Showing posts with label Painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Painting. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2015

Lovely Painting By El Greco

The Exhibition

The initial project envisaged the creation of a museum containing works by all the leading Spanish artists and which could offer a historical survey of the origins and development of Spanish art. This, however, never fully realised, as the collection solely comprised works brought from Toledo, Avila, Segovia, Burgos and Valladolid in 1836. As a result, the collection of the Museo Nacional consisted primarily of works by Madrid School artists, the vast majority inevitably religious in subject-matter, given their provenance. Only the paintings from the collection of the Infante don Sebastián Gabriel added some thematic variety.

Despite these issues, from the outset the collection of the Museo Nacional featured some key groups and individual works of Spanish art. These included the panels from the altarpieces of Saint Dominic and Saint Peter Martyr, by Berruguete; the series of 56 canvases with scenes of Carthusian monks by Vicente Carducho, painted for the cloister of the Carthusian monastery of El Paular; five canvases from the high altar of the College of Doña María de Aragón in Madrid, by El Greco; and the six paintings from the altarpiece of the Cuatro Pascuas in the church of San Pedro Mártir in Toledo, by Maino. In addition, the collection featured a small but important group of paintings (such as The Fountain of Grace by the School of Van Eyck) and Italian ones (the copy of Raphael's Transfiguration by Giulio Romano, and the Passion series by G. D. Tiepolo, among others). Following the return of the Infante don Sebastián Gabriel's collection to its owner in 1859, a series of purchases expanded the Museum's holdings, including an Italian-period Annunciation by El Greco and an outstanding group of portraits by Goya, choices that reveal an advanced critical sensibility for the period.

The present exhibition comprises an exceptional group of works formerly in monasteries and convents closed during the Disentailment, as well as others purchased in the 1860s (the Auto da Fe with Saint Domingo de Guzmán by Berruguete, and two portraits by Goya), and paintings formerly in the collection of the Infante don Sebastián Gabriel, recently acquired by the Museo del Prado (a Still Life by Sánchez Cotán and Saint Bernard and the Virgin by Alonso Cano). Together, they are intended to offer an idea of the important contribution made by the collection of the Museo de la Trinidad to that of the Museo del Prado.

In addition, a further 47 paintings originally in the collection of the Trinidad can be seen hanging in their normal locations in the Museum, specially marked to facilitate identification.

Source: https://www.museodelprado.es

Quotes About Painting

“I dream my painting and I paint my dream.”
― Vincent van Gogh

 “You might as well ask an artist to explain his art, or ask a poet to explain his poem. It defeats the purpose. The meaning is only clear thorough the search.”
― Rick Riordan

“Every portrait that is painted with feeling is a portrait of the artist, not of the sitter.”
― Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

“If you hear a voice within you say you cannot paint, then by all means paint and that voice will be silenced.”
― Vincent van Gogh

“I don't paint dreams or nightmares, I paint my own reality.”
― Frida Kahlo

“I have an idea that the only thing which makes it possible to regard this world we live in without disgust is the beauty which now and then men create out of the chaos. The pictures they paint, the music they compose, the books they write, and the lives they lead. Of all these the richest in beauty is the beautiful life. That is the perfect work of art.”
― W. Somerset Maugham, The Painted Veil

“Painting is just another way of keeping a diary.”
― Pablo Picasso

“Painting is the silence of thought and the music of sight.”
― Orhan Pamuk, My Name is Red

“Writing, painting, singing- it cannot stop everything. Cannot halt death in its tracks. But perhaps it can make the pause between death’s footsteps sound and look and feel beautiful, can make the space of waiting a place where you can linger without as much fear. For we are all walking each other to our deaths, and the journey there between footsteps makes up our lives.”
― Ally Condie, Reached

 Painting is a blind man's profession. He paints not what he sees, but what he feels, what he tells himself about what he has seen.
Pablo Picasso

 Painting is concerned with all the 10 attributes of sight; which are: Darkness, Light, Solidity and Colour, Form and Position, Distance and Propinquity, Motion and Rest.
Leonardo da Vinci


Source: http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/painting