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Bathsheba (or The Toilet of Bathsheba After the Bath) are names given to a c 1480 [1] oil on wood panel painting by the Early Netherlandish artist Hans Memling, now in the Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart. Its unusually close framing and the fact that many of the details are cut off suggests that it is a fragment of a larger, probably religious, panel ...
Valued image: This is a featured picture on Wikimedia Commons (Featured pictures) and is considered one of the finest images.See its nomination here. This image has been assessed under the valued image criteria and is considered the most valued image on Commons within the scope Salvator Mundi by Leonardo Da Vinci.
Wikipedia This is a featured picture on the English language Wikipedia (Featured pictures) and is considered one of the finest images.See its nomination here. This is a featured picture on the Persian language Wikipedia (نگارههای برگزیده) and is considered one of the finest images.
Dying Gaul, or The Capitoline Gaul, [1] a Roman marble copy of a Hellenistic work of the late 3rd century BCE, Capitoline Museums, Rome Assyrian lamassu gate guardian from Khorsabad, c. 800 –721 BCE Michelangelo's Moses, (c. 1513–1515), San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome, for the tomb of Pope Julius II Netsuke of tigress with two cubs, mid-19th-century Japan, ivory with shell inlay The Angel of ...
The year 1500 in art involved some significant events and new works. Events. 26 July: Bartolomeo di Pagholo ("Baccio della Porta") becomes a Dominican friar.
It was probably modelled on Rembrandt's partner Hendrickje Stoffels, and represents a woman in a vulnerable state, stepping into her bath. [1] Some scholars believe the painting is meant to represent the nymph Callisto, bathing apart from Diana's entourage. [2] The painting is broadly executed.
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Byzantine art comprises the body of artistic products of the Eastern Roman Empire, [1] as well as the nations and states that inherited culturally from the empire. Though the empire itself emerged from the decline of western Rome and lasted until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453, [2] the start date of the Byzantine period is rather clearer in art history than in political history, if still ...