Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Mirella Bentivoglio, E=congiunzione (1973)

View through Artsy
Screen print, 45.9 × 41.8 cm
image-zoom
Title: Mirella Bentivoglio, E=congiunzione (1973)
Description:
Screen print, 45.
9 × 41.
8 cm.

Related Results

The Bentivoglio Family
The Bentivoglio Family
Born in Ferrara, Lorenzo Costa trained with the Ferrarese painter Ercole de’Roberti. In the early 1480s he is documented in Bologna at the court of Giovanni II Bentivoglio (Bologna...
A King Performing a Ritual (painting, recto; painting, verso), illustration from a Ramayana series
A King Performing a Ritual (painting, recto; painting, verso), illustration from a Ramayana series
The folio depicts the ritual of the “Puttatresti Yajna,” a sacrifice mentioned in the ancient Indian text of the Atharva-Veda, performed to obtain a son. In the Indian Epic Ramayan...
Girls Worshipping at a Shiva Shrine, Rama and Lakshmana on the Left (painting, recto), illustration from a Ramayana series
Girls Worshipping at a Shiva Shrine, Rama and Lakshmana on the Left (painting, recto), illustration from a Ramayana series
This painting depicts the blue-skinned Rama, the seventh avatar of Hindu god Vishnu, and his brother, Lakshmana, on their way to a temple dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva. They plu...
Demons Approaching Rama and Lakshmana at a Fire Ceremony (Homa) (painting, recto), illustration from a Ramayana series
Demons Approaching Rama and Lakshmana at a Fire Ceremony (Homa) (painting, recto), illustration from a Ramayana series
The painting depicts Rama, the blue-skinned, seventh avatar of the Hindu god Vishnu, and his brother, Lakshmana, firing arrows at a group of demons. The horned demons wield weapons...
A wedding ritual celebrated by women of the palace (painting, recto), illustration from a Ramayana series
A wedding ritual celebrated by women of the palace (painting, recto), illustration from a Ramayana series
This painting depicts a wedding ritual primarily undertaken by women. In the center, the four brides of the four sons of Dasharatha are seated under a festive tent, and royal women...

Back to Top