We took the weekend off, but on Monday were back at what has become a favorite, the National Gallery of Art. Surprises were awaiting us, both outside and inside the museum...
Their messaging was not helped by the arrival of a loud group of drummers, same species, we think, who inadvertently (?) drowned out the rally's speakers; we repaired to the museum |
The National Gallery has a couple Vermeers (there are not very many), this A Young Woman Seated at a Virginal, 1670; not among the better Vermeer's we've seen |
Yes, I know we've already seen the Canalettos, but this Regatta on the Grand Canal, 1740, is worth looking at because... |
It shows Canaletto's lousy waves; maybe this lack of care for something nobody cared about is how he was able to do so many paintings... |
Not a Claude, not a Turner...Claude-Joseph Vernet's A Landscape at Sunset, 1773 |
Show-stopper: Elizabeth Louise Vigee Le Brun's Self-Portrait in a Straw Hat, 1782; alluding quite overtly to Rubens' portrait of Susanna Lunden 160 years earlier; there were few female artists, and they were not regarded well...one wonders how many treasures like this were lost, or never painted |
Francois-Hubert Drouais' Madame Pompadour at Her Tambour Frame, 1763; Louis XV's main gal |
Nicolas Lancret, Wardrobe Malfunction, 1739; aka The Four Times of Day: Morning |
Goya's Duke of Wellington, 1812-1814; famous painter portrays famous general after the latter's victory at Salamanca, ousting Napoleonic forces from Spain |
Paul Delaroche's dramatic The Execution of Lady Jane Grey, 1833; huge, almost life-sized |
Not to end on a downer, Franceso Hayez, Susanna at Her Bath, 1850; where are the dirty old men in this picture?! |
More speeches, more drumming, lots and lots of police, but not that many demonstrators, really |