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De Grote Rubens Atlas
DE GROTE RUBENS ATLAS GUNTER HAUSPIE DUITSLAND INHOUD 1568-1589 12-23 13 VLUCHT NAAR KEULEN 13 HUISARREST IN SIEGEN 14 GEBOORTE VAN PETER PAUL ANTWERPEN 15 SIEGEN 16 JEUGD IN KEULEN 1561-1568 17 KEULEN 20 RUBENS’ SCHILDERIJ 10-11 10 WELGESTELDE OUDERS IN DE SANKT PETER 10 ONRUST IN ANTWERPEN 21 NEDERLANDSE ENCLAVE IN KEULEN 11 SCHRIKBEWIND VAN ALVA 22 RUBENS IN HET WALLRAF- RICHARTZ-MUSEUM 23 TERUGKEER NAAR ANTWERPEN 1561 1568 1577 LEEFTIJD 0 1 2 3 4 ITALIË 1600-1608 32-71 33 OVER DE ALPEN 53 OP MISSIE NAAR SPANJE 33 VIA VENETIË NAAR MANTUA 54 EEN ZWARE TOCHT 35 GLORIERIJK MANTUA 54 OPLAPWERK IN VALLADOLID 38 LAGO DI MEZZO 55 VALLADOLID 39 MANTUA IN RUBENS’ TIJD 56 PALACIO REAL 40 CASTELLO DI SAN GIORGIO 57 OVERHANDIGING VAN DE GESCHENKEN 41 PALAZZO DUCALE 57 HERTOG VAN LERMA 42 BASILICA DI SANT’ANDREA 59 GEEN SPAANSE HOFSCHILDER 42 IL RIO 59 TWEEDE VERBLIJF IN ROME 42 HUIS VAN GIULIO ROMANO 59 CHIESA NUOVA 42 HUIS VAN ANDREA MANTEGNA 60 DE GENUESE ELITE 43 PALAZZO TE 61 INSPIREREND GENUA 44 MANTUAANS MEESTERWERK 65 DE PALAZZI VAN GENUA 48 HUWELIJK VAN MARIA DE’ MEDICI 67 EEN LAATSTE KEER ROME IN FIRENZE 67 TERUGKEER NAAR ANTWERPEN 49 EERSTE VERBLIJF IN ROME 68 RUBENS IN ROME 49 SANTA CROCE IN GERUSALEMME 70 STEDEN MET SCHILDERIJEN UIT 51 VIA EEN OMWEG NAAR GRASSE RUBENS’ ITALIAANSE PERIODE 52 VERONA EN PADUA 1600 1608 VLAAMSE MEESTERS 4 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 ANTWERPEN 1589-1600 24-31 25 TERUG IN ANTWERPEN 25 STAD IN VERVAL 26 UITMUNTEND STUDENT 27 DE JEUGDJAREN IN ANTWERPEN 28 GOEDE MANIEREN LEREN 28 DE ROEP VAN DE KUNST 28 -
The Rubenianum Quarterly
2016 The Rubenianum Quarterly 1 Announcing project Collection Ludwig Burchard II Dear friends, colleagues and benefactors, We are pleased to announce that through a generous donation the Rubenianum will be I have the pleasure to inform you of the able to dedicate another project to Ludwig Burchard’s scholarly legacy. The project entails imminent publication of the first part of two main components, both building on previous undertakings that have been carried the mythology volumes in the Corpus out to preserve the Rubenianum’s core collection and at the same time ensure enhanced Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard. The accessibility to the scholarly community of the wealth of Rubens documentation. Digitizing the Corpus Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard, launched in 2013 and successfully two volumes are going to press as we extended until May 2016, will be continued for all Corpus volumes published before 2003, speak and will be truly impressive. abiding by the moving wall of 15 years, that was agreed upon with Brepols Publishers, for the Consisting of nearly 1000 pages and over years 2016–18. 400 images, they will be a monumental The second and larger component of the project builds on the enterprise titled A treasure addition to our ever-growing catalogue trove of study material. Disclosure and valorization of the Collection Ludwig Burchard, raisonné of Rubens’s oeuvre and constitute successfully executed in 2014–15. An archival description of Rubenianum objects originating from Burchard’s library and documentation has since allowed for a virtual reconstruction a wonderful Easter present. of the expert’s scholarly legacy. Much emphasis was placed on the Rubens files during In the meantime, volume xix, 4 on Peter this project, while the collection contains many other resources that are of considerable Paul Rubens’s many portrait copies, importance to Rubens research. -
The Wallace Collection — Rubens Reuniting the Great Landscapes
XT H E W ALLACE COLLECTION RUBENS: REUNITING THE GREAT LANDSCAPES • Rubens’s two great landscape paintings reunited for the first time in 200 years • First chance to see the National Gallery painting after extensive conservation work • Major collaboration between the National Gallery and the Wallace Collection 3 June - 15 August 2021 #ReunitingRubens In partnership with VISITFLANDERS This year, the Wallace Collection will reunite two great masterpieces of Rubens’s late landscape painting: A View of Het Steen in the Early Morning and The Rainbow Landscape. Thanks to an exceptional loan from the National Gallery, this is the first time in two hundred years that these works, long considered to be companion pieces, will be seen together. This m ajor collaboration between the Wallace Collection and the National Gallery was initiated with the Wallace Collection’s inaugural loan in 2019 of Titian’s Perseus and Andromeda, enabling the National Gallery to complete Titian’s Poesie cycle for the first time in 400 years for their exhibition Titian: Love, Desire, Death. The National Gallery is now making an equally unprecedented reciprocal loan to the Wallace Collection, lending this work for the first time, which will reunite Rubens’s famous and very rare companion pair of landscape paintings for the first time in 200 years. This exhibition is also the first opportunity for audiences to see the National Gallery painting newly cleaned and conserved, as throughout 2020 it has been the focus of a major conservation project specifically in preparation for this reunion. The pendant pair can be admired in new historically appropriate, matching frames, also created especially for this exhibition. -
Beginnings Lesson Plans
Outline of Lessons WEEK #1—Introduction to God’s Word Sunday Overview of Timeline Study What We Expect Wednesday “Who’s Who? and What’s What?” God, The Bible, Satan and Man WEEK #2—“In the Beginning” Sunday “Let Us”—God and Creation “Where Are You?”—Man Sins Wednesday Prophecy of Christ—God Makes Atonement Brothers: Cain, Abel and Seth WEEK #3—God’s Judgment and Mercy Sunday The Ark—God’s Design The Flood—God’s Judgment The Deliverance—God’s Mercy Wednesday The Rainbow—God’s Covenant Noah’s Three Sons—Shem, Ham and Japheth Tower of Babel—God Scatters the People 1 Essential Knowledge Lesson 1a 1. SW become familiar with the TIMELINE UNIT of study: • 12 TIMELINE sections • BIBLE HISTORY HIGHWAY • TIMELINE TALK 2. SW know how to use their TIMELINE booklet and what is inside. 3. SW learn something about their teachers. 4. SW know what their personal and spiritual responsibilities are in studying the BIBLE TIMELINE. Lesson 1b 1. God is the author of the Bible, and that the Bible is perfect. 2. Satan is real and is the author of sin. 3. Man is free to choose his master. Lesson 2a 1. God had Others with Him during creation. 2. God was pleased with His creation. 3. God is Great and man is small. 4. Man cannot hide from God. 5. Man must choose whom he will obey. Lesson 2b 1. Christ was in existence before man. 2. All who sin suffer consequences and sin separates man from God. 3. Some offerings to God are not respected by God. -
HNA April 11 Cover-Final.Indd
historians of netherlandish art NEWSLETTER AND REVIEW OF BOOKS Dedicated to the Study of Netherlandish, German and Franco-Flemish Art and Architecture, 1350-1750 Vol. 28, No. 1 April 2011 Jacob Cats (1741-1799), Summer Landscape, pen and brown ink and wash, 270-359 mm. Hamburger Kunsthalle. Photo: Christoph Irrgang Exhibited in “Bruegel, Rembrandt & Co. Niederländische Zeichnungen 1450-1850”, June 17 – September 11, 2011, on the occasion of the publication of Annemarie Stefes, Niederländische Zeichnungen 1450-1850, Kupferstichkabinett der Hamburger Kunsthalle (see under New Titles) HNA Newsletter, Vol. 23, No. 2, November 2006 1 historians of netherlandish art 23 S. Adelaide Avenue, Highland Park, NJ 08904 Telephone/Fax: (732) 937-8394 E-Mail: [email protected] www.hnanews.org Historians of Netherlandish Art Offi cers President - Stephanie Dickey (2009–2013) Bader Chair in Northern Baroque Art Queen’s University Kingston ON K7L 3N6 Canada Vice-President - Amy Golahny (2009–2013) Lycoming College Williamsport, PA 17701 Treasurer - Rebecca Brienen University of Miami Art & Art History Department PO Box 248106 Coral Gables FL 33124-2618 European Treasurer and Liaison - Fiona Healy Seminarstrasse 7 D-55127 Mainz Germany Board Members Contents Dagmar Eichberger (2008–2012) HNA News ............................................................................1 Wayne Franits (2009–2013) Matt Kavaler (2008–2012) Personalia ............................................................................... 2 Henry Luttikhuizen (2009 and 2010–2014) Exhibitions -
Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel, the Garden of Eden with the Fall of Man (1617)
Lenten Quiet Day 2017 | S. Stephen’s, Providence The Good, The True, & the Beautiful: Lost and Won on the Wood of a Tree Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel, The Garden of Eden with the Fall of Man (1617) ow the serpent was more subtle than any other wild creature that the Lord God had made. He said to the woman, N“Did God say, ‘You shall not eat of any tree of the garden’?” 2 And the woman said to the serpent, “We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden; 3 but God said, ‘You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die.’” 4 But the serpent said to the woman, “You will not die. 5 For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” 6 So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate; and she also gave some to her husband, and he ate. 7 Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves aprons. Genesis 3.1-7 The fool has said in his heart, “There is no God.” * We think that Paradise and Calvarie, All are corrupt and commit abominable acts; Christs Cross and Adams tree, stood in one place; there is none who does any good. -
Ribera's Drunken Silenusand Saint Jerome
99 NAPLES IN FLESH AND BONES: RIBERA’S DRUNKEN SILENUS AND SAINT JEROME Edward Payne Abstract Jusepe de Ribera did not begin to sign his paintings consistently until 1626, the year in which he executed two monumental works: the Drunken Silenus and Saint Jerome and the Angel of Judgement (Museo di Capodimonte, Naples). Both paintings include elaborate Latin inscriptions stating that they were executed in Naples, the city in which the artist had resided for the past decade and where he ultimately remained for the rest of his life. Taking each in turn, this essay explores the nature and implications of these inscriptions, and offers new interpretations of the paintings. I argue that these complex representations of mythological and religious subjects – that were destined, respectively, for a private collection and a Neapolitan church – may be read as incarnations of the city of Naples. Naming the paintings’ place of production and the artist’s city of residence in the signature formulae was thus not coincidental or marginal, but rather indicative of Ribera inscribing himself textually, pictorially and corporeally in the fabric of the city. Keywords: allegory, inscription, Naples, realism, Jusepe de Ribera, Saint Jerome, satire, senses, Silenus Full text: http://openartsjournal.org/issue-6/article-5 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5456/issn.2050-3679/2018w05 Biographical note Edward Payne is Head Curator of Spanish Art at The Auckland Project and an Honorary Fellow at Durham University. He previously served as the inaugural Meadows/Mellon/Prado Curatorial Fellow at the Meadows Museum (2014–16) and as the Moore Curatorial Fellow in Drawings and Prints at the Morgan Library & Museum (2012–14). -
Transcendence of God
TRANSCENDENCE OF GOD A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT AND THE QUR’AN BY STEPHEN MYONGSU KIM A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE PHILOSOPHIAE DOCTOR (PhD) IN BIBLICAL AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES IN THE FACULTY OF HUMANITIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF PRETORIA SUPERVISOR: PROF. DJ HUMAN CO-SUPERVISOR: PROF. PGJ MEIRING JUNE 2009 © University of Pretoria DEDICATION To my love, Miae our children Yein, Stephen, and David and the Peacemakers around the world. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First, I thank God for the opportunity and privilege to study the subject of divinity. Without acknowledging God’s grace, this study would be futile. I would like to thank my family for their outstanding tolerance of my late studies which takes away our family time. Without their support and kind endurance, I could not have completed this prolonged task. I am grateful to the staffs of University of Pretoria who have provided all the essential process of official matter. Without their kind help, my studies would have been difficult. Many thanks go to my fellow teachers in the Nairobi International School of Theology. I thank David and Sarah O’Brien for their painstaking proofreading of my thesis. Furthermore, I appreciate Dr Wayne Johnson and Dr Paul Mumo for their suggestions in my early stage of thesis writing. I also thank my students with whom I discussed and developed many insights of God’s relationship with mankind during the Hebrew Exegesis lectures. I also remember my former teachers from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, especially from the OT Department who have shaped my academic stand and inspired to pursue the subject of this thesis. -
Ontdek Schilder, Tekenaar, Prentkunstenaar Otto Van Veen
79637 4 afbeeldingen Otto van Veen man / Noord-Nederlands, Zuid-Nederlands schilder, tekenaar, prentkunstenaar, hofschilder Naamvarianten In dit veld worden niet-voorkeursnamen zoals die in bronnen zijn aangetroffen, vastgelegd en toegankelijk gemaakt. Dit zijn bijvoorbeeld andere schrijfwijzen, bijnamen of namen van getrouwde vrouwen met of juist zonder de achternaam van een echtgenoot. Vaenius, Octavius Vaenius, Otho Vaenius, Otto Veen, Octavius van Veen, Otho van Venius, Octavius Venius, Otho Venius, Otto Kwalificaties schilder, tekenaar, prentkunstenaar, hofschilder Nationaliteit/school Noord-Nederlands, Zuid-Nederlands Geboren Leiden 1556 Thieme/Becker 1940; according to Houbraken 1718: born in 1558 Overleden Brussel 1629-05-06 Houbraken 1718, vol. 1, p. Rombouts/Van Lerius 1872/1961, vol.1, p. 375, note 3 Familierelaties in dit veld wordt een familierelatie met één of meer andere kunstenaars vermeld. son of Cornelis Jansz. van Veen (1519-1591) burgomaster of Leyden and Geertruyd Simons van Neck (born 1530); marrried with Maria Loets/Loots/Loos (Duverger 1992, vol. 6, p. 186-187); brother of Gijsbert, Pieter, Artus and Aechtjen Cornelis; father of Gertrude van Veen; his 6-year old son Cornelis was buried on 19 September 1605 in St. Jacob's Church Zie ook in dit veld vindt u verwijzingen naar een groepsnaam of naar de kunstenaars die deel uitma(a)k(t)en van de groep. Ook kunt u verwijzingen naar andere kunstenaars aantreffen als het gaat om samenwerking zonder dat er sprake is van een groep(snaam). Dit is bijvoorbeeld het geval bij kunstenaars die gedeelten in werken van een andere kunstenaar voor hun rekening hebben genomen (zoals bij P.P. -
Isabel Clara Eugenia and Peter Paul Rubens’S the Triumph of the Eucharist Tapestry Series
ABSTRACT Title of Document: PIETY, POLITICS, AND PATRONAGE: ISABEL CLARA EUGENIA AND PETER PAUL RUBENS’S THE TRIUMPH OF THE EUCHARIST TAPESTRY SERIES Alexandra Billington Libby, Doctor of Philosophy, 2013 Directed By: Professor Arthur K. Wheelock, Jr., Department of Art History and Archeology This dissertation explores the circumstances that inspired the Infanta Isabel Clara Eugenia, Princess of Spain, Archduchess of Austria, and Governess General of the Southern Netherlands to commission Peter Paul Rubens’s The Triumph of the Eucharist tapestry series for the Madrid convent of the Descalzas Reales. It traces the commission of the twenty large-scale tapestries that comprise the series to the aftermath of an important victory of the Infanta’s army over the Dutch in the town of Breda. Relying on contemporary literature, studies of the Infanta’s upbringing, and the tapestries themselves, it argues that the cycle was likely conceived as an ex-voto, or gift of thanks to God for the military triumph. In my discussion, I highlight previously unrecognized temporal and thematic connections between Isabel’s many other gestures of thanks in the wake of the victory and The Triumph of the Eucharist series. I further show how Rubens invested the tapestries with imagery and a conceptual conceit that celebrated the Eucharist in ways that symbolically evoked the triumph at Breda. My study also explores the motivations behind Isabel’s decision to give the series to the Descalzas Reales. It discusses how as an ex-voto, the tapestries implicitly credited her for the triumph and, thereby, affirmed her terrestrial authority. Drawing on the history of the convent and its use by the king of Spain as both a religious and political dynastic center, it shows that the series was not only a gift to the convent, but also a gift to the king, a man with whom the Infanta had developed a tense relationship over the question of her political autonomy. -
June 23, 2006 for IMMEDIATE RELEASE PREMIERE PRESENTATION
DATE: Friday, June 23, 2006 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE PREMIERE PRESENTATION EXHIBITION EXPLORES THE PROFESSIONAL EXCHANGES AND CLOSE FRIENDSHIP BETWEEN TWO GREAT 17th-CENTURY MASTERS Rubens and Brueghel: A Working Friendship At the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Getty Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, 1577-1640) and Jan Brueghel the Elder Center, July 5–September 24, 2006 (Flemish, 1568-1625) The Return from War: Mars Disarmed by Venus, about 1610–1612 Oil on panel 127.3 x 163.5 cm (50 1/8 x 64 3/8 in.) The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California, acquired in honor of John Walsh. 2000.68 LOS ANGELES—One of the greatest artistic partnerships in history—between Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640) and Jan Brueghel the Elder (1568–1625)—will be explored in Rubens and Brueghel: A Working Friendship, at the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Getty Center, July 5–September 24, 2006. This Premiere Presentation is the first major international loan exhibition devoted to the collaborative works of Rubens and Brueghel, and is one of the J. Paul Getty Museum’s most important shows of the year. It will feature the largest group of paintings by the two 17th-century masters ever seen together, examining their professional partnership, personal friendship, and unique collaborative process. Rubens and Brueghel: A Working Friendship has been organized by the J. Paul Getty Museum and the Royal Picture Gallery Mauritshuis. Following its showing at -more- Page 2 the Getty Center in Los Angeles, the exhibition will be presented at the Mauritshuis, The Hague, Netherlands, from October 21, 2006–January 28, 2007. -
Mark Twain and the Bible
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by University of Kentucky University of Kentucky UKnowledge American Literature American Studies 1969 Mark Twain and the Bible Allison Ensor University of Tennessee - Knoxville Click here to let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Thanks to the University of Kentucky Libraries and the University Press of Kentucky, this book is freely available to current faculty, students, and staff at the University of Kentucky. Find other University of Kentucky Books at uknowledge.uky.edu/upk. For more information, please contact UKnowledge at [email protected]. Recommended Citation Ensor, Allison, "Mark Twain and the Bible" (1969). American Literature. 4. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_american_literature/4 Mark Twain & The Bible This page intentionally left blank MARK TWAIN & THE JBIJBLE Allison Ensor UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY PRESS Copyright (c) I 969 UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY PRESS, LEXINGTON Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 76-80092 Standard Book NU11lber 8131-1181-1 TO Anne & Beth This page intentionally left blank Acknowledgments THis BOOK could not have been what it is without the assistance of several persons whose help I gratefully acknowledge: Professor Edwin H. Cady, Indiana Uni versity, guided me through the preliminaries of this study; Professor Nathalia Wright, University of Ten nessee, whose study of Melville and the Bible is still a standard work, read my manuscript and made valuable suggestions; Professor Henry Nash Smith, University of California at Berkeley, former editor of the Mark Twain Papers, read an earlier version of the book and encouraged and directed me by his comments on it; the Graduate School of the University of Tennessee awarded me a summer grant, releasing me from teach ing responsibilities for a term so that I might revise the manuscript; and my wife, Anne Lovell Ensor, was will ing to accept Mark Twain as a member of the family for some five years.