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New Years Eve, Times Square, New York
View through The Met
Gelatin silver print
Photographs, Metropolitan Museum of Art New York NY, Gift of Sandra Weiner 1992
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Adam and Eve
Adam and Eve
Adam and Eve entered the Thyssen-Bornemisza collection in 1929. The panel was acquired from the Julius Böhler gallery in Munich, who had previously owned the painting in 1916. In a...
Eve Giving Adam the Forbidden Fruit, plate 3 from "The Story of Adam and Eve"
Eve Giving Adam the Forbidden Fruit, plate 3 from "The Story of Adam and Eve"
Engraving, The Story of Adam and Eve...
Looped Textile Square: Quail
Looped Textile Square: Quail
Panel from a linen cloth faced with long loops of linen thread. The inwoven slit tapestry square (tabula) introduces wool wefts. At center, a quail with red feet and beak sits with...
Fragment with Jewelled Cross
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This textile fragment includes a tapestry woven square and two tapestry woven bands that meet at a right angle. These bands may have once run around the inner square to form a cont...
Adam and Eve Making Garments of Leaves; God Admonishing Adam and Eve for their Transgression (one of a set of three)
Adam and Eve Making Garments of Leaves; God Admonishing Adam and Eve for their Transgression (one of a set of three)
Canvas worked with wool silk and metal thread; chain split tent and straight stitches; appliqué of woven silk textiles; metal thread braid...
Angel of the Divine Presence Bringing Eve to Adam (The Creation of Eve: "And She Shall be Called Woman) (recto); Sketch for the same (verso)
Angel of the Divine Presence Bringing Eve to Adam (The Creation of Eve: "And She Shall be Called Woman) (recto); Sketch for the same (verso)
Watercolor pen and black ink over graphite...
Diptych with symbols of the Virgin and Redeeming Christ: Christ with the Cross as Redemptor Mundi (Right wing)
Diptych with symbols of the Virgin and Redeeming Christ: Christ with the Cross as Redemptor Mundi (Right wing)
This pair of panels formed part of a large ensemble of which the other subjects are now unknown. Within the Museum’s collection they are among the most iconographically interesting...

