Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Margaret Lemon (born c. 1614) was an English artist's model. She was the most painted female commoner of the seventeenth century, and she was the partner of Anthony van Dyck.

    • most painted female commoner of the 17th century
    • Anthony van Dyck
  2. 10 de fev. de 2018 · February 10, 2018February 12, 2018. The Apotheosis of Margaret Lemon: a Lely enigma solved? This week a friend very kindly sent me this article by Hilary Maddicott in the Burlington Magazine. This article, as Bendor Grosvenor pointed out in thursday’s AHN is free to download, a first for the Burlington and much to be encouraged.

  3. Margaret Lemon s birth remains unknown; James has only surmised it to have been c1614. Nor have documents yet been found to establish the date during the 1630s when Margaret became Van Dyck s mistress. Evidence has, however, more recently been uncovered indicating that Margaret died by her own hand in Oxford

  4. #FrickCollection. There is almost no surviving documentation for the life of Van Dyck’s mistress, Margaret Lemon, although some sources describe her as a famous courtesan. In this portrait, long considered lost, Lemon appears in three-quarter profile, delicately touching the fabric at her shoulder.

  5. Margaret Lemon was Van Dyck’s mistress and is unfortunately known to us today only through contemporary tittle-tattle. A fellow artist of Van Dyck, Wenceslaus Hollar (1607-77), described her as violently jealous, even on one occasion attempting to bite Van Dyck’s thumb off.

  6. 20 de mai. de 2020 · Alongside numerous quotations from famous works, including Sir Walter Scott’s Marmion (1808) and The Lady of the Lake (1810), Charlotte transcribed a surreal Georgian poem inspired by Sir Anthony van Dyck’s portrait of his mistress Margaret Lemon (c. 1638), which has been part of the Royal Collection at Hampton Court Palace since ...

  7. Etched after an earlier portrait by Anthony van Dyck of Margaret Lemon, the painter’s most famous mistress The first four lines, below the title are a paean to the youth and beauty for which Lemon was celebrated among the greatest of the English nobility.