RubensVelhagen & Klasing, 1904 - 168 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 10
Page 23
... Queen of Heaven with three Saints on either hand . He reserved for himself how- ever the picture that he had first painted , in which , besides the two Patrons of the church , he had represented the Virgin with other Saints and Pope ...
... Queen of Heaven with three Saints on either hand . He reserved for himself how- ever the picture that he had first painted , in which , besides the two Patrons of the church , he had represented the Virgin with other Saints and Pope ...
Page 29
... Queen of Heaven herself descended into his cathedral in visible shape and presented him with a mantle of celestial texture . The Archbishop is represented here on his knees before a throne , which occupies the centre of the picture ...
... Queen of Heaven herself descended into his cathedral in visible shape and presented him with a mantle of celestial texture . The Archbishop is represented here on his knees before a throne , which occupies the centre of the picture ...
Page 86
... Queen herself : and it was on this occasion that he most probably painted the fine portrait of her now in the Museum at Madrid ( Fig . 68 ) . Three years later the paintings , representing various scenes from her life , with the ...
... Queen herself : and it was on this occasion that he most probably painted the fine portrait of her now in the Museum at Madrid ( Fig . 68 ) . Three years later the paintings , representing various scenes from her life , with the ...
Page 90
... Queen is overcome by the sight of her first- born , and where at the Reconciliation she smiles at him through her tears . The whole work is one great thought , executed according to the spirit of the period , and is a creation which ...
... Queen is overcome by the sight of her first- born , and where at the Reconciliation she smiles at him through her tears . The whole work is one great thought , executed according to the spirit of the period , and is a creation which ...
Page 91
... Queen would much have liked to bind so famous an artist exclusively to her side : but Rubens wrote to a friend that he was " tired of that court " . He was dissatisfied besides , because Her Majesty seemed inclined to withhold the well ...
... Queen would much have liked to bind so famous an artist exclusively to her side : but Rubens wrote to a friend that he was " tired of that court " . He was dissatisfied besides , because Her Majesty seemed inclined to withhold the well ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adorned Albertina at Vienna Albrecht altar altar-piece Ambassador angels Antwerp Archduchess Archduke artist Balthasar Moretus beautiful Berlin Museum Breughel Brussels Carleton charm Church Clément Clément & Co Collection Cologne colour commission composition Cross daughter death decoration designed display Dornach drawing Dresden Gallery English engraving executed expression figures Flemish florins foreground France Franz Hanfstängl Gallery at Vienna Gerbier hand Helena Fourment Hermitage at St Holy Imperial Museum Infant Christ Isabella Brant King of Spain KNACKFUSS LADY landscape letter Liechtenstein Gallery life-size Louvre Louvre at Paris Madonna Maria de Medici master Medici Gallery Munich Pinakothek Museum at Antwerp Museum at Vienna Nymphs original by Braun original by Franz painted painter Paolo Veronese Paris and New-York peace period Peter Paul Rubens Petersburg Philip photograph picture Pinakothek at Munich Plantin-Moretus Museum portrait possesses Prince pupils Queen representing Saint Scaglia scenes Schelte seems sketch Spanish splendid Virgin whilst wife
