Laure de Châttilon: Jeanne d’Arc voue ses armes á la Vierge. 1869.
(via my-ear-trumpet)
Emma, Lady Hamilton - by T. Fall
The gown is what is usually called ‘Van Dyck’ style - a pastiche of mid- 17th-century dress - which was a occasional costume in European vogue from the 1770s into the early 19th century.
Rapunzel concept painting for ‘Tangled’ by Claire Keane
(Source: dreamsandfanciesinmyhead)
(via Underpaintings: Auction Preview: Victorian & British Impressionist Art)
Philip Alexius de László - Portrait of Princess Ruspoli, Duchess de Gramont, 1922 - oil on board
(via miss-givings)
After Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun · Henry Bone (1755 - 1834)
Lady Hamilton as a Bacchante (formerly said as Ariadne)
“I then painted Mme. Harte [Emma Hart, Lady Hamilton] as a bacchante reclining by the edge of the sea, holding a goblet in her hand. Her beautiful face had much animation… She had a great quantity of fine chestnut hair, sufficient to cover her entirely, and thus, as a bacchante with flying hair, she was admirable to behold.” - Memoirs of Madame Vigée-Lebrun
Krokodil // St. Vincent
I did a quick rip of the St. Vincent 7”. Not the highest quality, but an mp3 is an mp3.