Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Title: The Poets of the Nineteenth Century
Description:
Illustrations: wood engraving.

Related Results

Breechcloth
Breechcloth
Breechcloth; probably Yanktonai; 1860-1870Wool, porcupine quills, sinew, metal, horsehair, pigments; 117.5 x 28.5 cm.\RMV 710-9; Herman F.C. ten Kate collection; purchased from tra...
engraving from "Scenes in the life of the Saviour; by the poets and painters. Edited by R. W. G".
engraving from "Scenes in the life of the Saviour; by the poets and painters. Edited by R. W. G".
This image has been taken from scan 000065 from "Scenes in the life of the Saviour; by the poets and painters. Edited by R. W. G". The title and subject terms of this image have be...
Portrait of a Youth
Portrait of a Youth
The composition of this portrait study was first outlined in pencil and then blocked out with fields of watercolor, as is evidenced in the sitter’s chair. Next, the artist added op...
Robe
Robe
The distinctive cut of this robe—collarless with a wide neck, the skirt gathered under the arms and flaring over the hips, and a very full, tapering sleeve-- recalls the standard s...
Landscape with Mountain Village
Landscape with Mountain Village
Painted on paper in ink and the relatively light shades of color that the literati painters of the Suzhou-based Wu School typically employed, this long handscroll presents a panora...
Carpet weaving
Carpet weaving
Photograph of a row of children seated at a loom weaving carpets in the modern-day state of Jammu and Kashmir, taken by an unknown photographer in the 1890s. Carpet-making was said...
Radha Talking with Her Sakhi on a Terrace, drawing from a Rasikapriya (Handbook for Poetry Connoisseurs) Series
Radha Talking with Her Sakhi on a Terrace, drawing from a Rasikapriya (Handbook for Poetry Connoisseurs) Series
The drawing depicts Radha, the consort of the Hindu god Krishna, on the terrace of her palatial abode. Her chin rests on her hand as she listens to her female companion (sakhi), wh...

Back to Top