Neptune and Amphitrite
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- | :''[[Jan Mabuse]]'' | + | :''[[Jan Mabuse]], [[Neptune]], [[Amphitrite]]'' |
- | But [[Jan Mabuse]]'s only signed pictures of this period are the ''[[Neptune and Amphitrite]]'' of 1516 at Berlin, and the ''[[Madonna]]'', with a portrait of [[Jean Carondelet]] of 1517, at the Louvre, in both of which we clearly discern that [[Giorgio Vasari|Vasari]] only spoke by hearsay of the progress made by Mabuse in the true method of producing pictures full of [[mythological nude]] figures and [[poesies]]. It is difficult to find anything more [[coarse]] or [[misshapen]] than the Amphitrite, unless we except the grotesque and ungainly drayman who figures for [[Neptune (god)|Neptune]]. In later forms of the same subject--the Adam and Eve at [[Hampton Cour]]t, or its feebler replica at Berlin and ''[[Venus and Amor]]'' ([[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium]], Brussels) -- we observe more nudity, combined with realism of the commonest type. | + | But [[Jan Mabuse]]'s only signed pictures of this period are the ''[[Neptune and Amphitrite]]'' of 1516 at Berlin, and the ''[[Madonna]]'', with a portrait of [[Jean Carondelet]] of 1517, at the Louvre, in both of which we clearly discern that [[Giorgio Vasari|Vasari]] only spoke by hearsay of the progress made by Mabuse in the true method of producing pictures full of [[mythological nude]] figures and [[poesies]]. It is difficult to find anything more [[coarse]] or [[misshapen]] than the [[Amphitrite]], unless we except the grotesque and ungainly drayman who figures for [[Neptune (god)|Neptune]]. In later forms of the same subject--the Adam and Eve at [[Hampton Cour]]t, or its feebler replica at Berlin and ''[[Venus and Amor]]'' ([[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium]], Brussels) -- we observe more nudity, combined with realism of the commonest type. |
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But Jan Mabuse's only signed pictures of this period are the Neptune and Amphitrite of 1516 at Berlin, and the Madonna, with a portrait of Jean Carondelet of 1517, at the Louvre, in both of which we clearly discern that Vasari only spoke by hearsay of the progress made by Mabuse in the true method of producing pictures full of mythological nude figures and poesies. It is difficult to find anything more coarse or misshapen than the Amphitrite, unless we except the grotesque and ungainly drayman who figures for Neptune. In later forms of the same subject--the Adam and Eve at Hampton Court, or its feebler replica at Berlin and Venus and Amor (Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, Brussels) -- we observe more nudity, combined with realism of the commonest type.