A view of the Alte Pinakotek 
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Our favorite, at length, was Breughel's (the Elder) The Land 
of Cockaigne, a political satire depicting the sloth and  
corruption of the classes...knights, clergy, scholars, peasants 
too 
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Our favorite genre is the damnation...here a detail of one  
of Breughel's, torment by fart... 
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The usual St. Sebastians 
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Durer's incredible self-portrait 
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The obligatory Rembrandt self-portrait  
(did he paint anything else?) 
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And this, widely thought to be Velazquez's  
self-portrait--something the Prado would  
like to have back, one assumes 
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The largest and most varied collection of  
Peter Paul Rubens I have seen; this his  
damnation 
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This, Rubens' self-portrait with his first wife;  
one of the few he did of non-obese people  
with clothes on... 
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Rubens' Last Judgment 
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I have never seen a museum with more live  
painters at work 
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Rubens' powerful death of Seneca 
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Titian's portrait of Caesar Carlos IV  
(or V, depending on whether you're  
counting Spanish or Hapsburg  
kings) 
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An incredible museum I'd visit again in a flash. The displays were excellent, the order logical, the audio-guide, for once, genuinely tasteful and helpful.