Archive for posts tagged with ‘Milan’


May 13 2011

Bonaparte at the Bridge of Arcole

French / Paintings (Reproductions) / Romanticism - 1 year ago - troycapc

Bonaparte at the Bridge of Arcole

This is a reproduction of “Bonaparte at the Bridge of Arcole” by Antoine-Jean Gros of 1801.  It depicts the masterful victory of Napoleon against the Austrians during their third attempt to raise the siege of Mantua in 1796.  The painting, along with several others, depicts a crucial moment on the first day of the battle in which Napoleon seized the Tri-color and exposed himself to withering Austrian fire in an effort to inspire his men.  Bonaparte eventually won the battle and campaign.  The painting is 59 cm wide and 73 cm high.  The masterpiece is currently in Louvre, Paris.

Reproduction for sale on Zazzle

 


Oct 2 2010

The Crowning with Thorns by Michelangelo Meresi Caravaggio, 1606

Caravaggio / Inspirational prints / Italian / Paintings (Reproductions) / Renaissance - 1 year ago - troycapc

The Crowning with Thorns by Michelangelo Meresi Caravaggio, 1606

This is a reproduction of Caravaggio’s “The Crowning with Thorns” of 1606.  The master wrote out a contract to Massimo Massini for the work the previous year.  The work is influenced by Ruben’s alterpiece depicting the same moment in the Passion of Christ and is based in the style of Titian’s treatment of the same incident.  Caravaggio alters the representation by minimizing the objects detracting from the focus on Christ and three principal tormentors.  As is usual, Caravaggio captures his subjects in their humanity and with dark tones.  The original work is in the Cassa di Risparmio di Prato.

Michelangelo Merisi was born in Caravaggio, near Milan, in 1571 and from the age of thirteen he studied painting for four years.  He went to Rome at twenty-one and became an associate of Cesare d’Arpino, an artist and art dealer.  He secured his first patron, Cardinal Del Monte, who gained Caravaggio’s first commission for side paintings in San Luigi dei Francesi in Rome.  From 1600 he was constantly in trouble with the law for assaults and libels but he continued to secure important commissions.  In 1606 Caravaggio was forced to flee Rome having been accused of murder.  He spent time in Naples and Sicily and became a Knight of St. John in the latter in 1608.  Before long he had to flee again after being imprisoned.  He received a pardon from the Pope and was one his way back to Rome when he died at the age of thirty-nine at Porto Escole.

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