Before
posting the next and final discussion concerning trees as metaphors, I have
been busy adding fresh images to this blog’s galleries that can be accessed by
clicking on the set of links to the right of the” Home” button at the top of the
page.
For the
“Architecture and Ornament” gallery I have posted a lithograph featuring a bouquet-like
arrangement of what I assume to be a bundle of fig leaves crowned with a head
of maize or corn. Doubtless, this beautiful design has found its way into a
woodcarver’s storehouse of motifs.
In the
“Figures and Fauna” gallery you’ll see the best set of ears around. They are
simply stunning—if you have a leaning to drawings steeped in the traditions of
the nineteenth-century academies.
You must
have a look at the “Landscapes and Flora” gallery as I’ve posted Claude
Lorrain’s last etching. It has all the hallmarks of an artist at the peak of
his confidence. Just look at the final image where I show the details of the
print to see what I mean: no pretention just mastery of “feeling” a subject in
space. Also in this gallery there is the print that made Adolphe Appian famous.
Whether it is his best or simply a wonderfully moody print can only be answered
by the viewer. Nevertheless, I have included a quote that places this print as
the image that marked Appian's change from “finding” himself as an artist to
being one.
The
“Books” gallery now has a rare copy of Jacob Strutt’s book with a name that
only the author himself could love: Sylva
Britannica; or, Portraits of Forest Trees,
Distinguished for Their Antiquity, Magnitude, or Beauty.
Finally
the gallery for the weird and wonderful, “Object and Artefacts”, did have a
curiously interesting Victorian executive toy on offer but it has been snapped up and now only the pictures remain.
I know this web page provides quality based articles or reviews and other information, is there any
ReplyDeleteother web site which offers these kinds
of data in quality?
Here is my webpage: his comment is here ()