Second part of the art thread

Second part of the art thread

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my favourite blake

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this is a very simple painting but it's one of my favourites
couldn't even tell you why

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Because you dream of going outside, without meeting a single other human.

sometimes you can be so cruel

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JUST

I've got 6 of these from /ic/. don't know who the artist is though

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and last but not least, ass

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This is real beauty.

Is she ok?

I really can't stand Blake and his 80s action figure men. I like Fuseli, though, so whatever.

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It's a shame a lot of these Roman paintings are gone. They look interesting.

They could get fairly loose.

Many mosaics have survived and they are amazing.

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This is a mural from the Vergina tomb complex, from a tomb believed to be connected with the complex in which Phillip II was possibly buried in.
It's very well done for the time

yeah he was a trash artist but a great poet

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I want a giant print of this now.

Could Roman painting have influenced Renaissance painting? The proper use of human anatomy, allegory, visual perspective used are similarities that one cannot pass up. However Pompeii was rediscovered only after 1599, well after the renaisance, so something doesn't add up. Did Italian painters just re-invent Roman painting techniques without knowing about it?

It's Henri Rousseau - Tiger in a Tropical Storm (1891) fyi.

Karl Friedrich Schinkel - Landschaft mit Pilger

Romans didn't use perspective, Brunelleschi derived that. Also, painting techniques like tempera never died. Sculptors like the Pisanos were inspired by the classics but the mastery was their own. Oil paint was individually invented in Europe before the 12th century and used to paint things like statues and shields before being appropriated by Flemish painters employed by the French court. Romans didn't paint in oil

>the absolute state of Veeky Forums

>& Humanities
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