People in the Key Set | National Gallery of Art https://www.nga.gov/research/publications/alfred-stieglitz-key-set/people-key-set
Vogel, Hermann Wilhelm (1834–1898) A highly respected photographic chemist and professor
Vogel, Hermann Wilhelm (1834–1898) A highly respected photographic chemist and professor
Kress Senior Fellow and joint appointment as Distinguished Professor in the History
In the Low Countries, the Feast of Epiphany, or Twelfth Night, is known as Driekoningen (Three Kings). The Christian holiday is traditionally celebrated on January 6th with a festive meal at which friends and relatives gathered to eat, drink, and be merry.
sold 12 February 1941 to (Goudstikker firm, Amsterdam); sold 11 December 1941 to Professor
Pietro Bembo (1470–1547) wears the red biretta and cape of a cardinal. At the time Titian painted this portrait, Bembo had recently been elevated to that status in honor of his service to the Church and his scholarly career, although the writer’s literary output was almost entirely secular.
Galli, Leone Barberini, Antonio, Cardinal Barberini, Maffeo, Prince Volpi, Elia, Professor
passed nearly the entirety of his professional career in the United States as a professor
Michel Sittow, a northern painter who was born in Estonia on the Baltic Sea but apprenticed in Bruges, was an acclaimed portraitist at the Spanish court. After Queen Isabella’s death in 1504, his peripatetic career took him to several northern European centers, including Burgundy, where he probably painted this portrait.
Professor Steppe also states that the diptych now divided between Berlin and Washington
His teacher, Professor Hermann Wilhelm Vogel (Key Set number 1), an expert in photographic
Hochschule, Berlin 1884 Winter Probably studies with the renowned photo-chemist Professor
When this painting was made in 1333, according to the date given on the lower frame, the style was a bit old-fashioned. Saint Paul’s frontal stance, the intensity and fervor of his direct gaze, the inclusion of his name in red-backed gold letters on either side of his head, and the pointed arch all might have been seen in a work from the previous century.
Associated Names Monasterio di San Felice, Florence Volpi, Elia, Professor American
In Sand Dipper, jazz violinist Jenny Scheinman creates an abstract and overwhelming world. This music, Scheinman says, sounds how El Greco’s painting looks. And it feels like the question on Laocoön’s face as he looks up for the last time.
was also senior lecturer in the department of art and art history and a visiting professor