Friday, March 29, 2024

Monet - Moreelse - Motherwell - Netscher

Claude Monet
The Artist's Garden at Vétheuil
1881
oil on canvas
Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California

Claude Monet
Water Lilies
1908
oil on canvas
Dallas Museum of Art

Claude Monet
Tulip Fields at Sassenheim
1886
oil on canvas
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts

Claude Monet
Japanese Bridge, Giverny
ca. 1920-24
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Paulus Moreelse
Portrait of Anna Ram Strick
1625
oil on canvas
Centraal Museum, Utrecht

Paulus Moreelse
Portrait of Philips Ram
1625
oil on canvas
Centraal Museum, Utrecht

Paulus Moreelse
Portrait of Antoine van Hilten
1625
oil on canvas
Rhode Island School of Design, Providence

Paulus Moreelse
Prometheus
ca. 1634-38
oil on canvas
Centraal Museum, Utrecht

Robert Motherwell
Elegy Study
1954
oil on paper, mounted on board
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Robert Motherwell
Untitled (Elegy Study)
1950
oil on board
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Robert Motherwell
Open no. 12 (in Raw Sienna with Gray)
1968
acrylic on canvas
Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington

Robert Motherwell
Open no. 37A: in Orange
1971
acrylic and charcoal on canvas
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Caspar Netscher
Courtship
ca. 1665
oil on canvas
Detroit Institute of Arts

Caspar Netscher
Portrait of a Widow
1670
oil on canvas
Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel

Caspar Netscher
Portrait of physicist Nicolas Hartsoeker
ca. 1682
oil on canvas
Musée d'Art et d'Histoire de Genève

Caspar Netscher
Portrait of Susanna Doublet Huygens
1669
oil on panel
Leiden Collection, New York

from Part Three of The Age of Anxiety

     
So one by one they plunge into the labyrinthine forest and vanish down solitary paths, with no guide but their sorrows, no companion but their own voices. Their ways cross and recross yet never once do they meet though now and then one catches somewhere not far off a brief snatch of another's song. Thus Quan't voice is heard singing:

          A vagrant veteran I,
          Discharged with grizzled chin,
     Sans youth or use, sans uniform,
          A tiger turned an ass.

Then Malin's:
          These branches deaf and dumb
          Were woeful suitors once;
     Mourning unmanned, and moping turned
          Their sullen souls to wood.

Then Rosetta's:
          My dress is torn, my tears
          Are running as I run
     Through forests far from father's eye
          To look for a true love.

Then Emble's:
          My mother wept for me
          Who disappeared at play
     From home and hope like all who chase
          The blue elusive bird.

Now Quant's again:
          Through gloomy woods I go
          Ex-demigod; the damp
     Awakes my wound; I want my tea
          But needed am of none.

Now Emble's:
          More faint, more far away
          The huntsman's social horn
     Calls through the cold uncanny woods
          And nearer draws the night.

Now Rosetta's:
          Dear God, regard thy child;
          Repugn or pacify
     All furry forms and fangs that lurk
          Within this horrid shade.

Now Malin's:
          Their given names forgot,
          Mere species of despair,
     On whims of wind their wills depend,
          On temperatures their mood.

And yet once more Quant's:
          So, whistling as I walk
          Through brake and copse, I keep
     A lookout for the Limping One
          Who buys abandoned souls.

– W.H. Auden (1944-46)