Thursday, July 16, 2020

Peter Paul Rubens

Peter Paul Rubens
Painting
Port Authority
Rembrandt
Grand Central Station
Timon of Athens
Felipe Carrillo Puerto
Diego Rivera y Frida Kahlo 
The Mouse Trap: Three Blind Mice


Phil.1:29
"For unto you it is given in the behalf of Christ, not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for his sake;"

Fil.1:29
"A vosotros os es concedido a causa de Cristo, no sólo que creáis en él, sino también que padezcáis por él,"








Westminster Abbey








Self-portrait, 1623, Royal Collection










The Lion Hunt is a 1621 painting by Peter Paul Rubens, now held in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich. It shows two lions attacked by hunters on horseback and on foot. It marks the end of an intensive creative phase for Rubens centered on the theme of hunting.








"the height of the cliffs thus affording a rude measure of the age of the streams"~~~Darwin 


Frida Kahlo And The Symbolism In Her Art
Frida Kahlo who lived during the first half of the 20th century changed the art history in a way that she put her own dreams in her artworks. She was affected from several occasions as she had a bus accident and many love affairs that she expressed in an open manner. She used Christian symbolism merging with her own dreams that she called her reality.
After her periods of depression and miscarriages in her life she gave herself into pets around her. She liked to use monkeys, hummingbirds, dogs and cats in her artwork. One of her self-portrait depicts her with three spider monkeys surrendered Kahlo as a protective and tender symbols. On the contrary, Mexican mythology suggests monkeys are the symbols of lust and generally used in that manner.


"my salad days when I was green in judgment, cold in blood"~~~Shakespeare



"He was restless and active, endowed with an easy salacious humour."~~~T. E. Lawrence




Born in Guanajuato, Mexico, Diego Rivera often captured the history and social challenges of his native country through his murals and paintings. El Vendedor de Alcatraces (“Calla Lilies Vendor”) depicts a native Mexican peasant woman carrying an enormous basket of calla lilies, preparing to begin her day as a flower vendor at a market. The unidentified individual in the background helping carry the load of flowers and the hunched posture of the woman is indicative of the hardships endured by the country’s working class, a common theme in Rivera’s work.



Chess: "Peter Paul Rubens"  "Painting" "Rembrandt" "Timon of Athens" "Diego Rivera y Frida Kahlo"
"The Mouse Trap: Three Blind Mice" "Port Authority" "Felipe Carrillo Puerto" "Grand Central Station"

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