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The show, featuring 30 paintings and two sculptures, opened its doors after a highly successful stint at the Museum of Fine Arts of Seville, where it drew an impressive 115,808 visitors between ...
When Domenichino died in mysterious circumstances while painting frescoes in the Duomo di San Gennaro, the grand cathedral at the center of Naples, Jusepe de Ribera was suspected of murdering his ...
Some time in 1606, Jusepe de Ribera, age 15, arrived in Rome from his ... apprenticeship back home—and to study the great works of art, past and present, that the city offered.
“Extreme violence” will grace the quiet walls of London’s Dulwich Picture Gallery this month in the first major UK exhibition of the Spanish Baroque artist Jusepe de Ribera (1591-1652).
The artist was a prolific draftsman and printer, which set him apart from his vanguard elder Caravaggio. Between Heaven and Hell: The Drawings of Jusepe de Ribera at the Meadows Museum is the most ...
According to some, Jusepe de Ribera enjoyed painting torture. A new exhibition seeks to challenge that view of the 17th-Century artist, writes Kelly Grovier. No artist has ever managed to put the ...
Perhaps he had in mind a painting such as Jusepe de Ribera's The Boy with a Club Foot. It was painted in Naples a few years before the poem was written, and is explicitly a charity picture.
“Between Heaven and Hell: The Drawings of Jusepe de Ribera” is one of a continuing series of collaborations between the Meadows and the Prado in Madrid, one of Europe’s most prestigious art ...
has donated Jusepe de Ribera’s St. James the Greater (ca. 1615/16) to the museum’s old masters collection. The painting is one of the most valuable and significant works by the Spanish painter.
Jusepe de Ribera was a Spanish painter known for his tenebristic works reminiscent of Caravaggio in his naturalist renderings and use of chiaroscuro. This technique lent his biblical and classical ...