Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. The Power and the Glory. This huge oil painting by Peter Paul Rubens adorns the ceiling of the Banqueting House and was commissioned by Charles I as testament to the glory of the Stuart monarchs. Banqueting House is the only remaining complete building of Whitehall Palace, the sovereign's principal residence from 1530 until 1698 when it was ...

  2. 16 de ago. de 2020 · Peter Paul Rubens’s Samson and Delilah portrays a tragedy of love and betrayal. Delilah, Samson’s lover, has been bribed to discover the secret of Samson’s supernatural strength. Rubens shows the moment when Delilah tells an accomplice to cut his hair, leaving him powerless.

  3. Peter Paul Rubens (Siegen, 28 juni 1577 – Antwerpen, 30 mei 1640) was een Zuid-Nederlandse barokschilder, tekenaar, tapijtontwerper en diplomaat, werkzaam in Antwerpen. Hij werd ook wel Pieter Paul, Pieter Pauwel of Petrus Paulus genoemd. [2]

  4. Rubens, Peter Paul. Siegen, Westphalia (Germany), 1577 - Antwerp (Belgium), 1640. No other 17th-century European painter combined artistic talent, social and economic success and a high cultural level like Rubens. Though primarily a painter, he also made numerous designs for prints, tapestries, architecture, sculpture and decorative objects.

  5. The Four Rivers of Paradise (1615) Also known as the Flour Continents, this is one of the famous paintings by Peter Paul Rubens which depicts what was at the time the four continents—Europe, Asia, Africa, and America—as female allegoric figures partnered with the gods of their four rivers—the Danube, the Ganges, the Nile, and the Ro de la ...

  6. Rubens, Peter Paul. Siegen, Westphalia (Germany), 1577 - Antwerp (Belgium), 1640. No other 17th-century European painter combined artistic talent, social and economic success and a high cultural level like Rubens. Though primarily a painter, he also made numerous designs for prints, tapestries, architecture, sculpture and decorative objects.

  7. Perseus and Andromeda. Perseus and Andromeda is a 1622 painting in the Hermitage Museum by the Flemish artist Peter Paul Rubens of the ancient Greek myth of Perseus and Andromeda after the former's defeat of the Gorgon. The composition is similar to that of an earlier painting by Rubens, Perseus frees Andromeda (now Gemäldegalerie, Berlin ).