Albrecht Altdorfer (c. 1480 - February 12, 1538)
It’s something about the way he paints trees that makes me think of rococo painting.
Albrecht Altdorfer (c. 1480 - February 12, 1538)
It’s something about the way he paints trees that makes me think of rococo painting.
Source: oldrags
Cesare Auguste Detti (Italian, 1847-1914) – Les amiants
Source: ornamentedbeing
Gaston La Touche (1854-1913) - L’intrigue nocturne
Source: artrenewal.org
Sleeveless over-dresses with distinctive W-shaped necklines, such as the one worn in Renoir’s 1864 portrait of Mademoiselle Romaine Lancaux, were considered especially stylish for girls in the mid-1860s.
Sophia and Olivia by Thomas Faed (1826 - 1900)
This fierce lady is Juana Galán. She was a Spanish heroine known for beating Napoleon’s troops out of her village during the Peninsula War (1808-1814). During the Battle of Valdepeñas in June, 1808, there weren’t enough men to defend the village from invading French troops. Juana, who was about 21 years old at the time, immediately rallied all of the women in the village to plan a defense strategy. When the French troops marched into the village, the women dumped boiling oil on top of them. As for Juana? She stood in the street with a large club and beat seven shades of shit out of any French soldier that crossed her path. The French beat a hasty retreat from the village, never to return, and Juana was declared a hero. Her combined intelligence, courage, beauty, and general badassery make Juana my ultimate history crush.
Source: poboh
I don’t quite know why but there is something about these uniforms
and these menthat are just so bloody dashing.
Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.
By John Partridge. 1840.
FOREVER AN ALBERT FAN <3