Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fancy pictures are a sub-genre of genre paintings in 18th-century English art, featuring scenes of everyday life but with an imaginative or storytelling element, usually sentimental. The usage of the term varied, and there was often an overlap with the conversation piece , a type of group portrait showing the subjects engaged in some activity.
The exhibition catalog included detailed discussions of 85 paintings from various collection holders, that together give an overview of four basic aspects of daily life in 17th-century portraits of children and families from the Low Countries: family values, educating children, children at play, and children's fashions. [3]
18th-century portraits (11 C, 88 P) 1800 paintings (8 P) M. ... Children Playing with a Goat; The Council of Nicaea (painting) Cracked Ice screen; The Crucifixion ...
Most of the 18th-century portraits occupy a placid middle ground between the styles of the two dominant male artists of the time, Thomas Gainsborough and Joshua Reynolds, typified by Katherine ...
Portrait of Ferdinand VI as a Boy; Portrait of Frederick Muhlenberg; Portrait of George II; Portrait of Horatio Gates; Portrait of James Stanhope; Portrait of Maria Luisa of Parma; Portrait of Mathilde de Canisy, Marquise d'Antin; Portrait of Mrs. Theodore Atkinson Jr. Portrait of Muhammad Dervish Khan; Portrait of the Marquise de la Solana ...
A game of spin the bottle. Spin the bottle is a kissing party game stereotypically played by teenagers. The game was very popular among teenagers during the second half of the 20th century because it fostered "sexual" interactions between boys and girls. It has even been described as "the party game of choice for glandularly excited high ...
18th-century portraits (11 C, 87 P) 19th-century portraits (11 C, 204 P) 20th-century portraits (5 C, 178 P) 21st-century portraits (19 P) This page was last ...
Children's Games is an oil-on-panel by Flemish Renaissance artist Pieter Bruegel the Elder, painted in 1560. It is now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. The entire composition is full of children playing a wide variety of games. Over 90 different games that were played by children at the time have been identified. [2]