Showing posts with label Monet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monet. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Famous Paintings, Section 4



The WhiteRock  Family Digital  Art Gallery is presented in sections  containing eight images each of famous  paintings by
great artists.  The works  are arranged  according  to what are  generally  accepted and  what the author  thinks are the
best or the most important by the artists who are themselves presented according to the significance of their respective
contributions to art.

Some factors have to be  considered in order to understand  the criteria of the  selection of the works that are included
in this gallery. Examples of these are the influence of Western philosophy in the development of aesthetic  taste and the
adoption of   Western  values and  culture  in  the selection  of artistic  subjects,  the inspiration  that religious  faith has
provided in the creation of great art and the wealth and power of the Catholic Church to commission the services of the
greatest artists of the Renaissance and beyond.

On the other hand,  the human  form  has always  been a subject of  endless intellectual  speculation and this includes the
creation of tasteful art. Along this line, different cultures also have different standards of defining what is "tasteful."
These factors help explain the exclusion of certain aesthetic values and cultures in this selection as well as its liberality
over the selection of certain subjects that some individuals may otherwise find inappropriate.

Art may be objective, but the process of selecting cannot be but subjective. Beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder.     

Welcome to The WhiteRock Family Digital Art Gallery.




This section includes works by the following painters:

Tomasso Masaccio
Giotto
Diego Velázquez
Salvador Dali
Paul Cézanne
Claude Monet
Francis Bacon
Caravaggio

Click on the image to view on black background; the title of the work to go to the source.
The name of the artist and location of work link to sources of more information.

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The Adoration of the Magi
Tomasso Masaccio
Tempera on poplar (1426)
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

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The Adoration of the Magi  or Adoration of the Kings  is the name  traditionally  given to the  subject  in the  Nativity of
Jesus in art in which the three Magi, represented as kings, especially in the West, having found Jesus by following a star,
lay before him  gifts of gold,  frankincense,  and myrrh,  and worship him.  It is related in the Bible  by Matthew 2:11:  "On
entering the house,  they saw the  child with  Mary his mother;  and they knelt down and paid him homage.  Then, opening
their treasure chests,  they offered  him gifts of gold,  frankincense,  and myrrh. And having been warned in a dream not
to return to Herod, they left for their own country by another path".

Christian  iconography  has considerably  expanded the bare  account of the Biblical Magi  given in the second  chapter of
the Gospel of Matthew (2:1–22)  and used it to press  the point that Jesus was recognized, from his earliest infancy, as king
of the earth.  The scene  was often  used to represent the Nativity,  one of the most indispensable episodes in cycles of the
Life of the Virgin as well as the Life of Christ.

In the church  calendar,  the  event is  commemorated  in Western  Christianity  as the  Feast of the  Epiphany  (January 6).
The Orthodox Church  commemorates the Adoration of the Magi on the Feast of the Nativity (December 25).  The term is
anglicized from the Vulgate Latin section title for this passage: A Magis adoratur. wikipedia

Tommaso di Ser  Giovanni di Mone  (1401-1428)  was the shooting star in the  Florentine firmament,  gone almost as soon as
his brilliance  had been seen.  Standing  on the  threshold of the  15th century,  the artist  (whose nickname  was Masaccio,
short for Tommaso,  meaning "clumsy" or "messy" Tom)  is often regarded  as the founder  of Italian Renaissance painting,
ushering  in  the  classical  revival.   His  work  suggests  a  preference  for  the  simple  and  immediate,   both  qualities  he
inherited from Giotto.  Masaccio was also  guided by the sculpture of his day,  drawing inspiration particularly from the
works of Donatello.

One of the most  intriguing  legacies  of Masaccio’s  short life  is the altarpiece  he executed for a wealthy  notary  in the
church  of  Santa  Maria  del  Carmine  in  Pisa.  The  original  polyptych  altarpiece  was  dispersed  when  the  church  was
remodelled  in the 16th century.  The Adoration of the Magi  predella is now  in the  State Museum  in Berlin  and would
have been placed under the panel of the Virgin and Child, now in the National Gallery, London.

The Adoration  panel is  Masaccio’s  first narrative  religious  painting  and is completed  with admirable  conciseness. The
oldest King kneels before the  Virgin and Child  and there is a wonderful  sense of human warmth  and intimacy between
the figures. The fluid line created by the careful positioning of the three Kings guides the eye towards the two striking
figures swathed in grey.  These are  supposed  portraits of the  patron and  his son  and  hint at the burgeoning  awareness
among commissioners of the social and political potential of art. Italy Magazine

Masaccio and the Italian Renaissance from Peter Beal on YouTube
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The Flight into Egypt
Giotto di Bondone
Fresco (1304-06)
Capella di Scrovegni, Padua

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The flight into Egypt  is a biblical  event  described in the  Gospel of Matthew  (Matthew 2:13-23),  in which Joseph  fled to
Egypt with Mary  and infant son Jesus  after a visit by the Magi,  because they  learned that  King Herod  intended to kill
the infants of that area.  The episode is frequently  shown in art,  as the final  episode of the  Nativity of Jesus in art, and
was a common component in cycles of the Life of the Virgin as well as the Life of Christ.

When the Magi  come in  search of  Jesus,  they go to  Herod  the Great  in Jerusalem  and ask  where to find  the newborn
"King of the Jews".  Herod becomes paranoid  that the child will  threaten his throne,  and seeks to kill him (2:1-8). Herod
initiates the  Massacre of the Innocents  in hopes of killing the child  (Matthew 2:16-Matthew 2:18).  But an angel appears
to Joseph in a dream and warns him to take Jesus and his mother into Egypt (Matthew 2:13).

Egypt was a logical place to find refuge,  as it was outside the dominions of King Herod,  but both  Egypt and Israel were
part of the Roman Empire,  linked by a coastal road  known as "the way of the sea",  making travel between them easy and
relatively safe. wikipedia

Flight Into Egypt was part of a  commission made by Enrico Scrovegni,  the son of a  wealthy banker who was consigned to
hell for usury in  Dante's Divine Comedy.  His main purpose  was the repentance  of his father's sins to  make  sure that he
went  to  heaven,   therefore  the  fresco   media  was  appropriate   because  of  its  relatively   cheap  materials,  including
limestone, water and pigments, which were inexpensive and therefore inoffensive to religious figures.

The  entirety  of  the   commission  itself  was  the   painting  of   the   Arena  Chapel   of  which  Giotto   had  a  part  in  the
architectural  design,  making sure  that  there  were large  amounts of  wall space  on which  he could  effectively  paint
frescoes. Giotto wanted to allow for huge figures that were close to being life-sized  (Flight Into Egypt is 2 x 1.8 meters)
to create a strong  physical  presence  of the  characters  such as Mary.  The near  life-sized  figures aided  in relating the
narrative to a  public  audience,  as the  majority  of them  were  not able  to read  and  needed  a simple,  visual  method of
following the stories of the Bible in the form of didactic art.

The large, clean and simple compositions that Giotto was able to create on the wall space the Arena Chapel provided also
allowed for a great amount of emphasis on the expression of human emotion that a public audience could easily relate to;
portraying characters like Mary and Joseph as human beings for a greater emotional impact. Art History 3.4A at www.nzqa.govt.nz

Giotto, Arena (Scrovegni) Chapel, Padua, from Smarthistory, art, history, conversation on YouTube. 
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Las Meninas
Diego Velázquez
Oil on canvas (1656)
Museo del Prado, Madrid

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Las Meninas  (Spanish for The Ladies-in-Waiting),  is a 1656 painting by Diego Velázquez, the leading artist of the Spanish
Golden Age. Its complex and enigmatic composition raises questions about reality and illusion, and creates an uncertain
relationship between  the viewer and  the figures depicted.  Because of  these complexities,  Las Meninas  has been one of
the most widely analyzed works in Western painting.

The  painting  shows a  large room  in  the  Royal  Alcazar  of Madrid  during the  reign of  King  Philip IV  of  Spain,  and
presents   several   figures,   most  identifiable   from   the   Spanish   court.   The   young   Infanta   Margaret  Theresa   is
surrounded by  her  entourage  of maids  of  honour,  chaperone,  bodyguard,  two dwarfs  and  a dog.  Just  behind  them,
Velázquez portrays himself working at a large canvas.  Velázquez looks outwards, beyond the pictorial space to where a
viewer of the painting would stand.  In the background there is a mirror  that reflects the upper bodies of the king and
queen.  Some scholars have speculated that their image is a reflection from the painting Velázquez is shown working on.

Las Meninas has long been recognised as one of the most important paintings in Western art history. Luca Giordano said
that  it  represents  the  "theology  of  painting"  and  in  1827  the president  of  the  Royal  Academy of Arts  Sir  Thomas
Lawrence described the work as  "the true philosophy of the art".  More recently,  it has been  described as  "Velázquez's
supreme achievement, a highly self-conscious, calculated demonstration of what painting could achieve.

Las Meninas is set in Velázquez's  studio in Philip IV's  Alcázar palace in Madrid.  The high-ceilinged room is presented as
"a  simple  box  that  could  be  divided  into  a  perspective   grid  with  a  single  vanishing   point".   In  the  centre  of  the
foreground stands the Infanta Margaret Theresa.  The five-year-old infanta,  who later married Holy Roman Emperor
Leopold I,  was  at  this point  Philip  and  Mariana's  only  surviving  child.  She is  attended  by  two ladies-in-waiting,  or
meninas:   doña  Isabel  de  Velasco,   who  is  poised to  curtsy  to  the  princess,   and  doña  María  Agustina  Sarmiento  de
Sotomayor,  who kneels before  Margaret Theresa,  offering her a drink  from a red cup,  or bucaro,  that she holds on a
golden tray.  To the right of the  Infanta are  two dwarfs:  the achondroplastic  German,  Maribarbola,  and the Italian,
Nicolas  Pertusato,  who playfully  tries  to rouse a  sleepy  mastiff  with his foot.  Behind them  stands doña Marcela de
Ulloa, the princess's chaperone, dressed in mourning and talking to an unidentified bodyguard (or guardadamas).

To the rear and at right stands  Don José Nieto Velázquez,  the queen's chamberlain who may have been a relative of the
artist. Nieto is shown pausing, with his right knee bent and his feet on different steps. Both this backlight and the open
doorway reveal  space behind:  in the words of the  art historian Analisa Leppanen,  they lure  "our eyes inescapably into
the  depths".   The  royal  couple's  reflection  pushes  in  the  opposite  direction,   forward  into  the  picture  space.   The
vanishing point  of the perspective  is in the doorway,  as can be shown by  extending the  line of the meeting of wall and
ceiling  on the right.  Nieto is  seen  only  by the king  and queen,  who share the  viewer's  point of view,  and  not  by the
figures in the foreground.

Velázquez himself  is pictured to the left of the scene,  looking outward  past a large canvas  supported by an easel.  On
his chest is the red cross of the  Order of Santiago,  which he did not receive until 1659,  three years after the painting
was completed.  A mirror  on the back  wall reflects  the upper  bodies and heads of  two figures identified  from other
paintings as King Philip IV and Queen Mariana.  The most common assumption is that the reflection shows the couple in
the pose they are holding for Velázquez as he paints them.

Of the nine  figures depicted,  five are  looking  directly  out at the  royal couple  or the viewer.  Their glances,  along
with the king and queen's reflection,  affirm the royal couple's presence  outside the painted space.  Alternatively, art
historians H. W. Janson and Joel Snyder  suggest that the image  of the king and queen is a reflection from Velázquez's
canvas, the front of which is obscured from the viewer. wikipedia

Las Meninas: Is This the Best Painting in History? from Nerdwriter1 on YouTube
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Oil on canvas, 1931

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The Persistence of Memory is one of Salvador Dalí's most recognizable works. First shown at the Julien Levy Gallery in
1932,  since 1934 the painting has been in the collection of the  Museum of Modern Art in New York City,  which received
it from an  anonymous  donor.  It is  widely  recognized and  frequently  referenced  in popular  culture  and  sometimes
referred to by more descriptive (though incorrect) titles, such as 'The Soft Watches' or 'The Melting Watches'.

The well-known piece introduced the  image of the soft melting pocket watch.  It epitomizes Dalí's theory of  "softness"
and  "hardness",   which  was  central  to  his  thinking  at  the  time.    As  Dawn  Ades  wrote,   "The  soft   watches  are  an
unconscious symbol of the relativity of space and time, a Surrealist meditation on the collapse of our notions of a fixed
cosmic order". This interpretation suggests that Dalí was incorporating an understanding of the world introduced by
Albert Einstein's  theory of special relativity.  Asked by  Ilya Prigogine  whether this  was in fact the case,  Dalí replied
that the soft  watches were  not inspired by the theory of relativity,  but by the  surrealist  perception of a Camembert
melting in the sun.

It is possible to  recognize a human figure  in the middle of the composition,  in the strange  "monster"  that Dalí used in
several   contemporary   pieces  to   represent   himself   –   the  abstract   form  becoming  something   of  a  self-portrait,
reappearing  frequently in his work.  The figure  can be  read as a  "fading"  creature,  one that  often appears  in dreams
where the dreamer cannot pinpoint the creature's  exact form and composition.  One can observe  that the creature has
one closed eye with several eyelashes, suggesting that the creature is also in a dream state.  The iconography may refer
to a dream that Dalí himself had  experienced,  and the clocks  may symbolize  the passing of time as one experiences it in
sleep or the persistence of time in the eyes of the dreamer.

The orange clock  at the bottom left of the  painting is covered in ants.  Dalí often used ants in his paintings as a symbol
of decay.  The painting  employs  "the  exactitude  of  realist  painting  techniques"  to depict  imagery more  likely  to be
found in dreams than in waking consciousness.

The craggy rocks  to the right  represent a tip of  Cap de Creus  peninsula  in north-eastern  Catalonia.   Many of  Dalí's
paintings   were  inspired   by  the  landscapes   of  his  life  in  Catalonia.   The  strange  and   foreboding  shadow   in  the
foreground of this painting is a reference to Mount Pani. wikipedia

Dali: The Persistence of Memory video from Khan Academy
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Oil on canvas (1894 -  95)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

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The Card Players  is a  series of  oil  paintings  by the  French  Post-Impressionist  artist  Paul Cézanne.  Painted  during
Cézanne's final period in the early 1890s, there are five paintings in the series. The versions vary in size, the number of
players,  and the setting in which the game takes place.  One version of  The Card Players  was sold in 2011 to the Royal
Family of Qatar  for a price  estimated  at between  $250 million  and $300 million,  making it the  third most expensive
work of art ever sold.

Each  painting  depicts  Provençal  peasants  immersed  in  their  pipes  and  playing  cards.   The  subjects,   all  male,   are
displayed as  studious  within their  card playing,  eyes cast downward,  intent on the  game at hand.  Cézanne  adapted a
motif from  17th-century  Dutch  and  French  genre painting  which often  depicted card  games with  rowdy,  drunken
gamblers in taverns, replacing them instead with stone-faced tradesmen in a more simplified setting.

Whereas previous paintings of the genre had illustrated heightened moments of drama, Cézanne's portraits have been
noted for their lack of drama, narrative, and conventional characterization. Other than an unused wine bottle in the
two-player  versions,  there  is an  absence of  drink  and  money,  which  were  prominent  fixtures  of the  17th  century
genre.  A painting by one of the  Le Nain brothers,  hung in an  Aix-en-Provence  museum near the artist's home,  depicts
card players and is widely cited as an inspiration for the works by Cézanne.

The models for the paintings were local farmhands, some of whom worked on the Cézanne family estate.  Each scene is
depicted  as one of quiet,  still  concentration;  the men look down  at their cards  rather than at each other,  with the
cards being  perhaps  their  sole means  of communication  outside  of work.  One  critic  described the scenes as  "human
still  life",   while  another  speculated  that  the  men's   intense  focus  on  their  game  mirrors  that  of  the  painter's
absorption in his art. wikipedia
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Impression, Sunrise
Claude Monet
Oil on canvas (1872)
Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris

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  Impression, Sunrise  depicts the port of Le Havre,  Monet's hometown,  and is his  most famous painting of the harbor.
Shown  at what  would  later  be  known  as the  "Exhibition  of the  Impressionists"  in April  1874,  it is attributed to
giving rise to the name of the  Impressionist movement.  The painting was stolen from the  Musée Marmottan Monet
in 1985  by Philippe  Jamin  and  Youssef  Khimoun  but recovered in 1990.  Since 1991  it has been  back on  display in the
museum.

Monet claimed that he titled the painting  Impression, Sunrise  due to his  hazy painting style  in his depiction of the
subject:  "They asked me for a title for the catalogue,  it couldn't really be taken for a view of  Le Havre,  and I said:
'Put Impression.'"  In addition  to this  explanation  for the  title of the work,  art historian  Paul Smith  claims that
Monet  might  have named  the painting  Impression  to excuse  his painting  from  accusations of  being unfinished or
lacking descriptive detail, but Monet received these criticisms regardless of the title.

While the  title of the painting  seemed to be  chosen  in haste for the catalogue,  the term  "Impressionism"  was not
new.  It had been used  for some time  to describe the effect of  paintings from the  Barbizon school.  Both associated
with the school,  Daubigny and Manet  had been known to use the term  to describe their own works.  In critic Louis
Leroy's review  of the 1874  exhibition,  "The Exhibition  of the  Impressionists"  for the  newspaper  Le Charivari,  he
used "Impressionism"  to describe the new style of work displayed,  which he said was typified by Monet’s  painting of
the same name.

Before the 1860s and the debut of Impression, Sunrise, the term "impressionism" was originally used to describe the
effect of a  natural scene  on a painter,  and  the effect of a  painting on the  viewer.  By the  1860s,  "impression"  was
used by transference  to describe a painting which relayed  such an effect.  In turn,  impression came to describe the
movement  as   a  whole.   Initially   used  to  describe   and   deprecate   a   movement,   the  term   Impressionism "  was
immediately  taken  up  by   all  parties"   to  describe  the   style,   and   Monet’s   Impression,  Sunrise   considered   to
encapsulate the start of the movement and its name. wikipedia

In this painting,  the sun is placed against the dawn sky,  with orange and blue-violet contrast.  Because it was a very
misty morning on the harbor,  the clouds are  colored by the rising sun,  in the dense mist,  and the boats  take shape,
without  great  definition.  The abbreviated,  darker  brushstrokes  on the water,  create motion  and ripples,  while
hints of  orange  and yellow  appear as a  reflection  of the sunrise.  The ships’ masts are  sometimes  disrupted by the
rippling water, as the silhouettes of the boats seem to be disappearing into the mist.

An interesting observation about this painting is that although  the sun seems to be much brighter than the rest of
the scene,  if viewed removing all color, the sun almost disappears. This supports Monet’s mastery of depicting light
effects  on  scenes  which  he  painted.   This  accurate  reproduction  of  Monet’s  impression,  and resulting  mood  of
atmospheric  conditions  dominate,  and  limit  the  importance  of great  detail.  The  viewer  almost feels  that he is
looking out  the same  window  that Monet  did that  Spring  morning.  Once  called  an abstract  piece of unfinished
work by critics,  over one-hundred years later,  Monet’s work is part of a historic art movement,  and Monet helped
to make a name for the Impressionistic artists as well. Totally History

Monet's Impression, Sunrise: Painting & Analysis on study.com
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Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion
Francis Bacon
Oil paint & pastel on fiber board (1944)
Tate, London

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Three Studies  for Figures at the  Base of a Crucifixion  were painted  over the  course of  two week s in 1944  in the
ground floor flat at 7 Cromwell Place,  South Kensington.  During the day  the converted billiard room served as
Bacon's studio, and at night as an illicit casino.

Bacon recalled that at the time he was drinking heavily and that he painted the studies in an alcoholic haze.  Later
he was to admit  that he hardly knew  what he  was doing,  though he  believed  that alcohol  had loosened his style.
Yet,   despite  this  unpromising  genesis,  the  triptych  of   three  writhing,   anthropomorphic  figures,   with  their
featureless,  scarcely human  faces  contorted  into  what  might  be  either  pain  or  exquisite ecstasy,  set  against a
background of visceral oranges, reds and blacks, marks a watershed in British painting.

Bacon had been painting  the Crucifixion since 1933  but he considered  the works unsuccessful  and destroyed them,
and,  for a while,  abandoned painting.  When he  did return  to the subject of the  Crucifixion 11  years later he was
influenced by his  reading of  Aeschylus's  savage drama  The Oresteia  (itself a trilogy)  which tells  the tale of the
curse  of  the  House of  Atreus  and  the  pursuit,  by the  avenging  Furies  (or Eumenides),  of those  responsible for
murder.  Generally considered  to be his  first masterwork,  Bacon was at some pains  to suppress the showing of any
paintings that pre-dated the Three Studies.

Bacon's  Eumenides  are  barely  recognisable  as  human  figures,  for  they  have  no  eyes  but  only  gaping,  silently
screaming mouths.  The creature  on the left,  seated on a table of sorts,  is the most recognisably human.  Partially
draped in a  length of cloth,  this bent  form,  with its  hunched  white  shoulders,  its stumpy,  malformed  arms and
bowed head  topped with a mop  of dark hair,  might be a mourner  at some unnamed wake,  while that in the central
panel,  with  its  grimacing  mouth  set  directly  into its  elongated  neck,  is blindfolded  by a white cloth  -  a motif
taken,  perhaps,  from  Matthias  Grnewald's  Mocking of Christ  -  and  resembles  some  large,  flightless  bird.  The
figure on the right appears to have most of its upper face missing. Its head is thrown back, its mouth stretched open
to reveal its teeth, as if in the grips of some bestial orgasmic spasm.

The heads of all three figures point downwards,  following a series of converging  lines that radiate out from the
central plinth  and imply  a room or an  enclosed  space.  The mood is one  of bleak  isolation  and violent angst.  This
work is to painting what Sartre's Huis Clos is to literature; a paean to existential despair.

This is  also a  Crucifixion  with a difference,  for there is  no evidence,  not even a shadow,  of the actual  event.  No
trace of  Christ  or his cross,  though Bacon  did say in a letter in  1959 that  Three Studies  were,  "intended  to [be]
use[d]  at the base of a large  Crucifixion  which I may still do".  Yet how  genuine this remark  was is hard to gauge
from  the  bleakly  nihilistic  non-believer  who  once  said,  "I think  of life  as meaningless;  but we give it  meaning
during our own existence …" "we are born and we die,  but in between we give this purposeless existence a meaning
by our drives."

Like many other artists and writers of the early 20th century, Bacon had read Nietzsche, and shared something of
his hypothesis of  "a strong  pessimism".  He had  been  particularly  attracted to  The Birth of Tragedy.  Nietzsche's
passionate  rejection  of  Christianity,   and  his  passion  for  life  resonated  with  Bacon,   who  said: "…   you  can  be
optimistic and  totally  without hope.  One's  basic  nature is  totally  without hope,  and yet one's nervous  system is
made out of optimistic stuff." Sue Hubbard

Francis Bacon and Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion on Vimeo 
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Judith Beheading Holofernes
Caravaggio
Oil on canvas (1598-99)
Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica at Palazzo Barberini, Rome

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The deutero-canonical Book of Judith tells how Judith served her people by seducing and pleasuring Holofernes,
the Assyrian general.  Judith gets Holofernes drunk, then seizes his sword and slays him: "Approaching to his bed,
she took hold of the hair of his head." (Judith, 13:7-8).

Caravaggio's  approach  was,  typically,  to  choose  the  moment of  greatest  dramatic  impact,  the  moment  of the
decapitation itself. The figures are set out in a shallow stage, theatrically lit from the side, isolated against the
inky,   black  background.    Judith   and   her  maid   Abra  stand  to  the  right,  partially  over  Holofernes,  who  is
vulnerable  on his back.  X-rays have revealed that  Caravaggio adjusted the  placement of  Holofernes' head as he
proceeded,  separating  it  slightly  from  the  torso  and  moving it  slightly  to the right.  The  faces of  the three
characters demonstrate  his mastery of emotion,  Judith in particular  showing in her face a mix of determination
and  repulsion.   Artemisia  Gentileschi   and  others  were  deeply  influenced  by  this  work,   and  even   surpassed
Caravaggio's  physical  realism,  but it  has been  argued  that  none  matched  his  capture of  Judith's psychological
ambivalence.  The model for  Judith is  probably  the Roman  courtesan  Fillide Melandroni,  who posed for several
other works by Caravaggio around this year. wikipedia

A whole book in the Bible  is devoted to Judith,  because as a woman she  embodies the power of the  people of Israel
to defeat the enemy, though superior in numbers,  by means of  cunning and courage.  She seeks out the conquering
Holofernes  in   his  tent,   seduces   him,  makes  him  drunk,   then   beheads  him.   The  sight  of  their   commander's
bloodstained head on the battlements of Bethulia puts the enemy to flight.

In the painting,  Judith comes in with her  maid from the right,  against the  direction  of reading the picture.  The
general is lying naked on a white sheet. Paradoxically, his bed is distinguished by a magnificent red curtain, whose
color crowns the act of murder as well as the heroine's triumph.

This  is the  first time  Caravaggio  chose  such a  highly  dramatic  subject,  and  with  good reason.  His  Judith  is an
expression of an allegorical-moral contest in which Virtue overcomes Evil. In contrast to the elegant and distant
beauty of the vexed Judith,  the ferocity of the scene is concentrated in the  inhuman scream and the body spasm of
the giant Holofernes.  Caravaggio has managed to render,  with exceptional efficacy,  the most dreaded moment in
a man's life:  the passage  from  life to death.  The  upturned  eyes of  Holofernes  indicate  that  he is  not  alive any
more,  yet signs of life still persist in the  screaming mouth,  the contracting body  and the hand that still grips at
the bed.  The original  bare breasts of Judith,  which suggest  that she has  just left the bed,  were later  covered by
the semi-transparent blouse.

The roughness of the details and the realistic precision with which the horrific decapitation is rendered  (correct
down to the  tiniest details  of anatomy and physiology)  has led to the hypothesis that the  painting was inspired by
two highly publicized  contemporary  Roman executions;  that of  Giordano Bruno  and above all of  Beatrice Cenci
in 1599. www.bc.edu

Judith Beheading Holofernes from Classical Harmony on YouTube.
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Saturday, October 3, 2015

Famous Paintings, Section 1



The WhiteRock  Family Digital  Art Gallery is presented in sections  containing eight images each of famous  paintings by
great artists.  The works  are arranged  according  to what are  generally  accepted and  what the author  thinks are the
best or the most important by the artists who are themselves presented according to the significance of their respective
contributions to art.

Some factors have to be  considered in order to understand  the criteria of the  selection of the works that are included
in this gallery. Examples of these are the influence of Western philosophy in the development of aesthetic  taste and the
adoption of   Western  values and  culture  in  the selection  of artistic  subjects,  the inspiration  that religious  faith has
provided in the creation of great art and the wealth and power of the Catholic Church to commission the services of the
greatest artists of the Renaissance and beyond.

On the other hand,  the human  form  has always  been a subject of  endless intellectual  speculation and this includes the
creation of tasteful art. Along this line, different cultures also have different standards of defining what is "tasteful."
These factors help explain the exclusion of certain aesthetic values and cultures in this selection as well as its liberality
over the selection of certain subjects that some individuals may otherwise find inappropriate.

Art may be objective, but the process of selecting cannot be but subjective. Beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder.    

Welcome to The WhiteRock Family Digital Art Gallery.




This section includes works by the following painters:

Leonardo da Vinci
Pablo Picasso
Rembrandt van Rijn
Paul Cézanne
Claude Monet
Caravaggio
Michaelangelo
Vincent van Gogh

Click on the image to view on black background; the title of the work to go to the source.
The name of the artist and location of work link to sources of more information.

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Oil on poplar (1503 to 1506; perhaps until 1517)

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The Mona Lisa  or La Gioconda has been acclaimed as "the best known, the most visited, the most written about, the most
sung about, the most parodied work of art in the world".

The subject's expression,  which is frequently described as enigmatic,  the monumentality of the composition, the subtle
modelling  of forms,  and the atmospheric  illusionism  were  novel qualities  that have  contributed  to the  continuing
fascination and study of the work. wikipedia

Mona Lisa  features  a pyramidal  composition,  a design Leonardo  uses to capture  the essence of  different  focal points
beginning at the top of the triangle  that flows into  detail as it widens at the base.   Her softly rounded lit face draws
your attention  as she appears to be  looking right at you.   A subtle smile,  lifted cheekbones and defined  chin complete
this feminine figure  along with her  robust chest and natural wavy hair.  She properly sits  with her lifelike hands are
featured as her forearm is settled on the arm of the chair.  She seems relaxed and poised; dark yet calm.

This painting introduces  the portrait style painting  focusing on the representation of the ideal woman.  Small details
are faint but  exclusive  such as her  black veil,  gold embroidery  on her dress,  and the definition  in her  hands and the
features on her face.  In a distance  the sky is gray  and the  landscape is  undefined and  hazy in its depiction  of serenity.
This technique is called  sfumato where  Leonardo softly  blends the edges of the surfaces to  illustrate a vision rather
than a realistic scene.  The hazy backdrop  features  the three  elements of land,  water and air.  Settled and serene, the
space divides the elements horizontally offering different color hues. HUM 120 Course Blog

Mona Lisa on Khan Academy

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Pablo Picasso
Oil on canvass (1937)
Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid

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Guernica is regarded by many art critics as one of the most moving and powerful anti-war paintings in history. It shows
the suffering of people wrenched by violence and chaos.

The painting was created in  response to the bombing of Guernica,  a Basque Country village in  northern Spain,  by Nazi
German  and  Fascist  Italian  warplanes  at  the  request  of  the  Spanish  Nationalists.  Upon   completion,  Guernica  was
exhibited  at the  Spanish  display  at the  1937  World's  Fair  in Paris  and  then  at other  venues around  the world.  The
touring  exhibition  was used to raise funds  for Spanish  war relief.  The painting  became  famous and  widely acclaimed,
and it helped bring worldwide attention to the Spanish Civil War.

Interpretations  of  Guernica  vary widely  and contradict  one another.  This extends,  for example,  to the  mural's two
dominant elements:  the bull and the horse.  Art historian  Patricia Failing said,  "The bull and the horse  are important
characters in Spanish culture."

When pressed  to explain  the elements in Guernica, Picasso said, ". . .  this bull is a bull and this  horse is a horse. . .
If  you  give a  meaning  to  certain  things in  my  paintings  it may  be very true,  but  it is  not my  idea to  give this
meaning.  What  ideas  and  conclusions  you  have got  I obtained too,  but instinctively,  unconsciously.  I make the
painting for the painting. I paint the objects for what they are."

According to scholar  Beverly Ray  the following list  of interpretations  reflects the general  consensus of historians:

The shape and posture of the bodies express protest. Picasso uses black, white, and grey paint to set a somber mood
and express pain and chaos. Flaming buildings and crumbling walls not only express the destruction of Guernica,
but reflect the  destructive  power of civil war.  The newspaper  print used  in the painting  reflects  how Picasso
learned of the massacre. The light bulb in the painting represents the sun. The broken sword near the bottom of
the painting symbolizes the defeat of the people at the hand of their tormentors. wikipedia

Guernica from Art History Online on YouTube
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The Night Watch
Rembrandt van Rijn
Oil on canvass (1642)
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

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Militia  Company  of  District II  under  the  Command  of  Captain  Frans  Banninck  Cocq,  also known  as  The  Shooting
Company  of  Frans  Banning  Cocq  and  Willem  van  Ruytenburch,  but  commonly  referred to as  The  Night  Watch is
renowned  for three characteristics:  its colossal size  (363 cm × 437 cm (11.91 ft × 14.34 ft)),  the effective use of light and
shadow (tenebrism) and the perception of motion in what would have traditionally been a static military portrait.

The painting was  completed in 1642,  at the peak of the  Dutch  Golden  Age.  It depicts the  eponymous  company moving
out, led by Captain Frans Banning Cocq (dressed in black, with a red sash) and his lieutenant,  Willem van Ruytenburch
(dressed in yellow,  with a white sash).  With effective use of sunlight and shade, Rembrandt leads the eye to the three
most  important  characters  among  the  crowd:  the  two  gentlemen  in the  centre  (from  whom  the painting  gets its
original title),  and the small girl  in the centre-left  background.  Behind them,  the company's  colours are carried by
the ensign, Jan Visscher Cornelissen.

Rembrandt   has   displayed  the   traditional  emblem   of   the   arquebusiers  in  a  natural way,   with  the  girl  in   the
background  carrying  the  main  symbols.  She  is  a  kind  of  mascot  herself;  the  claws  of  a dead  chicken  on  her belt
represent the  arquebusiers,  the pistol  behind the  chicken  represents  clover and  she is holding the  militia's goblet.
The  man  in front  of  her is  wearing a  helmet  with  an oak  leaf,  a traditional  motif  of  the arquebusiers.  The  dead
chicken is also meant to represent a defeated adversary. The colour yellow is often associated with victory.

Another  interpretation  proposes  that   Rembrandt  designed  this  painting  with  several  layers  of  meaning,  as  was
common  among  the most  talented artists.  Thus,  the Night Watch is  symmetrically divided,  firstly to illustrate the
union  between  the Dutch  Protestants  and the  Dutch  Catholics,  and secondly  to evoke  the war  effort  against the
Spaniards.  For instance,  according to  Rembrandt's  multilayered  design,  the taller captain  (in black)  symbolizes the
Dutch  Protestant  leadership,  loyally  supported  by  the  Dutch  Catholics  (represented  by the   shorter  lieutenant,
in yellow).

One of the most important aspects of The Night Watch is that the figures are nearly human size.  Rembrandt gives the
illusion that the characters jump off the canvas and into real space. wikipedia

The Night Watch on Khan Academy

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The Bathers
Paul Cézanne
Oil on canvass (1898-1905)
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia

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Occasionally referred  to as the Big Bathers or Large Bathers to distinguish it from the smaller works,  The Bathers
is considered  one of the masterpieces  of modern art  and is often considered  Cézanne's finest work.   Cézanne worked
on the painting for seven years, and it remained unfinished at the time of his death in 1906. wikipedia

Paul Cézanne created a series  of bathers' paintings at the end of his career.  The Large Bathers  is so called  because it
was Cézanne's largest composition in the series, and it was  the last to be produced.  When creating  The Large Bathers
Cézanne was  attempting to  produce a piece  that  would  be timeless.  The artist  did  not  follow  fashionable painting
trends and felt no pressure to conform to nineteenth century methods.

The story that  some critics have told describes  the women in The Large Bathers  as goddesses in the middle of nature.
The trees are acting as their theater and the figures in the background are watching their actions.  There is a distinct
triangle shape  that  forces  the viewer  to  focus  on  the  lake and  the  small  figures  in  the background.  Despite  the
movement in the picture there is a sense of calm among the bathers.  The viewer appears to take a  voyeuristic peek into
their private world.

Cézanne's scene,  with its  tranquil lake  and  church  tower  is not an exact  representation  of a  real  village.  Cézanne
created  this image  using his imagination  and drawing from nature.  The  artist  enjoyed  painting  landscapes  and  was
inspired by nature but he wanted to understand it and paint more than what was on the surface.

Paul Cézanne prepared a number of practice paintings of figures before he started working on  The Large Bathers.  He
experimented  with  how  he  wanted the figures  to  relate  to each  other  and   preparatory  pieces   show  the  bathers
interacting with each  other in various different ways.  Despite it's unpolished state The Large Bathers is considered a
masterpiece of modern art and has appeared on television shows as one of the greatest compositions of all time.
Artble; The Large Bathers

The Large Bathers from Nerdwriter1 on YouTube
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Water Lilies
Claude Monet
Oil on canvass (1914-7)
Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, Ohio

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Water Lilies is a series of  approximately 250 oil paintings by  French Impressionist  Claude Monet. The paintings depict
Monet's flower garden at his home in Giverny,  and were the main focus of Monet's artistic production during the last
thirty years of his life. Many of the works were painted while Monet suffered from cataracts. wikipedia

Monet had moved  with his family  to the commune of Giverny,  50 miles west of Paris,  in 1883 and keenly  begun filling
his garden with arbours,  fruit trees and ornamental flowers.  Leaving the  French capital behind – scene of his and his
fellow Impressionists’ great rise – he now opted,  aged 43,  for a more sedate life.  “I’m good for nothing except painting
and gardening,” he declared.

After a decade  and a bit in  Giverny,  he looked to  expand his  two-acre  property  –  his specific aim to divert  the River
Epte,  a tributary  of the Seine,  and create  a water  garden for  himself  across the road,  adorning it with water lilies
from Egypt  and South  America.  The neighbours  and local  council  objected,  convinced  he would  poison  their water
with his strange flowers, but Monet proceeded anyway.

The water  lilies weren’t just a source  of prolonged inspiration for  Monet, t hough: in a way,  his paintings serve  as an
alternative  diary  for him.  He famously  suffered  with  cataracts  from  1912  onwards,  and this explain  –  at  least,  in
part – the coarse, thickly applied strokes of blues, purples and greens in Irises two years later.

In November 1918, meanwhile, the day after Armistice was signed,  Monet promised a set of huge water-lily paintings to
the French  nation,  as a “monument to peace”.  These  would  end  up as  decorative  panels in  the Orangerie  building at
Paris’s Tuileries Gardens. Alistair Smart for The Telegraph

Water Lilies on Khan Academy
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The Calling of Saint Matthew
Caravaggio
Oil on canvass (1599-1600)
San Luigi dei Francesi, Rome

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The Calling of Saint Matthew is a masterpiece by  Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio,  depicting the moment at which
Jesus Christ inspires  Matthew to follow him.  It was completed in 1599–1600  for the Contarelli Chapel  in the church
of the French congregation, San Luigi dei Francesi in Rome, where it remains today. wikipedia

The tale  of the  calling of  Saint  Matthew  is found  in the  New Testament,  Matthew 9:9:  "And when  Jesus  passed on
from thence, he saw a man sitting in the custom house, named Matthew;  and he said to him:  Follow me. And he arose up
and  followed him."  In  this  painting,  Caravaggio  depicts the  very moment  when  Matthew  first realizes  he is  being
called.

Caravaggio's  The Calling of  Saint Matthew  was executed  for the  left  wall of the  Contarelli  chapel in the  French
church of San Luigi dei Francesi in Rome.  Cardinal Matteo Contarelli had saved for years to pay for the decoration of
his chapel with scenes from the life of Saint Matthew, his namesake.

The painting can be divided into two parts.  The figures on the right form a vertical rectangle while those on the left
create a  horizontal  block.  The two  sides are  further  distinguished  by  their  clothing  and symbolically,  by Christ's
hand.

The artist's use of light and shadow adds drama to this image as well as giving the figures a quality of immediacy. Many
other artists later followed Caravaggio's  example and copied this technique.  The figures are engulfed by shadow and
it is only the beaming light that shines across the wall and highlights the fact of  Saint Matthew and the seated group
that brightens the canvas.

The Calling of Saint Matthew is proof of  Caravaggio's ability to show biblical scenes more realistically and unfolding
before the viewer's very eyes.  The artist was not  creating a descriptive  naturalism but instead focused on the physical
reality of this particular scene.  He drew on his earlier genre  figures when creating  this piece and the result in Saint
Matthew and his cronies depicted as approachable figures to whom people could relate. Artble; The Calling of Saint Matthew

The Calling of Saint Matthew from Spencer's Painting of the Week on YouTube
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The Creation of Adam
Michaelangelo
Fresco (c. 1508-12)
The Sistine Chapel, Rome

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The Creation of Adam  is a fresco  painting by  Michelangelo,  which forms  part of the  Sistine Chapel's ceiling,  painted
c. 1508–1512.  It illustrates  the  Biblical creation  narrative  from the  Book of Genesis  in which  God breathes  life into
Adam,  the first  man.  The fresco  is part  of a  complex  iconographic  scheme  and is  chronologically the  fourth  in the
series of panels depicting episodes from Genesis.

The  image  of   the  near-touching  hands  of   God  and  Adam   has  become   iconic  of  humanity.   The  painting  has   been
reproduced in countless imitations and parodies.  Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper and Michelangelo's Creation of Adam
are the most replicated religious paintings of all time.

God  is  depicted  as  an  elderly  white-bearded   man  wrapped  in  a  swirling  cloak  while  Adam,  on  the  lower  left,  is
completely nude.  God's right arm  is outstretched  to impart  the spark of life  from his  own finger into  that of Adam,
whose left arm is  extended in a pose  mirroring God's,  a reminder that  man is created  in the image and likeness of God
(Gen 1:26).  Another point is that Adam's finger  and God's finger are not touching.  It gives the impression that God, the
giver  of life,  is  reaching  out  to Adam  who  has  yet  to  receive it;  they are  not on  "the same  level"  as  would  be two
humans shaking hands, for instance.

Many hypotheses  have been  formulated  regarding  the identity  and meaning  of the  figures  around God.  The person
protected by God's left arm might be Eve due to the figure's  feminine appearance and  gaze towards Adam,  but was also
suggested to be Virgin Mary, Sophia, the personified human soul, or an angel of feminine build.

The Creation of Adam is  generally  thought  to depict  the  excerpt  "God created  man in his own image,  in the image of
God He created him" (Gen 1:27).  The inspiration  for Michelangelo's  treatment of the subject may come from a medieval
hymn called  Veni Creator Spiritus,  which asks  the  'finger of the  paternal right hand'  (digitus paternae  dexterae) to
give the faithful speech.

Several hypotheses  have been put  forward  about the  meaning of  The Creation of Adam's  highly original composition,
many of them taking  Michelangelo's well-documented  expertise in  human  anatomy  as their starting point.  In 1990, an
Anderson,  Indiana physician  named  Frank  Meshberger  noted in the  Journal of the American Medical Association that
the background figures and shapes portrayed behind the figure of God  appeared to be an anatomically accurate picture
of the human brain.  On close  examination,  borders in  the painting  correlate  with  major sulci of the  cerebrum in the
inner and outer  surface of the brain,  the brain stem, the frontal lobe,  the basilar artery,  the pituitary  gland and the
optic chiasm.

Alternatively,  it has been observed  that the red cloth around God has the shape  of a human uterus  (one art historian
has called it a  "uterine mantle"),  and that the scarf hanging out,  coloured green,  could be a newly cut umbilical cord.
Recently a group  of  Italian  researchers  published  on  Mayo Clinic  Proceedings  an  article  where the  images  of  the
mantle  and  the  postpartum  uterus  were  overlapped.  According  to Enrico  Bruschini  (2004),  "This  is an  interesting
hypothesis that presents the Creation scene as an idealised  representation of the physical  birth of man.  It explains the
navel that appears on Adam, which is at first perplexing because he was created, not born of a woman." wikipedia

The Creation of Adam on Study.com
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The Starry Night
Vincent van Gogh
Oil on canvass (1889)
Museum of Modern Art, New York City

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The Starry Night  is an oil painting by the  Dutch post-impressionist painter  Vincent van Gogh.  Painted in June 1889, it
depicts the view from the east-facing window of his asylum room at  Saint-Rémy-de-Provence,  just before sunrise, with
the addition of an idealized village.  It is regarded as among Van Gogh's finest works and is one of the most recognized
paintings in the history of Western culture.

In the aftermath  of the  23 December 1888  breakdown that  resulted in the  self-mutilation  of his left ear,  Van Gogh
voluntarily  admitted   himself  to  the   Saint-Paul-de-Mausole   lunatic  asylum  on   8  May  1889.   Housed  in  a  former
monastery,   Saint-Paul-de-Mausole   catered   to  the  wealthy  and  was  less  than   half  full  when  Van  Gogh  arrived,
allowing him to occupy not only a second-story bedroom but also a ground-floor room for use as a painting studio.

Although  The Starry Night  was painted during the day in  Van Gogh's ground-floor studio,  it would be inaccurate to
state that the  picture was  painted from  memory.  The view  has been  identified as  the one  from his bedroom  window,
facing east,  a view which Van Gogh painted  variations of no fewer than twenty-one times,  including The Starry Night.
"Through the iron-barred window," he wrote to his brother, Theo,  around 23 May 1889, "I can see an enclosed square of
wheat . . . above which, in the morning, I watch the sun rise in all its glory."

Van Gogh next  mentioned the painting  in a letter to Theo on or about 20 September 1889,  when he included it in a list
of paintings  he was  sending  to his  brother  in Paris.  Of this  list of  paintings,  he wrote,  "All in all the  only  things I
consider a little  good in it are the  Wheatfield,  the Mountain,  the Orchard,  the Olive trees  with the  blue  hills and
the Portrait  and the Entrance  to the quarry,  and the rest  says nothing to me";  "the rest" would  include The Starry
Night. In a letter to painter Émile Bernard from late November, 1889, Van Gogh referred to the painting as a "failure."

Van Gogh argued with Bernard and, especially, Paul Gauguin as to whether one should paint from nature,  as Van Gogh
preferred,  or  paint  what  Gauguin  called  "abstractions":  paintings  conceived  in  the  imagination.   In  the  letter  to
Bernard,  Van Gogh recounted his experiences  when Gauguin lived with him in 1888:  "I once or twice allowed myself to
be led astray into abstraction, as you know. . . .  But that was delusion, dear friend,  and one soon comes up against a brick
wall. . . .  And  yet,  once  again  I  allowed  myself  to  be  led astray  into  reaching  for  stars  that are too  big  -  another
failure  -  and I have had my fill of that." wikipedia

"Now, I understand what you tried so say to me; how you suffered for your sanity."

In the soil beneath Amsterdam’s Van Gogh museum waits a time capsule containing a set of the artist’s brushes  -  and the
sheet  music  for  Don  McLean’s  Vincent  (Starry  Starry  Night).   Museum  staff  play  the  song  for visitors  every  day,
although there’s no  danger of it being  forgotten.  Indeed,  it is likely to be the American singer’s powerful portrait of
misunderstood genius that brought them there in the first place. Helen Brown in The Telegraph

The Unexpected Math Behind Van Gogh's Starry Night from TED-Ed on You Tube
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