Albín Brunovský (1935–1997) - Miroslav Válek: Rovina Frontispice, 1980
etching, drypoint
source
Egyptian
Game of Hounds and Jackals
Middle Kingdom, ca. 1814-1805 B.C.E.
Artist: Albert Moore (English, 1841–1893)
Date: 1869
Medium: OIl on Canvas
Collection: TATE Britain
Description
Albert Moore was influenced by Japanese art. He produced decorative and subtly coloured pictures. He focuses on the colour, texture and movement of draped fabric on the woman’s costume. Art critic Sidney Colvin said Moore’s subjects were ‘merely a mechanism for getting beautiful people into beautiful situations.’ Moore used the flower-like symbol at the bottom of the picture as a signature.
The Muses Leaving their Father Apollo to Go Out and Light the World (1868) by Gustave Moreau
Mosè Bianchi (Italian, 1840-1904)
Flora
holy moly these silent hill fanartists are always DEVOURINGGGG
You see it too?
For me…it’s always like this.
.
Never have I drawn anything so graphic and bold, yet I’m unapologetically happy with the result.
Dante's Inferno (1861)
— by Gustave Doré
Idleness (1900) by John William Godward
Christ in the Sepulchre, Guarded by Angels William Blake
Flower Sketch for The Enchanted Garden (1916) by John William Waterhouse