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"titian" Definitions
  1. of a brownish-orange color
"titian" Antonyms

178 Sentences With "titian"

How to use titian in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "titian" and check conjugation/comparative form for "titian". Mastering all the usages of "titian" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Consider this: How many paintings did Titian make in all?
"It was very introverted," says Mr Falomir, an expert on Titian.
My thanks go to Giotto, Titian, Rembrandt, Veronese, Tiepolo, Mondrian, Matisse.
I also knew a lot about Titian, Tiepolo, and Giotto's Arena Chapel.
Within seconds, you can become a van Gogh or Rembrandt or Titian painting.
Her hair had a redness about it; a shade she referred to as "titian".
In Italy, he was galvanized by the Venetian School painters, especially Titian and Tintoretto.
These borrowed works by Titian, Leonardo, Rembrandt and Rubens make it a jaw-dropping blockbuster.
It is the beautiful women who are ogled naked in the very best of Titian.
Inside, the staggering collection of art includes masterpieces by Titian, El Greco, Caravaggio and Raphael.
The life-size sculpture "Marsyas," informed by a celebrated Titian painting, is priced at $22017,0003.
The fact that Weinstein and Titian never read it in the original doesn't matter two hoots.
Titian: Love Desire Death continues at the National Gallery (Trafalgar Square, London, England) through June 14.
It emerged from her first project, Mapping Titian, which focused only on the Italian painter's works.
When it branched out, with shows on Rubens and Titian, colleagues across Europe and America were sceptical.
There are fairer women here to-day than Titian ever painted — lovelier than Raphael ever dreamed of.
Then came Titian, portraying the Emperor Charles V on horseback, distilling the essence of imperial splendour in oils.
" The artwork: "The Flaying of Marsyas" (probably 1885s) by Titian Mr. Meyerhofer's take: "It's so violent and awful.
They also shared sources in Italian art, such as the works of Titian, Carracci and Caravaggio, he said.
And while the top names — Rembrandt, Titian, Raphael — still command top dollar, everything else has dropped in value.
Luckily, the rest of the artists interpret Titian's legacy much more interestingly than did Titian in this instance.
The exhibition cleverly connects Bruegel with his southern counterparts by highlighting the influence of Venetian painters such as Titian.
Not all the great tableaus of Titian, Veronese or Caravaggio are necessarily 100 percent work of the original artist.
At my back, an immense, hushed, empty reading room designed by Jacopo Sansovino and decorated by Titian and Veronese.
With Raphael or Titian, if you have someone in turquoise you have a piece of yellow, just to balance.
We stood before a Titian portrait of a young man, richly dressed in a red velvet cap and furs.
In the 16th century, Titian painted the rape of Lucretia three times; a hundred years later, Rembrandt painted it twice.
Inspired by Koons' Gazing Ball paintings, the leather bags feature works by Da Vinci, Titian, Rubens, Van Gogh and Fragonard.
He most notoriously outfoxed the hostile circle of Titian, in 1564, to decorate the palatial Scuola Grande di San Rocco.
In a mother-daughter portrait by Titian, the woman holds what looks like a bouquet of smoke in one blurry hand.
Titian paints Mary crouched to the right of the composition, her eyes cast down and her hand clasped over her breast.
This portrait of Clarissa Strozzi by Titian is considered one of the most beautiful child — and animal — portraits in the world.
There he encountered the Habsburg collection, and, inspired, returned to England with numerous paintings including samples of Titian and Paolo Veronese.
LAWRENCE "Masterpieces by Rubens, Michelangelo and Titian," an illustrated art lecture by Thomas Germano, professor of art history at Farmingdale State College.
Titian was, in the words of the great English poet Geoffrey Chaucer, a 'man's man,' accustomed to showing off his posturing pride.
Pieces headed to American University include works by Picasso, Rembrandt, Titian, Albrecht Dürer, Winslow Homer, John Singer Sargent, Andy Warhol, and Louise Nevelson.
Venus lounges on a red velvet blanket, which Titian renders with stunningly free brushwork; gashes of purple and mauve run through the velour.
When Philip IV acceded to the throne, he moved this painting to a special chamber in the Alcázar Palace, called the Titian Vaults.
Four other "Annunciations After Titian" from that year are blurrier still, the last of them evaporating into a nearly monochrome cloud of pink.
Virtually all paintings they displayed followed a specific set of rules designed to imitate the work of Renaissance masters like Michelangelo and Titian.
Titian was already fairly elderly at the time (people got older much younger then), but he responded to the commission with tremendous gusto.
According to the organization's report, the painting is thought to reproduce a lost Titian portrait that once belonged to the Spanish royal collection.
In the later Titian "Annunciation" here, standing nine feet tall and on loan from the Museo di Capodimonte in Naples, the free brush strokes of Gabriel's wings and the parting clouds cohere only at a distance; get up close and marvel at how Titian breaks down color, makes the brush stroke its own justification, and pushes the visible to the limit.
Although their styles diverged — Titian depicted the moment of attack and Rembrandt her ensuing suicide — they both turned rape into "pure allegory," Princenthal writes.
The Breuer's 2016 exhibition "Unfinished: Thoughts Left Visible" presented incomplete paintings through the ages, from Titian to Lucian Freud, Gerhard Richter and Bruce Nauman.
In 1734 a huge blaze at the Alcázar palace in Madrid turned hundreds of works to ash, including many by Velázquez, Rubens and Titian.
Completed in 1839, it was essentially a gallery for the count's private art collection, which included antiquities and masterpieces by Ingres, Rembrandt and Titian.
OLD MASTERS NOW: CELEBRATING THE JOHNSON COLLECTION About 90 works by Botticelli, Bosch, Titian, Rembrandt, Jan Steen, Manet, Monet and Whistler. Nov. 3–Feb.
You could literally pull your laptop from Van Gogh's "Wheatfields," or sling a luminescent, fleshy "Titian" over your shoulder, I couldn't help but laugh.
Spread out over 118 small islands, all of Venice is considered to be an artistic masterpiece where works by Titian, Giorgionne, and Tintoretto are commonplace.
The first single from her album Divers, "Sapokanikan," references a painting by Titian, Percy Bysshe Shelley's sonnet "Ozymandias," and an old mayor of New York.
While in Venice that summer, he went to the Scuola Grande di San Rocco, where he came upon a painting by Titian from around 20173.
His "Annunciation After Titian" (1973) represents the same dramatic announcement of the Incarnation, but Titian's already soft brush strokes have deliquesced into an even blur.
"Titian/Gerhard Richter" is not really about the direct influence of one painter on another; that would be too simple for the German artist, anyway.
Inscribed on its sandstone facade are the names of great artists in the European tradition: Praxiteles, Giotto, Donatello, Raphael, Michaelangelo, Titian, Rembrandt, Rubens and Gainsborough.
First up: "Unfinished: Thoughts Left Visible," an exhibition of nearly two hundred works, which ranges from Titian to Basquiat, connecting the past to the present.
How would a trained icon-maker who moved to Venice, whose art world was dominated by Titian, Tintoretto, and Veronese, respond to that new setting?
In direct response to scenes of mythical debauchery depicted in paintings by Titian and Poussin, George Shaw uses the woodland backdrop to imagine the morning after.
He also backlights her Titian hair into a burnt-orange cloud that jangles with the fire-engine red of her lips and, eventually, her spilled blood.
The 14 new rooms, spanning over 1,13 square meters (11,840.3 square feet), will host 105 art works by Venice and Florence artists, including Titian and Tintoretto.
Around the same time, Titian illuminated his 1520–30 "Bacchus and Ariadne" with a lapis lazuli blue sky and wind-blown garments on his mythical figures.
Why, you might ask, did Titian change Midas's demeanor from the shrinking horror depicted in the Romano drawing to the clinical dispassion rendered in the painting?
The cloud beneath Gabriel that Titian depicted as smoke has turned an impalpable white, while the column and pediment to Mary's right have vanished into fuzziness.
It's probably been since undergrad that I thought about Caravaggio or Titian in relation to my own work — it seems to have such a different character.
Titian began to use cochineal in his works after the middle of the century, as did Veronese, whose "Martyrdom of Saint Justine" is in the exhibition.
Ms. Staver's figures often are framed against a Titian-blue sky, or by the rays of a bright sun that is itself blocked by their bodies.
With her electric twist of Titian curls and dark, secretive gaze, Moll (a riveting Jessie Buckley) has the look of a volcano that's primed to erupt.
His next book was "Le Séjour des Dieux," a sort of historical novel depicting the dialogue, confrontation and, basically, the twin ambitions of Michelangelo and Titian.
She won the race and $10,4003 in 5 hours 24 minutes, beating Ruth Tower, whom The Times quirkily insisted on describing as "titian-haired," by 300 yards.
The next year, back in his spotless German studio, he started to repaint the Titian — the first and only time he copied a work of art history.
Last year's stellar Met Breuer exhibition "Unfinished," for example, presented art from Titian through Piet Mondrian to Marlene Dumas, exploring works that the artists had left incomplete.
She believed herself to be a 'medium' through whom spirits, ranging from saints and archangels to dead Renaissance painters Correggio and Titian, could communicate with the living.
There are Annibale Carracci's portrait of himself on a canvas on an easel and ones by Titian, Delacroix, Ingres, Sargent, Morandi, even Rauschenberg, up to the present day.
Last week the entire cycle was brought together for the first time in 450 years at the National Gallery in London for the exhibition Titian: Love, Desire, Death.
So thank you, Mr. Berry, for always remembering that Latin phrases, Titian paintings and physicists do not always dance in the frontal lobes of all of your solvers.
A bit overshadowed in art history by Titian, the supremely talented local elder, Tintoretto is famous but may not register as clearly as other painters of the age.
A 1555 Titian painting of the Crucifixion fell off the wall at the Royal Monastery of San Lorenzo de El Escorial and onto a dresser containing liturgical objects.
In direct response to scenes of mythical debauchery depicted in paintings by Titian and Poussin, Shaw uses the updated woodland backdrop to imagine the morning after the night before.
His scrawled vignettes of Italian landscapes add a deeper layer to the context of the exhibit in Venice's historic home to masterpieces by Tintoretto, Titian, and Tiepolo, among others.
In Venus with a Mirror (1555, After Titian), the artist takes the famous National Gallery-residing piece and applies the x-ray technique to create a complex, contemporary interpretation.
It includes objects from antiquity, the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, as well as masterpieces by Titian, Veronese, de La Tour, Tiepolo, Delacroix, Monet, Manet, Sisley, Cross and Rouault.
Notable rivals of the Medici family in the 1400s, the wealthy Italian Strozzi family commissioned the work from Titian, one of the most celebrated artists of the 16th century.
The Royal Academy of Arts is bringing together Charles I's collection of art from the 15th to the 17th century, including works by Titian, Van Dyck, Rubens, Holbein and Mantegna.
Navarrete said nearly 1,800 criminals had been caught since late January with the launch of operation Titian Shield, a federal plan to reduce violence in hot spots around the country.
Critics struggled from the start with the very un-Pop intent of his work, which set out to animate figurative art, inspired by European artists from Matisse to Bonnard to Titian.
"I hope people will come out of this exhibition thinking that he was one of the great portraitists of the 16th century along with Titian and Bronzino," Mr Ilchman says. Maybe.
The two-floor exhibition — which ends its six-month run next weekend — spans the 280s to today and features artists as varied as Titian, Andy Warhol and a teenage Pablo Picasso.
The peas in their pods glint like pearls in a velvet compact; the cabbage heads are nestled in their leafy wraps like swaddled babes; a recumbent marrow suggests a Titian nude.
He painted a few great mythological scenes and several acute portraits of old, bearded men, but at his core Tintoretto was a religious artist, far more so than Titian and Veronese.
Titian had a pretty good idea of some of the most famous bits, the main story lines, and Weinstein was happy for him to mix and match as he so wished.
In 1987 a collection of old masters, including works by Raphael, Titian and El Greco, was seized in France from Adnan M. Khashoggi, a wealthy Saudi arms dealer and Marcos associate.
As the Six Collection passed down from one generation to the next, it grew to include works by Vermeer, Bruegel, Hals and Rubens, as well as the odd Titian and Tintoretto.
The Flemish painter Peter Paul Rubens came to Madrid in the 17th century as both a diplomat and an artist, frequently copying works in the royal collection by Titian and others.
Models walked through the space surrounded by paintings from Titian, Perugino and Raphael, wearing faux fur jackets, brocade suiting and sequin-embellished velvet gowns — the typical magpie pieces of the Gucci aesthetic.
FLORENCE, Italy — The 15th-century Palazzo Pitti, by the banks of the Arno, is one of the great storehouses of Italian Renaissance painting, an embarrassment of riches by Raphael, Titian and Tintoretto.
Now on loan from the Prado, it is highly suggestive of how Venetian developments in the painting of the nude, led by Bellini, Giorgione and Titian, affected Ariosto's description of female beauty.
In another painting from this group, she places her copy of a book on Titian next to one on Picasso: the covers are stained and the binding of one is coming undone.
There's Noël Coward's "Blithe Spirit," last seen on Broadway a decade ago and starring a Titian-haired Angela Lansbury as Madame Arcati, a dizzy medium who accidentally summons a writer's deceased wife.
At once absurd and solemn, it is rendered in big splintery brush strokes of gorgeous colors on a patchwork collage of gold and blue velvet (the blue resembles an overheated Titian sky).
There are over 2340 color plates to illustrate his points about older works by Guido Reni, Titian, Kitagawa Utamoro, and others, as well as modern works by Duchamp, Warhol, Andres Serrano, and others.
It belongs to a history of reclining nudes that reaches from Titian through Manet's "Olympia" to Matisse's "Blue Nude," painted the next year, and exploded in Picasso's "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon," also of 1907.
In Van Dyck's reverence for Titian, or Reynolds's appreciation for the Renaissance masters, one begins to grasp that an artist's collection is "the most secret kind of self-portrait", in Ms Robbins's words.
At the edge of the park stands the Galleria Borghese, once the cardinal's "party villa" and now one of Rome's most beloved art galleries, holding works by Caravaggio, Bernini and Titian, among others.
She wore a fresh-pressed white linen jumpsuit and a goldtone vintage kimono that set off her loose shoulder-length hair, dyed for her role to a searing titian from its customary blond.
The first model I built, the one that was the woman I used in "Machina," the beginning of the body series that you saw in 2004, was inspired by Raphael and Titian odalisques.
But, in the sixteenth century, when a Venetian nobleman was posted to the Italian province of Bergamo and wanted to commission a portrait, no less a master than Titian referred him to Moroni.
Mr. Richter stepped in, lending a print on aluminum of "Annunciation After Titian" that he made in 2015, and a dozen other works — some with figurative imagery, many abstract and never before exhibited.
DRAWING IN TINTORETTO'S VENICE Works by Titian, Veronese, Palma Giovane and Bassano provide context for an in-depth examination of the drawing practice of the monumental Venetian painter Jacopo Tintoretto. Oct. 12-Jan.
More than 100 such chiaroscuro prints, including ones after Raphael, Titian and Parmigianino, were on view earlier this year at LACMA and are at the National Gallery of Art in Washington through Jan.
Studying Bourgeois's prints, most of which were made when she was in her eighties and nineties, got me interested in late artistic styles generally — the styles of artists like Titian, Rembrandt, Monet, de Kooning.
The Spanish royal taste for nudes can hardly be separated from the Spanish royal taste for Titian, the Venetian painter who innovated the influential, seductive nude Venus-type that the two Philips avidly acquired.
Currently, the vast majority of works on Mapping Paintings — which is funded by Boston University and the Kress Foundation — arrive from its Titian-centric forebear, with Cranston drawing data from catalogues and museum websites.
In L'Aretino (210), which was written in response to Vasari, the Venetian writer and theorist of painting, Lodovico Dolce, claimed that Titian was the greatest artist of his time and that Michelangelo was deeply flawed.
Six days a week, and on the last Sunday of each month, throngs of visitors scurry past masterpieces by Titian and Caravaggio and through a suite of rooms painted by Raphael to reach Michelangelo's chapel.
Commissioned to paint Hercules' labors for Philip IV's Buen Retiro Palace, Zurbarán depicted the superhero as a tightly wound package of muscle, with little of the individuality Titian afforded to Venus, or Rubens to personified Fortune.
Artists who dealt with this subject include Titian, Diego Velasquez, Peter Paul Rubens, François Boucher, and Twombly's lifelong friend Robert Rauschenberg in the silkscreen "Persimmon" (1964), which incorporates Rubens' oil painting "Venus at the Mirror" (1615).
He failed in respect of Michelangelo and Raphael, but managed to commission a spectacular cycle of works, based on classical mythology, by Bellini and Titian (which are scattered in collections on both sides of the Atlantic).
Jeff Koons's new line of Louis Vuitton bags and accessories, including a Speedy made with reimagined art from Da Vinci, Van Gogh, Rubens, Fragonard or Titian ($2,800), is available at a Louis Vuitton Masters pop-up.
In an early gallery here are two somber portraits of Spain's Habsburg kings: the expansionist Philip II, painted by Titian in stern semiprofile, and his grandson Philip IV, depicted by Diego Velázquez with his trademark handlebar mustache.
Among the insertions and expansions that Ariosto made to the 1532 edition was a verse praising contemporary artists, naming da Vinci, Mantegna, Giovanni Bellini, the brothers Dosso and Battista Dossi, Michelangelo, Sebastiano del Piombo, Raphael and Titian.
Unlike the older Titian, he took few commissions outside the Most Serene Republic, preferring to decorate the lavish cathedrals and palazzi of his aquatic hometown, and to offer his services to humbler congregations from Cannaregio to Castello.
Highlights: See Hieronymus Bosch's famous triptych "The Garden of Earthly Delights"; works by Diego Velázquez; more works by Titian, the godfather of Venetian painting, than in any other museum; more than 250 sculptures; and countless other delights.
After centuries of obscurity — when their works were frequently misattributed to Leonardo da Vinci, Titian, Paolo Veronese, and other male artists — A Tale of Two Women Painters shows us just how much we've been missing out on.
As she writes in the very first episode of her series of poems, Titian Air Vent:              A work of art is a world of signs, at least to the poet's              nursery bookself sheltered behind the artist's ear.
The exhibition ends with four portraits from the first decades of the 16th century: two men, by Titian and Parmigianino, and two women, by Palma il Vecchio and Lorenzo Lotto, all four with Aldine pocket books in hand.
From humble roots—the oldest of three children of a tinto , a dyer—he waged, more than conducted, a career in competition with favorites of the Venetian aristocracy, chiefly his sublime elder Titian and his elegant rival Veronese .
A Venetian-born 16th-century artist, Domenico Campagnola, who studied with Titian (and whose work is sometimes attributed to his teacher) has a very strange landscape drawing here, of a city reduced, as if by earthquake, to rubble.
The Capodimonte Museum in Naples, Italy, has never sent a tour of that size on the road, and it contains paintings by some of the all-time greats: Titian, El Greco, Jusepe de Ribera and Parmigianino among them.
He endows them with the poses and gestures of kings and nobles borrowed from portraits by Velázquez, Holbein, Manet and Titian and also sets them against bold, sometimes jarring patterns of rich brocades, Dutch wax fabrics or Liberty's wallpaper.
Tintoretto, born here 500 years ago, in 1518 or '19, remains less well known than his Venetian rivals Titian and Veronese, to say nothing of the slightly earlier Florentine painters so renowned they got Ninja Turtles named after them.
NEW YORK - The Met Breuer, a new extension of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, gave a preview of its opening exhibition which features works by artists ranging from Titian and Leonardo da Vinci to Andy Warhol and Jackson Pollock.
"At the Frick we are fortunate to have painted portraits of famous people, such as Aretino by Titian, whom one can now compare with medallic portraits, in some cases, of the same subjects," the museum's director, Ian Wardropper, told Hyperallergic.
On the other hand, you had the Catholic Counter-Reformation, in which Catholics seeking to reestablish their religious influence did so by the creation of some of the most magnificent baroque churches in history, painted by artists like Tintoretto and Titian.
The show in the Palazzo dei Diamanti, one of the city's finest Renaissance palazzi, offers an array of suggestive works by leading artists of the time, including Botticelli, Cosmè Tura, Leonardo da Vinci, Mantegna, Piero di Cosimo, Raphael and Titian.
In a review of the show, John Russell of The Times called Mr. Fahy "one of our nimblest needlemen" for ably threading the works of Leonardo, Raphael, Titian, Andrea del Saito, Francesco Primaticcio and Jacopo da Pontormo into a cohesive narrative.
The "Bondage" section, for instance, features various artists' takes on the motif of Christ at the Column; "Some Faggy Gestures" draws attention to the hand positions and poses of male sitters in famous paintings by Botticelli, Titian, Giovanni Bellini, and many others.
Fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 2222 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Encompassing fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 2212 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 21 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 193 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Encompassing fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 190 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Encompassing fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 21980 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Encompassing fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 27598 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Encompassing fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 21741 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Encompassing fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 221618 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
She was as recognizable to many Parisians as were the politicians in the Élysée Palace: a dramatic, sparrowlike woman, always in black, with a pale powdered face engulfed in a mass of titian hair and bangs that fell to heavily mascaraed green eyes.
Encompassing fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 685 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Encompassing fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 291 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Encompassing fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 2845 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 18 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
Fully astounding loans (Titian, Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Leonardo) and little-seen gems of its own (just one word: Bruegel), it meditates across five centuries and some 190 objects on the nature, meaning and value of artworks left unfinished by accident or design.
But you need only set the colors and, most especially, the composition of "The Entombment of Christ" (21575-21600), in which the figures are crowded together, alongside those found in any Titian or Tintoretto to identify him as an outsider to Venetian tradition.
Among the treasures from this period are the portraits by Titian and other artists of Emperor Charles V, whose territory covered almost 1.5 million square miles, including much of Western Europe from Flanders, where he was born, to Western Spain, where he died.
The 28 paintings here — by Titian, Tintoretto, Peter Paul Rubens, Francisco de Zurbarán and other late Renaissance and Baroque all-stars — may leave you a little hot under the collar, but imagine how they looked to the rigidly devout elites of the Spanish Golden Age.
The Venetian master's hold on the great skeptic of contemporary painting is the subject of "Titian/Gerhard Richter: Heaven on Earth," an idiosyncratic and wonderfully challenging exhibition on view at the Palazzo Te, a 16th-century palace in Mantua, Italy, 90 miles west of Venice.
But the inquiry also underscored the fragility of Italy's ecclesiastical patrimony, scattered among the country's more than 60,1003 churches, a treasure trove that includes masterpieces by Titian, Michelangelo and Caravaggio as well as statues and precious artifacts like chalices, candelabra and countless illuminated manuscripts.
One of the hags, robed in royal bedclothes, is tossed from a high window, crashing into trees beneath, and the camera lingers to survey the pictorial shock: swags of crimson drapery, worthy of Titian, hang in the green and moss-furred dankness of a wood.
Through a practice that encompasses hand and digital embroidery, as well as beading, photography, and tapestry, accompanied by texts from the likes of Ovid and Plutarch, Reichek recreates classic works by artists like Titian, Rubens, and Klimt that tell tales of the women of Minos.
I also looked at lots of works of scale, from ancient Egyptian friezes to the ancient caves of the Thousand Buddhas in the Dunhuang desert in China; the enormous paintings of Buddhas in the Met, and Italian renaissance paintings of scale, Titian, Veronese, Tintoretto … everything I could.
LONDON — It was around 193 that Harvey Weinstein commissioned a sequence of six paintings in celebration of rape, violence, savagery between man and beast, and other kindred matters from Tiziano Vecelli (aka 'Titian'), a man widely regarded by many as the greatest Venetian painter of his day.
The painting wasn't a commission, which implies that Titian took up the subject for his own reasons — another Modernist practice — and it is intriguing to contemplate what Ovid's tale of hubris (Marsyas meets his terrible end by losing a challenge to Apollo's mastery of music) meant for him.
About 50,000 people watched the Prado's director, Miguel Falomir Faus, discuss a mythological renaissance painting by Titian, but slightly more listened to Mr. Osuna highlight a favorite portrait by the Spanish Baroque painter Jusepe de Ribera of a ragged Greek philosopher with a toothless grin and grimy fingernails.
For one thing, when will another Chelsea art gallery present a combination of old and modern masters that includes Titian, Piero di Cosimo, Salvator Rosa (a naked witch), Jan Bruegel the Younger, Gustave Moreau, James Ensor, Odilon Redon, Max Ernst (three great canvases), and a follower of Hieronymus Bosch?
In her second exhibition, Brandi Twilley: Where The Fire Started, at Sargent's Daughters (July 12 – August 18, 2017), the artist returns to the subject of her ravaged house, this time her bedroom, and to library books on Picasso and Titian that she had borrowed just before the fire.
FLORENCE, Italy — Compared to showier works in Florence's Pitti Palace — paintings by Caravaggio, Raphael, and Titian — the small "Vase of Flowers" by Jan van Huysum might barely earn a second glance, even if the artist was among the most popular still-life artists working in the Netherlands in the 18th century.
While this Peeters exhibition appears to be 197 years in the making, since 2003 the institution has mounted six exhibitions devoted to Francisco Goya, four on El Greco, and three each about Diego Velázquez, Titian, and Picasso (the latter of whom, it's worth noting, was the museum's director from 1936 to 1939).
The Metropolitan Museum of Art is planning a $600 million wing for contemporary and modern art; in March, it filled its temporary satellite, the Met Breuer, with unfinished works from the 15th century to the present, presenting Renaissance masters like Titian and Rembrandt alongside contemporary artists like Brice Marden and Kerry James Marshall.
The show's promise to reunite the pieces for the first time since their dispersal set anticipation in the art world soaring, if as much for its legendarily superlative quality — Anthony Van Dyck, Peter Paul Rubens, Hans Holbein the Younger, Titian and Andrea Mantegna scream from the list — as for its art historical significance.
If the Met Breuer, as a program, is attempting to demonstrate connectivity across centuries of art-making by way of its own encyclopedic collections — not to mention its global clout in securing such phenomenal loans as the Titian, the Leonardo da Vinci sketch, "Head and Shoulders of a Woman (La Scapigliata)" (ca.
" James raved, of Tintoretto's art, "It seemed to me that I had advanced to the uttermost limit of painting," adding that "Bellini, Veronese, Giorgione, and Titian, all joining hands and straining every muscle of their genius, reach forward not so far but that they leave a visible space in which Tintoret alone is master.
At first glance, she said, the Folio is far from the most arresting item at the house, which also has paintings by Titian and Veronese, a garter presented by King George III to the third earl of Bute (the first Scottish prime minister of Britain) and, perhaps more prosaically, the world's first heated indoor swimming pool.
The map for "Europa," for instance, begins in Venice, where Titian worked on the piece between 1560 and 1562, before it moved to Madrid to enter the collection of King Philip II. Each known address that was once home to the painting is marked and numbered sequentially, so you can easily follow its path from Europe to America.
The past few years have been great for redheads: The gorgeous Julianne Moore won her first Oscar for Still Alice, Joan Holloway made her grand exit on the finale of Mad Men, and the Titian-haired sisters Adrienne Vendetti Hodges (pictured left) and Stephanie Vendetti (right), founders of the website How to Be A Redhead, nabbed a book deal of the same name.
The settings of Ivanka's childhood were the golden landscapes of the New York tabloids in the late twentieth century: the rococo splendor of Mar-a-Lago, the former Marjorie Merriweather Post estate, in Palm Beach, which Trump bought in 1985; a forty-seven-room mansion in Greenwich, Connecticut; a triplex in Trump Tower, with faux Titian murals and an indoor waterfall.
Campbell has obscured Carr's imagery with broad, thick charcoal lines, though; the images can't be seen clearly until one comes close to them — which can't be done without walking over another of Campbell's works, "A Century of Progress" (2018), a large, brightly colored woven carpet depicting female nudes from art history (including, among others, a nude by Matisse, another by Titian, and one that appears to be a Bernard Karfiol).
Other parts of the show are distributed throughout the Foundation's Hôtel d'Assezat building, a 16th century Renaissance palace jewel itself, that permanently houses a cherry Roger van der Weyden studio painting "Virgin and Child" (15th century) and works by François Clouet, Tiepolo, François Boucher, Elisabeth Vigée-Le Brun, Pieter Brueghel the Younger, Titian, Henri Fantin-Latour, Odilon Redon, Paul Gauguin, Paul Cézanne, Georges Rouault, Henri Matisse, and Pablo Picasso, among others.
Elsewhere, the elusive and perpetually absent beloved Albertine sometimes comes into view looking like Bernardo Luini's "Portrait of Lady "(1520/1525); Albertine covets dresses that remind the narrator of gowns in female portraits by Titian and Carpaccio; Gilbrete's hair reminds Proust of long-stemmed flowers drawn by Leonardo da Vinci; and as World War I descends, Parisian women who have taken to wearing hair accessories made from munition fragments look like noblewomen in Pisanello portraits.
The last time "The Flaying of Marsyas" traveled to the US was a generation ago, for the blockbuster retrospective Titian: Prince of Painters (October 28, 1990–January 27, 1991) at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. It's a safe bet that it will not leave its home at the Archiepiscopal Palace in the southeastern Czech village of Kroměříž, where it has hung since the end of the 18th century, for a good long time.

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