eakins. It is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. [1] Woman Reading probably depicts the artist's sister Elizabeth Macdowell Kenton. It is one of Eakins' many portraits of her family members in interior settings. [1]
Margaret Backhouse (née Holden) (1818–1896) was a successful British portrait and genre painter during the 19th century. Although she was born near Birmingham, Backhouse spent most of her life in London where she showed works on a regular basis at the Royal Academy, the Society of Women Artists and at the Royal Society of British Artists.