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#still life with flowers and fruit by jan van huysum
diioonysus · 9 months
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flowers + art
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Richard van Bleeck and Coenraet Roepel - Coenraet Roepel (1678-1748), painting a still-life -
oil on canvas, height: 110.5 cm (43.5 in); width: 87.2 cm (34.3 in)
Richard van Bleeck (1670–1733) was a Dutch Golden Age painter.
Coenraet Roepel (1678, The Hague – 1748, The Hague), was an 18th-century fruit and flower still life painter from the Northern Netherlands.
According to Jan van Gool he was an avid gardener and his love of flowers made him become a pupil of Constantijn Netscher so that he could paint the flowers and other plants in his garden. He travelled to Düsseldorf in 1716 and received a gold chain and medal from Johann Wilhelm, Elector Palatine for his work. He had high hopes of painting more for the elector, but his patron died the same year, so Coenraet returned to the Netherlands. On his return, he became a member of the Confrerie Pictura in 1718 and was very successful in The Hague, receiving as much as 1,000 guilders for a work, but was later eclipsed by the flower painter Jan van Huysum.
According to the RKD he was trained in the Confrerie in the years 1698-1699 and first became a member there in 1711. His pupil was Pieter Terwesten.
The Lazaro Galdiano Museum in Madrid owns a couple of Still lifes, one with fruits and the other a Vase with Flowers, from Roepel.
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Message in a Haunted Mansion art part IV (part I, part II + part III)
1- February in the Isle of Wight by John Brett, 1866 (on the left/creaking side of the main stairs)
2- Still Life with Flowers and Fruit by Jan van Huysum, c.1700-1750 (dining room, near side)
3- Still-Life with Flowers and Fruit by Jan Davidsz. de Heem, c.1650 (dining room, far side)
4- Gilded and Embossed Vase by Andrea Scacciati, 1674* (parlour, beside the fireplace)
5- Elizabeth Robins by W. & D. Downey, 1893 (nancy's room, on desk)
6- Fruit and Flowers by Paulus Theodorus van Brussel, 1789 (dining room, near side)
7- Flowers in a Vase by Jan Brueghel the Elder, 1588-1625 (cover of the magazine in Louis' briefcase)
8- Large Still Life with Flowers (cropped) by Josef Steiner, c. 20th century (dining room, far side)
9- 18th century Gobelins tapestry design, tapestry after Jean-Baptiste Huet, 1785 (magazine in dining room)
*pictures now image collection, my best friend & my enemy, strikes again; alamy's date is just straight-up wrong, because it's 40 years after Scacciati's death? Mary Evans lists 1674, which is at least possible, but as ever I'm not thrilled to rely on info from image sourcing websites.
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kaffeeraum-bei-zarah · 4 months
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My new favourite fashion style...
Though this post is about fashion, but I'll start with a couple of beautiful paintings. Not that they are closely related to the fashion style I'm showcasing in this post, but it was really because of these artworks that I've come to discover a whole new level of sophisticated chic and charm...
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Ilda Lange (Austria) - Katze am Fenster (1921) .via random-brushstrokes
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Elin Danielson-Gambogi (Finland) - Portrait of Walborg Jakobsson (1890) .via random-brushstrokes
...90% of the fashion close-up images below are found on whimsigothwitch:
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...I can't even properly define the right name for such style (though it should already exist, of course). But it obviously embraces different historical fashion styles -- Gothic, Neo Baroque and Rococo are definitely present here. So I decided to call it NeoChic to myself...
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...layers upon layers of high quality fabrics like velvet, jacquard, tulle and lace, just to name a few; lush intricate embroidery, textured patterns, rich embellishments and high-end jewelry - countless ways to immerse yourself in history, even into different epochs, all met in one outfit.
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↑4 images on the left are my finds and ↑3 images on the right are via whimsigothwitch
...and here's my moodboard: so much inspiration can be taken from the old times masterpieces - colours, shapes, patterns and textures - to compose modern lush looks full of personality!
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Moment Volé perfume - Fragonard
Brown Cake Mascara $23.00 at besamecosmetics.com
Pa Design purse €22.50 at pa-design.com
...I don't have any outfit in such style yet, but what I see in the images is very appealing, and my fantasy is now going really wild suggesting me lots of ideas for my first NeoChic look. The challenge is that I'm going to hunt for the stuff at affordable prices, so I'm afraid the choice will not be so wide. But that does make the task even more interesting. We'll see... :)
ᴏᴛʜᴇʀ ɪᴍᴀɢᴇs ᴜsᴇᴅ ɪɴ ᴛʜɪs ᴍᴏᴏᴅʙᴏᴀʀᴅ:
x - Willem Kalf (1619-1693) “Still-Life with an Aquamanile, Fruit, and a Nautilus Cup” (c. 1660)
x - Jan van Huysum (1682-1749) “Bouquet of Flowers in an Urn” (1724)
x - My favourite actress, Madelaine Petsch :)
x - Christian Berentz (1658–1722) - Still Life
x - Marija Auersperg Attems (Graz, 1816−1880) "A Vase of Flowers"
x - Abraham Mignon (1640-1679) "Still Life with Flowers and a Watch"
x - A cameo jewelry on books from victoriamag.com
x - Angela Bandurka "Pouring peppermint"
+ Lanvin 2015 fashion runway close-up
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halyomorpha · 10 months
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Details from Still Life with Flowers and Fruit - Jan van Huysum, c. 1715
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ucbsierrazh · 2 years
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6/7/2022
Still Life
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I know this is not required but I still wanna address some of my ideas behind each photo.
#1: some Jan van Huysum vibes but with more dramatic lighting (I've always dreamed to shoot some van Huysum-like flower images)
#2: Masks in a shoe: masks are for mouths, but I think the opening of a shoe also looks like a mouth. It also looks like vomiting, which clearly reflects the mentality under covid when masks and other measures clearly jeopardize the fluidity of all activities but we still have to do them to protect our lives.
#3: Plastic bottles etc: such a chaotic scene, the idea is to address plastic waste.
#4: some more Maurizio Cattalan jokes. He did it with a banana, but why not other fruits?
#5: Many of the photos in my 20 final photos celebrate the under-represented tools. Glasses are one of them. For someone with relatively worse vision, they are vital for everything. In this photo, I took off my glasses and try to shoot with bare eyes, experiencing life without this important tool. The glasses are purposefully out of focus while only texts close up are in focus -- reflecting the real state without glasses.
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wonder-rooms · 3 years
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Still Life with Flowers and Fruit (1728) - Jan van Huysum
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Jan van Huysum, Still Life with Flowers and Fruit, c. 1715 Oil on panel 
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Fruit and Flowers in front of a Garden Vase with an Opium Poppy and a Row of Cypresses, c. 1732. Jan Van Huysum
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Jan van Huysum, Still Life with Flowers and Fruit (c. 1716)
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Details from Still Life with Flowers and Fruit (c. 1715) by Dutch artist Jan van Huysum
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achasma · 7 years
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Fruit Piece (detail) by Jan van Huysum, 1722.
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mauritshuis-museum · 3 years
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Flower Still Life, Jan van Huysum, Mauritshuis Museum
Some flowers have been set out with apparent nonchalance on the corner of a marble tabletop. The eye-catcher is a large rose with fragile petals. Two butterflies are alighting on the flower. This small painting forms a pair with a fruit still-life. Together, they are unique in the oeuvre of Jan van Huysum, who painted mainly large, lavish bouquets. Van Huysum’s still-lifes were very popular – he was one of the highest paid painters of his day.
https://www.europeana.eu/portal/record/2021672/resource_document_mauritshuis_71.html?utm_source=api&utm_medium=api&utm_campaign=j4AoMQNzp
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bigspoopygurl · 2 years
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Jan van Huysum - Still Life of Flowers and Fruit (1716-1717)
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fernfeelings · 3 years
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Jan van Huysum, Still Life with Flowers and Fruit (details), 1715
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rubenista · 4 years
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Jan van Huysum, Still Life with Flowers and Fruit (detail), 1721. Oil on panel, 81 × 61 × 9 cm. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.
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