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CTyankee

(67,925 posts)
39. Rubens is present in this Challenge...
Sat May 19, 2012, 07:55 AM
May 2012

and I'd love to hear about the crazy art teacher and his Rubens stories...

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Does "some Hapsburg half-wit" qualify for #3? lapislzi May 2012 #1
#3??? CTyankee May 2012 #7
It's "The Hapsburg Nose"... DCKit May 2012 #8
Rubens is present in this Challenge... CTyankee May 2012 #39
Damn, I know I recognize at least a couple of these! CaliforniaPeggy May 2012 #2
You're almost there with the correct answer, Peggy! Leave it to you to know CTyankee May 2012 #4
The Third-Class Carriage by Daumier Angry Dragon May 2012 #5
Is number 6 by Modigliani? n/t CaliforniaPeggy May 2012 #3
You know, it DOES resemble Modigliani, but it is not. Several centuries separate this work CTyankee May 2012 #6
#3 is "Self portrait" by Mitt Romney. OffWithTheirHeads May 2012 #9
No. 3 answer is... Brickbat May 2012 #10
Do you not love this painting? How terrific is it! Yes! It is from that painting! CTyankee May 2012 #14
Truly, a masterpiece. Brickbat May 2012 #19
Have you seen this painting? CTyankee May 2012 #28
Many years ago, on a trip to Paris. Brickbat May 2012 #31
I was 16 when my mother took me to Paris and I too didn't want to go! CTyankee May 2012 #32
Same thing. OffWithTheirHeads May 2012 #15
KInd of over the top stuff! But, man, do you really NOT want to see what it was like? CTyankee May 2012 #20
Oh hell yeah! But the liklyhood that I will ever get to see the Louvre is slim to none. OffWithTheirHeads May 2012 #35
I think I've seen it before Liberal_in_LA May 2012 #33
Jimmy Hendricks HopeHoops May 2012 #11
No. 4 answer is... Brickbat May 2012 #12
Yes! Sad, tho. CTyankee May 2012 #16
Yes, it was the eyes that did it for me. Brickbat May 2012 #18
I described the eyes of a "woman of Algiers" as being "black as figs" in a paper I wrote on that CTyankee May 2012 #22
I thought I recognized that face hfojvt May 2012 #36
#6 .. hedda_foil May 2012 #13
There is that resemblance but it isn't El Greco. I can't quite understand it... CTyankee May 2012 #17
1 is by Mantegna kenny blankenship May 2012 #21
Yes, it is the Gonzaga family and its retinue by Montegna, a famous 15th century work. CTyankee May 2012 #24
Number two: Rembrandt's Olive Garden? Brother Buzz May 2012 #23
It's by a French painter of the mid 19th century, named Daumier. He felt very strongly for CTyankee May 2012 #25
I almost thought it was of Van Gogh's early works IcyPeas May 2012 #27
You know, it was an era between the Romantics and the post Impressionists like Van Gogh. CTyankee May 2012 #29
I thought the same. lapislzi May 2012 #43
The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam is phenomenal. It is vast. CTyankee May 2012 #48
Damn! I was stumped again. panader0 May 2012 #26
Were you an art history major? I'd be interested to know where your background is from. CTyankee May 2012 #30
Wild Ass Guess ellisonz May 2012 #34
Thank you, ellisonz! But it is not a Michelangelo... CTyankee May 2012 #38
K&R burrowowl May 2012 #37
Well, folks, #5 and #6 have yet to be guessed... CTyankee May 2012 #40
Hmm...early Renaissance, you say? lapislzi May 2012 #41
I looked up his dates. He lived in the second half of the 15th and early 16th century but is CTyankee May 2012 #44
#5: Rubens, The Consequences of War pinboy3niner May 2012 #42
You got it! Good on ya! CTyankee May 2012 #45
I keep getting to these threads late lately suffragette May 2012 #46
I'm glad you make them. You have contributed a LOT to them in the past! CTyankee May 2012 #47
Lovely to see you and from your hints #6 Botticelli Barnaba altarpiece suffragette May 2012 #49
I'd love to see an analysis of this painting to understand why St. John looks so pained in it. CTyankee May 2012 #50
Sounds like you're going in a likely direction to me, suffragette May 2012 #51
I wouldn't doubt that Modigliani studied the Early Renaissance artists. It sounds logical that CTyankee May 2012 #52
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