The Kunsthistorischemuseum is one of the great museums and also one of our favorites, primarily for its northern collection and its unsurpassed collection of Breughels, Peter the Elder, that is. An entire hall of big canvasses. We visited in 2010 and again in 2012. I have reviewed those two posts and have decided not to knowingly repost anything in the following two posts that I posted in those earlier years. Except the Breughels, of course. Unusual restraint for me. We were in the museum from opening to nearly closing, 7+hours, and took 300+ pix. You'll have to look at those two previous posts for most of the assorted van Eycks, Cranachs, Durers, Rogier van der Weidens, Rubens, Rembrandts, Caravaggios, Vermeer, Velasquez, etc., we saw at the KHM on October 16th. Not to mention the half of the collection that is not paintings.
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At the Louvre, this sign would be for the Gioconda; at the Prado, Bosch (and not Velasquez!), the Rijksmuseum, Night Watch, etc. |
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The Suicide of Saul, 1562; many Breughels are basically landscapes with a postage stamp-sized holy scene thrown in for whatever reasons; there's Saul on the left, falling on his sword (so to speak) |
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Massacre of the Innocents; possibly a copy by one of his talented sons, e.g. Jr. or Jan, some of whom made a career of copying and selling dad's popular masterpieces |
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Tower of Babel, 1563; a study of mid-16th century civil engineering |
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The Peasant and the Nest Robber, 1568; a rare sort of close-up |
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The Peasant Wedding, 1567; no divinities, saints, kings, queens, princes nor princesses, generals, et al.; just normal people living their normal lives in the mid 16th century |
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Peasant Dance, 1567; Peter the Elder is sometimes known as "peasant Bruegel" |
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Children's Games, 1560; 230 children, 83 games |
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The Fight Between Carnival and Lent, 1559; another of his "encyclopedic" works |
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Detail |
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Procession to Calvary, 1564; Jesus really is in there, somewhere |
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There, in the middle... |
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The Return of the Herd (Autumn), 1565; one of a seasonal series |
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Hunters in the Snow, 1565; often said to be the first winter landscape in European painting |
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Gloomy Day (Early Spring), 1565; panorama of seasonal activities and events |
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The Conversion of Paul, 1567; he's in there, really... |
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There he is, in the middle, again |
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Winterland with Bird-Trap, 1564 |
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Two walls of the four...there are elder Bruegels all over the world, and a few of our favorites are elsewhere (just search Breughel or Bruegel on this blog); the KHM collection is unsurpassed, however |