Artists
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I can't say I have a favorite, there are simply too many great artists and paintings. But I do have some that I'm partial to. From the Renaissance period, for example, I like Perugino quite a lot. For the time and subject, he paints nice faces. Very often, faces back then fall into the grotesque or absurd.


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I can't say I have a favorite, there are simply too many great artists and paintings. But I do have some that I'm partial to. From the Renaissance period, for example, I like Perugino quite a lot. For the time and subject, he paints nice faces. Very often, faces back then fall into the grotesque or absurd.


I can't say I have a favorite, there are simply too many great artists and paintings. But I do have some that I'm partial to.
This. So many, so different, and such personal subjective taste. My son in law dislikes all the earlier religious icon stuff so in the National Gallery we turned right and avoided the Sainsbury Wing, lol.
My good friend and artist dislikes chocolate box art yet loved this quite simple architectural daub by Heslop, a painter from County Durham.

It was charming and I'd definitely hang it in my house.Another local, Norman Cornish ("as good as Rembrandt") is now quite famous. He painted pit scenes, colliery life and comradeship, local people living.
He captures the wonderful incandescent gleam of a pint in in his pub, which is the essence of transferring light onto paper


His big booted miners are filled with animation.
Here's a lovely intimate portrait of his mother

Her hands, face, the cardigan...I've spent some time looking at the detail in this twilight charcoal drawing

Much more on the Web of course
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I tend to agree with Andy. I've seen a lot of art that I like. I will say that I have a long time fondness for impressionists.

Renoir's Young Girl in Pink is in the Carnegie Museum of Art's collection and I tend to walk past it when I visit the galleries. I've liked it ever since I first saw it when I was a college student and used to wander through the museums when I had a break from classes.
Big Al
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https://share.google/LM4m0y18nDWdbiVpr
Caravaggio
The Narcissist
I've been wondering for a long time about this myth. What is the context? Who is Echo? What role does Echo play? I'm at a loss. 🤪
The psychology of this painting fascinates me.
I also wonder what if anything does the myth have to do with the modern psychiatric classification of Narcissistic Personality Disorder.
NPD is very real. I know. I know people who have it.
More questions than answers for sure.
Caravaggio is magnificent.
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I can't say I have a favorite, there are simply too many great artists and paintings. But I do have some that I'm partial to.
This. So many, so different, and such personal subjective taste. My son in law dislikes all the earlier religious icon stuff so in the National Gallery we turned right and avoided the Sainsbury Wing, lol.
My good friend and artist dislikes chocolate box art yet loved this quite simple architectural daub by Heslop, a painter from County Durham.

It was charming and I'd definitely hang it in my house.Another local, Norman Cornish ("as good as Rembrandt") is now quite famous. He painted pit scenes, colliery life and comradeship, local people living.
He captures the wonderful incandescent gleam of a pint in in his pub, which is the essence of transferring light onto paper


His big booted miners are filled with animation.
Here's a lovely intimate portrait of his mother

Her hands, face, the cardigan...I've spent some time looking at the detail in this twilight charcoal drawing

Much more on the Web of course
Another local, Norman Cornish ("as good as Rembrandt") is now quite famous. He painted pit scenes, colliery life and comradeship, local people living.
Thanks for posting those. I hadn't heard of him before, and I really like the pub and the mother pictures. I'll have to look him up.
I also really liked the Honthorst you posted, and the ones by Perugino that Bernard posted, another two artists I hadn't heard of before.
Edit: Unless I'm mistaken, it looks like the woman knitting was his wife, not his mother.


Again I spent some time admiring the skill of painting a large room lit by a single candle.


