Showing posts with label Pietà. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pietà. Show all posts

01 Work, Interpretation of the bible, Flemish school's Pietà, with Footnotes #181

Flemish school, 17th Century
Pietà
Oil on canvas
116 x 92 cm.
Private collection

The Pietà is a subject in Christian art depicting the Virgin Mary cradling the dead body of Jesus, most often found in sculpture. As such, it is a particular form of the Lamentation of Christ, a scene from the Passion of Christ found in cycles of the Life of Christ. When Christ and the Virgin are surrounded by other figures from the New Testament, the subject is strictly called a Lamentation in English, although Pietà is often used for this as well, and is the normal term in Italian. More the Pietà

Flemish painting flourished from the early 15th century until the 17th century. The term does not refer to modern Flanders but to the County of Flanders and neighbouring areas of the Low Countries such as the Tournaisis and Duchy of Brabant which delivered the leading painters in Northern Europe and attracted many promising young painters from other countries. These painters were invited to work at foreign courts and had a Europe-wide influence. Since the end of the Napoleonic era, Flemish painters had again been contributing to a reputation that had been set by the Old Masters. More on the Flemish School




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01 Work, Interpretation of the bible, Michele Tosini's PIETÀ WITH TWO ANGELS, with Footnotes - 182

Michele Tosini, Florence 1503 - 1577
PIETÀ WITH TWO ANGELS
Oil on panel
35¾ by 25⅜ in.; 90.8 by 64.4 cm.
Private collection

The Pietà is a subject in Christian art depicting the Virgin Mary cradling the dead body of Jesus, most often found in sculpture. As such, it is a particular form of the Lamentation of Christ, a scene from the Passion of Christ found in cycles of the Life of Christ. When Christ and the Virgin are surrounded by other figures from the New Testament, the subject is strictly called a Lamentation in English, although Pietà is often used for this as well, and is the normal term in Italian. More the Pietà


Michele Tosini, also called Michele di Ridolfo, (1503–1577) was an Italian painter of the Renaissance and Mannerist period, who worked in Florence.

Tosini began painting in the early 16th-century Florentine style of Fra Bartolommeo and Andrea del Sarto. His acceptance of Mannerism was slow, but by the 1540s the influence of Salviati and Bronzino was visible in his work. After 1556, Tosini served as an assistant to Giorgio Vasari in the decoration of the Salone dei Cinquecento in the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence. Through Vasari's example, Tosini adopted a vocabulary derived from the work of Michelangelo and painted some of his best-known works in this manner. He executed several important commissions late in his career: the fresco decoration of three city gates of Florence (1560s), the altar in the chapel at the Villa Caserotta (1561), near San Casciano Val di Pesa, and the paintings on the sides and back of the tabernacle of the high altar of Santa Maria della Quercia (1570), Viterbo. According to Vasari, Tosini headed a large workshop that executed numerous altarpieces and paintings. He was also a notable portraitist. More on Michele Tosini




Please visit my other blogs: Art CollectorMythologyMarine ArtPortrait of a Lady, The OrientalistArt of the Nude and The Canals of VeniceMiddle East Artists365 Saints and 365 Days, also visit my Boards on Pinterest

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13 Icons from the Bible, 16 & 17th Century, with footnotes, #13


Spain or the Netherlands , early 17th century 
Saint Jerome, the Immaculate Conception, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Anthony of Padua and St. Peter
five gilt bronze plates, on a red velvet background; In the same gilt wood frame 
40 x 36.5 cm, 10 x 7 cm (each plate); 15 2/3 by 14 1/3 in., 4 by 2 4/5 (each insert)
Private Collection

France or Italy, sixteenth century 
Pietà
A FRENCH OR ITALIAN 16TH CENTURY GILT BRONZE PAX FIGURING THE PIETÀ
kiss of peace ormolu 
High. 15 cm; 6 in height.
Private Collection

France or Italy, sixteenth century 
Pietà
Detail

Netherlands or Germany, seventeenth century 
The Nativity and Adoration of the Magi
A PAIR OF NETHERLANDS OR GERMAN 17TH CENTURY GILT COPPER RELIEFS WITH THE NATIVITY AND THE ADORATION OF THE MAGI ; ON SILVER FRAMES WITH THE MAKER'S MARK CK
Quantity: 2 
pair of gilded copper plates and rejected; the silver frames punched CK ( London, 1908) 
23 x 19 cm; 9 by 7 1/2 in


 RUSSIAN ICON OF THE TIKHVIN MOTHER OF GOD, CIRCA 1600, MOSCOW
20 inches x 18 inches (51 x 46 cm).


She bears a star upon each shoulder and on her head, signifying her perpetual virginity before, during and after the birth of Christ. Christ delivers a blessing with His right hand and holds a scroll (signifying His wisdom) in His left hand. The Virgin gestures towards Christ, directing the viewer to the source of eternal life-her son. The upper corners painted with Angels. The borders and background overlaid with silver repousse basma strips and the haloes similarly decorated.

This Tikhvin Mother of God is one of four well-known Russian Miracle-Working images of the Mother of God. The original Tikhvin (Below) was believed to have been painted by Saint Luke, who sent it as a gift to the ruler Theophilus at Antioch. After Thoephilus' death it went to Jerusalem. In the 5th century it was sent as a gift to Pulcheria, sister of Theodosius the Younger, in Constantinople and the Church of the Blachernae was built to house it, where it remained for over five hundred years under the title Hodigitria. In 1383, knowing of the approaching fall of Constantinople to the Turks, The icon left that city for Russia. Fishermen saw it in a circle of light over Lake Ladoga, and then it appeared again near Lake Onega, then on the Oyat River, and then twice more, moving ever closer to Tikhvin. Finally, it appeared on the bank of the Tikhvinka River in 1383. In the 16th century it was placed in a brick church dedicated to the Dormition, and in 1613, after the vision of a blind widow, it was used to repel the invading Swedes. In 1944, during the Soviet oppression of the Russian Orthodox Church, the icon was rescued, eventually coming to the United States for safekeeping by future Archbishop John Garklavs. In 2004, it was transferred back to Russia and returned to its home village of Tikhvin. The Tikhvin Mother of God is the Patroness of families. More Tikhvin Mother of God

Luke the evangelist
The Theotokos of Tikhvin in the golden riza
Tikhvin Icon of the Mother of God in salary (Tikhvin)
XV-XVI вв

RUSSIAN ICON OF THE BIRTH OF THE MOTHER OF GOD, 16TH CENTURY, VLADIMIR-SUZDAL.
19.5 inches x 13.5 inches (49.5 x 34.5 cm)
Vladimir-Suzdal, Russia

At left Anna, the mother of Mary, is depicted reclining on a bed after having given birth. Following Jewish tradition, servants at the foot of the bed, wash the newborn Mary and swaddle her and cool her with a fan shown lower right. Behind Anna are two servants serving her food and further back still and to the right is Anna’s husband Joakhim who looks on. The draped red cloth along the upper margin strung between two buildings indicates that this is an interior scene.  The size and shape of the offered icon would suggest it once formed part of the festival tier of an iconostasis.

Vladimir-Suzdal, formally known as the Grand Duchy of Vladimir (1157–1331), was one of the major principalities that succeeded Kievan Rus' in the late 12th century, centered in Vladimir-on-Klyazma. After being conquered by the Mongol Empire, the principality became a self-governed state headed by its own nobility. A governorship of principality, however, was prescribed by a Khan declaration issued from the Golden Horde to a noble family of any of smaller principalities. More Vladimir-Suzdal,



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20 Carvings - Carvings & Sculpture from the Bible! 15 & 16th Century. With Footnotes -# 7

Lower Rhine, around 1530-1550
The Education of the Virgin, c. 1530-1550
Carved oak with traces of polychrome 
High. 85 cm; height 33 1/2 in.
Private Collection

Saint Anne Teaching Her Daughter the Virgin Mary to Read (The Education of the Virgin)

Northern France
Saint Martin sharing his cloak, c. 1520
Polychrome oak 
103 x 55 cm x 38 cm; 40 1/2 x 21 3/4 x 15 in.
Private Collection

St. Martin was born during the reign of the Emperor Constantine the Great, and was the son of a Roman soldier. He himself entered the army at an early age, and was sent into Gaul with a regiment of cavalry. Among his comrades he was loved for his mildness of temper and his generosity.

It happened that he was stationed in the city of Amiens, during a winter of unusual severity. There was great suffering among the poor, and many perished with cold and hunger. St. Martin was riding one day through the city gate, when he passed a naked beggar shivering on the pavement. Immediately he drew rein, and spoke pityingly to the poor creature. The young soldier was wearing over his coat of mail a long mantle. Slipping this garment from his shoulders he divided it with his sword, giving half to the beggar. More

Brabant, Antwerp,
St. Mary Jacobe teacher reading to her children, C. 1500-1510
AN ANTWERP, , OAK GROUP OF SAINTE MARIE-JACOBÉ TEACHING HER CHILDREN Carved oak with traces of polychrome 
36 x 24.5 x 7 cm; 14 1/4 x 9 1/2 x 2 3/4 in.
Private Collection

St. Mary Jacobe, the wife of Clopas, was one of various Marys named in the New Testament. Mary of Clopas is explicitly mentioned only in John 19:25, where she is among the women present at the Crucifixion of Jesus. More

The Golden Legend of Voragine, from the late medieval Europe, is a  biography of saints or ecclesiastical leaders. In this source book, St.Mary Jacobe is mentioned again in the dispersion Maximin tale, where Mary Magdalene, her brother Lazarus, her sister Martha, Martha’s maid Martillam, blessed Cedonius and many other Christians, were herded by the unbelievers into a ship without pilot or rudder and sent out to sea so that they might all be drowned, but by God’s will they eventually landed at Marseille.  The Golden Legend goes on;  Mary and the others destroyed the temples of the idols in the city of Marseille and built churches to Christ on the sites.

Burgundy last third of the fifteenth century Pietà
A PIETÀ
Limestone with traces of polychrome 
69 x 50 x 25 cm; 27 by 19 2/3 by 9 3/4 in.
Private Collection

The Pietà is a subject in Christian art depicting the Virgin Mary cradling the dead body of Jesus, most often found in sculpture. As such, it is a particular form of the Lamentation of Christ, a scene from the Passion of Christ found in cycles of the Life of Christ. When Christ and the Virgin are surrounded by other figures from the New Testament, the subject is strictly called a Lamentation in English, although Pietà is often used for this as well, and is the normal term in Italian. More

Lorraine, second quarter of the fourteenth century
Virgin and Child 
Limestone 
102 x 45 x 23 cm; 40 1/4 x 17 3/5 x 9 in.
Private Collection

Northern Spanish, early 17th century
SAINT JOHN THE EVANGELIST
Gilt and polychromed pine
101cm., 39¾in.
Private Collection

The present figure was possibly part of a crucifixion group. With its frowning expression, dramatic pose and bulky, elaborately polychromed drapery. More

John the Evangelist is the name traditionally given to the author of the Gospel of John. Christians have traditionally identified him with John the Apostle, John of Patmos, and John the Presbyter, though this has been disputed by modern scholars.

Christian tradition says that John the Evangelist was John the Apostle. A historical figure, one of the "pillars" of the Jerusalem church after Jesus' death. He was one of the original twelve apostles and is thought to be the only one to have lived into old age and not be killed for his faith. John is associated with the city of Ephesus, where he is said to have lived and been buried. Some believe that he was exiled (around 95 AD) to the Aegean island of Patmos, where he wrote the Book of Revelation. More

He wrote to the seven Christian churches in Asia to warn them of various challenges and temptations that confront them, which have been revealed to him in a vision. He then relates several additional powerful visions concerning the Last Days and the Second Coming of Christ. More

Southern German or Austrian, 17th century
BISHOP SAINT, POSSIBLY SAINT NICHOLAS
Gilt and polychromed wood
93cm., 36 5/8 in
Private Collection

Saint Nicholas (15 March 270 – 6 December 343), also called Nikolaos of Myra, was a historic 4th-century Christian saint and Greek Bishop of Myra, in Asia Minor. Because of the many miracles attributed to his intercession, he is also known as Nikolaos the Wonderworker. His reputation evolved among the faithful, as was common for early Christian saints, and his legendary habit of secret gift-giving gave rise to the traditional model of Santa Claus through Sinterklaas.

The historical Saint Nicholas, as known from strict history: He was born at Patara, Lycia in Asia Minor. In his youth he made a pilgrimage to Egypt and the Palestine area. Shortly after his return he became Bishop of Myra and was later cast into prison during the persecution of Diocletian. He was released after the accession of Constantine and was present at the Council of Nicaea. 

He was buried in his church at Myra, and by the 6th century his shrine there had become well-known. In 1087 Italian sailors or merchants stole his alleged remains from Myra and took them to Bari, Italy; this removal greatly increased the saint’s popularity in Europe, and Bari became one of the most crowded of all pilgrimage centres. Nicholas’s relics remain enshrined in the 11th-century basilica of San Nicola at Bari. More

Circle of Guido Mazzoni (circa 1445-1518)
Italian, Bologna, late 15th/ early 16th century
MARY MAGDALENE
Polychromed terracotta
70cm., 27 1/2 in.
Private Collection

This poignant figure of a wailing Mary Magdalene would have once formed part of a terracotta group lamenting the Dead Christ. Such groups, characterised by contorted poses and a high level of emotion, flourished in Emilia-Romagna in the second half of the 15th century, led by Niccolo dell'Arca's famous masterpiece in the church of S. Maria della vita in Bologna. The present figure can be associated with the work of Niccolo's contemporary, Guido Mazzoni. More

MAZZONI, Guido, (b. ca. 1450, Modena, d. 1518, Modena) was an Italian sculptor, painter, mask-maker and festival director. Throughout his career he was associated with the stage, and known as a painter as well as a sculptor. He was brought up by a paternal uncle, Paganino Mazzoni, a Modenese notary and official of the Este bureaucracy. This connection with the ducal court of Ferrara throws some light on the artist's early training, which is otherwise obscure. A document of 1472 refers to him as a painter, and his first sculpture strongly echoes the figural style in Francesco del Cossa's frescoes (1466–the mid-1470s) at the Palazzo Schifanoia outside Ferrara. Mazzoni may have worked at the Palazzo Schifanoia in association with the stucco master Domenico di Paris, where he may have learnt to model papier-mâché props for the court masques that contemporary sources say he directed and designed. A related activity of these years was making the realistic and caricatural festival masks for which Modena was famous.

After 1480 he made an Adoration group which reflects the influence of Venetian painting. By 1489 he had moved to Naples where his most important work is a Lamentation group in the church of Monte Oliveto. In 1495 he accompanied Charles VIII to France, and in 1498 executed the tomb of Charles VIII in St-Denis (destroyed in 1793). In 1507 he returned briefly to Modena, but thereafter again worked in France, executing an equestrian statue of Louis XII at Blois and returning to Italy only on the death of Louis XII in 1515. In 1516 he is once more recorded in Modena, where he died in 1518. More


Spanish, 14th century
John the Evangelist
Stained cedar, on a modern wood and metal stand
61.5cm., 24 1/8 in
Private Collection

John the Evangelist, see above

Italian, probably 14th Century
John the Evangelist
polychromed wood
131cm., 51 1/2 in.
Private Collection

John the Evangelist, see above

Italian, early 16th century
SAINT GEORGE
Gilt and polychromed wood
99cm., 39in.
Private Collection

Saint George (circa 275/281 – 23 April 303 AD) was a soldier in the Roman army who later became venerated as a Christian martyr. His parents were Christians of Greek background; his father Gerontius was a Roman army official from Cappadocia and his mother Polychronia was from Lydda, Syria Palaestina. Saint George became an officer in the Roman army in the Guard of Diocletian, who ordered his death for failing to recant his Christian faith.

In the fully developed Western version of the Saint George Legend, a dragon, or crocodile, makes its nest at the spring that provides water for the city of "Silene" (perhaps modern Cyrene in Libya or the city of Lydda in Palistine, depending on the source). Consequently, the citizens have to dislodge the dragon from its nest for a time, to collect water. To do so, each day they offer the dragon at first a sheep, and if no sheep can be found, then a maiden is the best substitute for one. The victim is chosen by drawing lots. One day, this happens to be the princess. The monarch begs for her life to be spared, but to no avail. She is offered to the dragon, but then Saint George appears on his travels. He faces the dragon, protects himself with the sign of the Cross, slays the dragon, and rescues the princess. The citizens abandon their ancestral paganism and convert to Christianity. Mor
Rhenish, 14th century style
SAINT CATHERINE OF ALEXANDRIA
Oak, with traces of polychromy
figure: 112cm., 44 1/8 in., base: 6cm., 2 3/8 in. 
Private Collection

Saint Catherine of Alexandria is, according to tradition, a Christian saint and virgin, who was martyred in the early 4th century at the hands of the pagan emperor Maxentius. According to her hagiography, she was both a princess and a noted scholar, who became a Christian around the age of fourteen, and converted hundreds of people to Christianity. She was martyred around the age of 18. Over 1,100 years following her martyrdom, St. Joan of Arc identified Catherine as one of the Saints who appeared to her and counselled her.

The Eastern Orthodox Church venerates her as a Great Martyr, and celebrates her feast day on 24 or 25 November (depending on the local tradition). In the Catholic Church she is traditionally revered as one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers. In 1969 the Catholic Church removed her feast day from the General Roman Calendar;[4] however, she continued to be commemorated in the Roman Martyrology on 25 November. More

Attributed to Giovanni Marigliano, called Giovanni da Nola (1488–1558)
Italian, Naples, first half 16th century
VIRGIN OF THE ANNUNCIATION
gilt and polychromed wood
123cm., 48½in. 
Private Collection

This serene, contemplative, and rare, Virgin of the Annunciation can be attributed to the celebrated wood carver and sculptor Giovanni Marigliano, who operated in Naples and was responsible for many of the most important tomb monuments erected in the city in the first half of the 16th century. Marigliano was responsible for two important polychromed wood crib groups: those in San Domenico Maggiore (circa 1507) and Santa Maria del Parto (1524) in Naples. The latter group, in particular, represents a fruitful comparison with the present figure. Each of the figures kneel and bear the same calm, reverent, expressions, and so represent a direct compositional comparison. The linearity of the Virgin's drapery finds some of its strongest comparisons in later tomb sculpture by Marigliano. Note, for example, the kneeling Maria Osorio Pimentel, book held in her hands, from the double tomb monument to herself and her husband Pedro de Toledo in the church of San Giacomo degli Spagnoli, Naples (circa 1540-1546); Marigliano's crowning masterpiece. More

MARIGLIANO, Giovanni, (b. ca. 1488, Nola, d. 1558, Napoli), Italian wood-carver and sculptor. He trained in Naples under Pietro Belverte (d. 1513), executing polychromed wooden reliefs and crib figures. In 1508 he and Belverte assisted Tommaso Malvito on a frame for an image of St Anne and on doors at the Ospizio dell'Annunziata, Naples. Marigliano continued to work almost exclusively in Naples. His first independent commissions were the frame for the Virgin and Child by Antonio da Rimpacta, and the altar frame for Bartolommeo de Lino's Virgin and Saints. Around 1524 he carved crib figures for Santa Maria del Parto, Naples, and collaborated on the marble tomb of the Viceroy of Sicily Don Ramón de Cardona.

In 1532 he completed the altar of the Madonna del soccorso, a pendant to another altar by Girolamo da Santacroce. Both follow earlier Tuscan models, and the juxtaposition highlights Marigliano's awkward figure designs and his dependence on other sculptors' formulae. His altar of the Madonna della neve represents a more classical solution, as did his monument to Guido Fieramosca. These precede the bizarre designs for the three tombs of the brothers Sigismondo, Ascanio and Jacopo Sanseverino (1539-46; Naples, Santi Severino e Sossio), who were poisoned (1516) by their uncle. His work combines Lombard influences with Giovanni Angelo Montorsoli's classical style, derived from Michelangelo, detectable also in such later marble figures as the St Peter in the Cappella Caracciolo). Marigliano's last surviving sculpture, the Deposition (c. 1549; Naples, Santa Maria delle Grazie a Caponapoli), is a highly emotive scene. More

Italian, 16th Century
VIRGIN AND CHILD
Gilt and polychromed wood
153cm. 60 1/4 in.
Private Collection

Italian, Siena, second half 15th century
VIRGIN AND CHILD
Gilt and polychromed wood
106cm., 41 3/4 in. 
Private Collection

North Italian, 15th century style
VIRGIN AND CHILD ENTHRONED
Gilt and polychromed pine
98cm., 38 5/8 in.
Private Collection
North Italian, late 14th/ early 15th century
RELIEF WITH THE VIRGIN AND CHILD ENTHRONED
Polychromed wood, on a metal stand
95.5cm., 37 5/8 in. 
Private Collection

North Italian, circa 1400
VIRGIN AND CHILD ENTHRONED
Polychromed stucco, on a wood base
128cm., 50 3/8 in.
Private Collection

Italian, Siena, late 14th century
VIRGIN AND CHILD ENTHRONED
Gilt and polychromed wood
128cm., 50 3/8 in. 
Private Collection

This  Virgin and Child enthroned breaks with the rigid Sedes Sapientiae type by introducing a new dynamism and intimacy to the interaction between the Virgin and Her infant. The group has in the past been attributed to the early 14th-century Sienese masters Ramo di Paganello (active circa 1281-1320) and Agostino di Giovanni (circa 1285-1347). More
Spanish, 15th century style
MALE SAINT HOLDING A BOOK
Polychromed walnut
114cm., 44 3/8 in
Private Collection




Acknowledgement: Sotheby'sSotheby's


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22 Paintings, RELIGIOUS ART - Paintings from the Bible by the Masters, Franz von Stuck, with footnotes, 21



Franz von Stuck, (1863-1928)
Inferno, c. 1908
128.5 x 209 cm
Oil on canvas

"His painting Inferno rendered an extraordinary panaroma of the damned writhing in eternal torment. A syphilitic whore with a death’s head stands stiffly on the left while a demon readies to suckle at her withered teat. Two muscled figures sit doubled up in agony at the scene’s center. On the right, a venomous serpent coils itself around two damned souls. Stuck used ophidian imagery repeatedly in his paintings and this particular Hydra wildly sibilates as it crushes its victims. Backlit with fiery igneous rock, Stuck focused light on each damned soul so as to detail every facet of their agony. Inferno successfully depicts an arresting scene of chthonian grotesques for its viewers." More

Franz Stuck (February 23, 1863 – August 30, 1928), ennobled as Franz von Stuck in 1906, was a German painter, sculptor, engraver, and architect. Born at Tettenweis near Passau, Stuck displayed an affinity for drawing and caricature from an early age. To begin his artistic education he relocated in 1878 to Munich, where he would settle for life. From 1881 to 1885 Stuck attended the Munich Academy.

File:Samson Franz von Stuck.jpg
Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
Samson, c. 1890
Oil on canvas
37 cm (14.57 in.), Width: 56.5 cm (22.24 in.)
 Museum Villa Stuck, Munich

Franz von Stuck's early painting, which titled "Samson" (1890), and which was considered lost since it's last mention in 1924 by Stuck's biographer, the poet OJ Bierbaum; who commented that the image: "One is more inclined to think of one of the labors of Hercules, as to the fact of the Old Testament ." More 

He first became well known by cartoons for Fliegende Blätter, and vignette designs for programmes and book decoration. In 1889 he exhibited his first paintings at the Munich Glass Palace, winning a gold medal for The Guardian of Paradise.

Franz Von Stuck 1863 -1928 |  German Symbolist / Expressionist painter and sculptor
Franz von Stuck
Crucifixion, 1913
Tempera on canvas
190 cm (74.8 in.), Width: 165 cm (64.96 in.) 
Museum der Bildenden Künste - Leipzig

In 1892 Stuck co-founded the Munich Secession, and also executed his first sculpture, Athlete. The next year he won further acclaim with the critical and public success of what is now his most famous work, the painting The Sin. Also during 1893, Stuck was awarded a gold medal for painting at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, and was appointed to a royal professorship. In 1895 he began teaching painting at the Munich Academy.

Franz von Stuck (1863 - 1928)
Crucifixion Christi, c. (1913)
165 x 190 cm (64,8 x 74,7 inches)
Leipzig, Museum

Stuck chose to portray the most dramatic moment of Christ's death, when the sun went dark and the heavens cracked. The scene concentrates entirely on the deathly pale Christ, who is lit in a bright heavenly glow against the dark setting. Apart from Christ and the two murderers, of whom one is lost in the darkness and the other seen from the back and almost invisible, the only others present are John and Mary. More

Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
Golgotha, c. 1917 
Oil on canvas
Brooklyn Museum - New York, NY (United States)

Stuck devoted several canvases to this subject late in his career, during the difficult years of World War I. Calling on new scholarly theories regarding the Gospel accounts, Stuck departs from tradition and places Christ at eye level with the witnesses to his sufferings. The artist cleverly structures his composition, placing the viewer immediately to the left of the crucified thief in the foreground and to the right of the haloed Virgin Mary, thereby closing a solemn yet intimate circle. Stuck also chooses to show Christ with his feet side by side rather than overlapping—again, referencing nineteenth-century debates about the historical details of this method of execution. More

In 1897 Stuck married an American widow, Mary Lindpainter, and began work designing his own residence and studio, the Villa Stuck. His designs for the villa included everything from layout to interior decorations; for his furniture Stuck received another gold medal at the 1900 Paris World Exposition.

Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
Pietà, c. 1891
Oil on canvas
Height: 95 cm (37.4 in.), Width: 178.5 cm (70.28 in.)
Städel Museum - Frankfurt (Germany)

Stuck’s big idea is humanity itself, in all its complexity and contradiction, all its passion and pain. In paintings such as Pieta, we bear witness to the Virgin Mary’s grief as we, too, look upon the dead body of Christ, to whom von Stuck often gave his own features in the paintings, thus placing himself in that most passionate and pathetic of roles. More

Having attained much fame by this time, Stuck was ennobled on December 9, 1905 and would receive further public honours from around Europe during the remainder of his life. He continued to be well respected among young artists as professor at the Munich Academy, even after his artistic styles became unfashionable. Notable students of his over the years include Paul Klee, Hans Purrmann, Wassily Kandinsky, Alf Bayrle and Josef Albers.

Franz von Stuck
Lucifer, c. 1891
oil on canvas
National Gallery for Foreign Art (Sofia, Bulgaria)

Stuck’s Lucifer (1890; detail shown above) strikes the viewer not just as an embodiment of evil, but an embodiment of the human element in evil. An early critic wrote of “appalling Lucifer, sitting alone in the nether gloom with incandescent greenish eyes.” Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria, once owner of Lucifer, told von Stuck that the painter “terrified” his ministers, who made the sign of the cross upon first sight of the fallen archangel—a story von Stuck retold with glee, one presumes.  What makes Lucifer stick in your mind isn’t some reproduction of the glamour of evil, but rather the poignant sense of loss in those glowing green eyes, the envy of the heaven he fell from fueling the fires of the hell he must now fashion. von Stuck could paint both convincing Christs and Satans because he always held onto the common thread of the humanity at the core of such figures. More

Stuck’s masterwork, “Lucifer.” As with many of his portraits, the subject gazes out toward the viewer—but off center and with pale, enraged eyes, the fallen angel is looking through the audience, not at them. Plotting his revenge and cupping his broken wings, this greatest symbol of inversion—once divine, now demonic, once the favorite, now the enemy—sees through the material aspects to the very essence of humanity and how it can be exploited to subvert divine order. Unlike Stuck’s other composite beasts whose hooves are planted firmly on earth, Lucifer has wings that for flight and ascendance, but now form only a dark shell, a reminder of his fall, crumpled by a thin crescent of light descending from above. More

'Temptation', Oil by Franz Von Stuck (1863-1928, Germany):
Franz von Stuck
Die Versuchung (The Temptation)

In the middle of the picture, between Adam and Eve, Stuck positioned the Tree of Knowledge around which a giant snake has curled itself. Eve, who has already been seduced by the snake and sampled the forbidden fruit, is shown timidly offering it to Adam. Torn between accepting or refusing the apple, Adam's leg is simultaneously being enveloped by the devil’s tail. Stuck clearly used the forbidden fruit as a metaphor of the seductive and erotic power of woman. This is reflected not only in the painting’s title but also in Eve’s gesture: while offering him the apple in one hand, she clasps her breast in the other. More

File:Franz-Von-Stuck-adam-and-Eve.jpg:
Franz von Stuck, (1863-1928)
Adam and Eve, ca. 1920-28
98.0 x 93.5 cm
Oil on wood

Here Stuck altered the iconography. The tree is left out entirely. Instead, the devil uses the woman herself as the temptress of man. Rather than the apple, Eve extends the snake’s head, in which the apple is clearly visible between the fangs of its gaping mouth. Both snake and woman conjoin in their attempt to seduce man, just as they do in Stuck’s famous later paintings of Die Sünde (The Sin).

Franz von Stuck, (1863-1928)
Temptation - Adam and Eve
Oil on wood
Mid Rhineland Museum

Franz von Stuck (1863 - 1928)
ADAM UND EVA, 1893
73 x 68,5 x 3,5 cm
Bronze

Franz von Stuck (1863 - 1928)
ADAM UND EVA (ADAM AND EVE)
Plaster
70 by 74.5cm., 27½ by 29¼in.


An interesting aspect of this relief, and the bronx above, is the opposing representations of the two nudes. While Adam resembles antique statues from the 5th century BC, Eve is emphatically modern, sensitively modelled from nature and stylized in a way that is typical of von Stuck.

Franz von Stuck died on August 30, 1928 in Munich; his funeral address memorialized him as "the last prince of art of Munich's great days". He is buried in the Munich Waldfriedhof next to his wife Mary.

Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
The Guardian of Paradise, c. 1889
Oil on canvas
250 cm (98.43 in.), Width: 167 cm (65.75 in.) 
Brooklyn Museum - New York, NY (United States)

In 1889 Stuck exhibited his first paintings at the Munich Glass Palace, winning a gold medal for The Guardian of Paradise.

The lost Paradise, 1897 by Franz Stuck. Symbolism. religious painting:
Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
The lost Paradise, c. 1897
Oil on canvas
200 x 290 cm
Galerie Neue Meister in Dresden, Germany

 “After he drove the man out, he placed on the east side of the Garden of Eden cherubim and a flaming sword.” (Genesis 3:24)

Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
The Explusion from Paradise, c. 1890
Oil on canvas
Musée d'Orsay - Paris (France)


In the present painting, the angel is turned into profile, and Adam and Eve are added at the right. The angel’s bent wings are firmly planted on the ground, balancing the slight curve of the two bodies on the right. A vanishing demarcation line indicates the border of Paradise in the center of the painting, reinforcing its symmetrical composition. The dark and light bodies of Adam and Eve repeat the rhythm of the angel’s dark wings and light body. The most innovative element is the scintillating light which creates an unreal magic space. More

Image: Franz von Stuck - Judith
Franz von Stuck, (1863-1928)
Judith, (1924)
83 x 157 cm
Oil on canvas
Schwerin State Museum

Franz von Stuck, (1863-1928)
Judith (1926)
83 x 157 cm
Oil on canvas
Schwerin State Museum

Franz von Stuck, (1863-1928)
Judith and Holofernes, c. 1927
82 × 74 cm
Oil on canvas
Collection Otto Heilmann, Munich, Germany

Modern paintings of this scene often cast Judith nude, as was signalled already by Klimt. Franz Stuck's 1928 Judith has "the deliverer of her people" standing naked and holding a sword besides the couch on which Holofernes, half-covered by blue sheets—where the text portrays her as god-fearing and chaste, "Franz von Stuck's Judith becomes, in dazzling nudity, the epitome of depraved seduction"

The account of the beheading of Holofernes by Judith is given in the Book of Judith, and is the subject of many paintings and sculptures from the Renaissance and Baroque periods. In the story, Judith, a beautiful widow, is able to enter the tent of Holofernes because of his desire for her. Holofernes was an Assyrian general who was about to destroy Judith's home, the city of Bethulia. Overcome with drink, he passes out and is decapitated by Judith; his head is taken away in a basket (often depicted as carried by an elderly female servant). More

Franz von Stuck, (1863-1928)
Salome, c. 1906
45.7 × 24.7 cm
Oil on canvas
Lenbachhaus

Franz von Stuck, (1863-1928)
Salome, 1920
90.2 x 66 cm (35 1/2 x 26 in.)
Oil on canvas

Salome, stepdaughter of Herod II, is depicted in the Bible as a femme fataleâ. Her dance before the King so pleases him that he ultimately agrees to the beheading of John the Baptist. Von Stuck highlights Salome`s seductive and rather sinister”qualities; the tilt of her head and positioning of her body emphasize her long, lean figure as well as the wide expanses of naked skin. Her smile similarly reveals her delight at entertaining her audience, the viewer. This representation is related to a variation of the same subject produced by von Stuck in 1906 (see above). Salome is shown the same pose, but accompanied by a black woman carrying the head of John the Baptist. More

Franz von Stuck - Batsheba, 1912.jpg
Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
Batsheba, c. 1912
Oil on canvas
95 × 91 cm (37.4 × 35.8 in)
National Museum of Fine Arts in Buenos Aires

According to the Hebrew Bible, "Bat Sheva," , "daughter of the oath"; was the wife of Uriah the Hittite and later of David, king of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah. She is most known for the Bible story in which she was summoned by King David who had seen her bathing and lusted after her.

Bathsheba was from David's own tribe and the granddaughter of one of David's closest advisors. She was the mother of Solomon, who succeeded David as king, making her the Queen Mother. More

Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
Susanna and the Elders

Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
Susanna and the Elders, c. 1904
Oil on canvas

Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
Susanna and the Elders, c. 1913
Oil on canvas
25 x 63 cm

Franz von Stuck (1863–1928)
Susanna And The Elders, c. 1904
Oil, canvas
98 x 134.5 cm

A fair Hebrew wife named Susanna was falsely accused by lecherous voyeurs. As she bathes in her garden, having sent her attendants away, two lustful elders secretly observe the lovely Susanna. When she makes her way back to her house, they accost her, threatening to claim that she was meeting a young man in the garden unless she agrees to have sex with them.

She refuses to be blackmailed and is arrested and about to be put to death for promiscuity when a young man named Daniel interrupts the proceedings, shouting that the elders should be questioned to prevent the death of an innocent. After being separated, the two men are questioned about details of what they saw, but disagree about the tree under which Susanna supposedly met her lover. In the Greek text, the names of the trees cited by the elders form puns with the sentence given by Daniel. The first says they were under a mastic, and Daniel says that an angel stands ready to cuthim in two. The second says they were under an evergreen oak tree, and Daniel says that an angel stands ready to saw him in two. The great difference in size between a mastic and an oak makes the elders' lie plain to all the observers. The false accusers are put to death, and virtue triumphs. More

stuck, franz von the dragon slayer | figures | sotheby's l15101lot7y6mden:
Franz von Stuck, 1863 - 1928
THE DRAGON SLAYER
Oil on panel
135 by 126cm., 53¼ by 49½in.

The Dragon Slayer is a particularly charged rendition of an age-old theme. Although most of Stuck's paintings depict scenes from the Antique or the Bible, neither the title The Dragon Slayer nor the iconography reveal the exact story behind the present work. Stuck's fascination with Greek legends suggests the subject to be Perseus and Andromeda, although Medusa's head and Perseus's winged shoes are missing. As early as 1900 Stuck’s contemporary, Lovis Corinth (lots 3, 4 & 5), had painted the hero as a medieval knight rather than a Greek half-god, and his Perseus and Andromeda may have been a possible source of inspiration for the present work. Another obvious influence would have been the biblical story of St. George, who kills the dragon to save a virgin. More

Franz von Stuck, 1863 - 1928
Versuchung (Temptation), c. 1918
Mixed media on canvas
37 3/8 x 42 1/2 in
Museum Villa Stuck

Franz von Stuck, 1863 - 1928
Temptation Of St. Anthony
Oil on board
13.00 in. (33.02 cm.) (height) by 15.00 in. (38.10 cm.) (width)

Saint Anthony or Antony (c. 251–356) was a Christian monk from Egypt, revered since his death as a saint. He is known as the Father of All Monks. His feast day is celebrated on January 17 among the Orthodox and Catholic churches and on Tobi 22 in the Egyptian calendar used by the Coptic Church.

The biography of Anthony's life helped to spread the concept of Christian monasticism, particularly in Western Europe via its Latin translations. He is often erroneously considered the first Christian monk. Anthony was, however, the first to go into the wilderness (about ad 270), a geographical move that seems to have contributed to his renown. Accounts of Anthony enduring supernatural temptation during his sojourn in the Eastern Desert of Egypt inspired the often-repeated subject of the temptation of St. Anthony in Western art and literature.

Anthony is appealed to against infectious diseases, particularly skin diseases. In the past, many such afflictions, including ergotism, erysipelas, and shingles, were historically referred to as St. Anthony's fire. More


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