Burn for Love by Renée Stout, Hand Print Workshop International https://www.nga.gov/artworks/172441-burn-love
Results Keep typing to get suggestions Loading Results Top Searches: Free images
Meintest du logo image b?
Results Keep typing to get suggestions Loading Results Top Searches: Free images
Artists in the United States are protected under the First Amendment, which guarantees freedoms of speech and press. This module features works created by artists with a range of perspectives and motivations.
What are some iconic images from the news that you can remember?
Results Keep typing to get suggestions Loading Results Top Searches: Free images
Trees, grass, and shrubbery, simplified almost to abstraction, set off the fragile, wasp–waisted figure of MarÃa Ana de Pontejos y Sandoval, the Marquesa de Pontejos. Splendidly attired, she typifies those ladies of the Spanish aristocracy who affected the „shepherdess“ style of Marie Antoinette, so popular in pre–revolutionary France.
Read our full Open Access policy for images.
Results Keep typing to get suggestions Loading Results Top Searches: Free images
Commissioned for the Chapel of San José in Toledo by MartÃn RamÃrez, a namesake of the saint and donor of the chapel, Saint Martin and the Beggar was part of one of the artist’s most successful ensembles. The saint, who lived during the reign of Constantine the Great, was a member of the imperial cavalry stationed near Amiens, in Gaul.
Results Keep typing to get suggestions Loading Results Top Searches: Free images
In this tempestuous scene, El Greco depicted an angry Christ driving the moneychangers from the Temple. An uncommon theme, it became increasingly popular in the latter half of the sixteenth century, promoted by the Council of Trent as a symbol of the Catholic church’s attempt to purify itself after the Protestant Reformation.
Results Keep typing to get suggestions Loading Results Top Searches: Free images
Selected key events from the museum’s past are supplemented with archival images
During the Trojan War, the priest Laocoön angered the Greek gods, who sent snakes to kill him and his two sons. The legend became popular after a monumental, ancient marble sculpture of Laocoön and his sons was unearthed in Rome in 1506.
Results Keep typing to get suggestions Loading Results Top Searches: Free images
Results Keep typing to get suggestions Loading Results Top Searches: Free images