Sketchbook painting no.18

#art #painitng #watercolor #TraditionalArt

🌄 🌊 🎨

'First Impressions of Claude Monet'

exploring how the 19th-Century French painter strove to portray the world as authentically as possible… & how the humble ferrule helped

Signifier 🖌️ https://medium.com/signifier/claude-monet-first-impressions-ec3acbf9ce8e?sk=e9327ea37073afc70e101e4e35d8fd25

#art #ArtHistory #history #landscape #painitng #Impressionism

Just another watercolor I was working on this weekend. I had painted a figure, I added the ink and then the background, which is what it is because I was working on it in BART. #watercolor #psoul #BART #painitng #mastoart #SFBA
Just another watercolor I was working on this weekend.
I had painted a figure, I added the ink and then the background, which is what it is because I was working on it in BART.

#watercolor #psoul #BART #painitng #mastoart #SFBA

'Marketing the Mona Lisa, Portrait & Product'

Samuel Belleville-Douelle considers Leonardo da Vinci’s iconic portrait painting & the hype surrounding it in our media-driven consumer society…

Signifier 🖼️ https://medium.com/signifier/mona-lisa-just-a-marketing-product-52b7f997ca3d?sk=205f099b2f97846084d868000417adb4

#art #ArtHistory #painitng #history

🌄 🌊 🎨

'First Impressions'

Exploring how the 19th-Century French painter Claude Monet strove to portray the world as authentically as possible & left a lasting impression…

Signifier: https://medium.com/signifier/first-impressions-6cfffb73a52b?sk=813821d51f9e03940bd484f986493a3a

#art #ArtHistory #history #landscape #painitng #Impressionism

First Impressions - Signifier - Medium

The painting that gave the Impressionists their name is a beautifully poetic evocation: you can almost feel the chill breeze coming off the water and hear the soft lapping as the boats move, feel the…

Signifier
~ The life of Caterina Sforza, part III ~

Sforza spent the next several years acting as regent for her eldest son, Ottaviano, who was too young to rule on his own. During that time, she put down several conspiracies and rebellions while retaining firm control over Imola and Forlì. In addition, she wed twice more. Her second husband, Giacomo Feo, gained power in her court but also acquired enemies. After assassins killed him in 1495, Sforza had those involved, as well as their families, tortured and killed. Her third husband, Giovanni di Pierfrancesco de’ Medici, died of natural causes in 1498.

In 1499 Sforza’s military might was tested once again. Cesare Borgia, the son of Pope Alexander VI and the leader of the papal armies, launched military attacks on Italian cities that refused to acknowledge the pope’s supremacy. Assisted by a large contingent of French troops, Borgia’s armies conquered Imola and marched to Forlì. Sforza barricaded herself and her troops in the main fortress to withstand a siege, but they were no match for Borgia’s attacks. The fortress fell in January 1500, and Sforza was taken captive. She was held in Rome for more than a year before being released by the pope. She then moved to Florence and schemed with her sons to retake Imola and Forlì, but all of her efforts were thwarted.

#caterinasforza #history #art #arthistory #painitng #womenshistory #womenfromhistory
~ The life of Caterina Sforza, part II ~

As Sixtus lay dying in the summer of 1484, Rome descended into turmoil as various factions battled for control of the city. Riario and his soldiers engaged in a reign of terror against his enemies. In order to secure her family’s position, Sforza, who was then seven months pregnant, rode on horseback to the Castel Sant’Angelo and gained control of the papal castle, where she threatened the destruction of the College of Cardinals with artillery. After several days, the cardinals offered Riario money and assurances of his continued rule of Imola and Forlì in exchange for his immediate retreat from Rome. Sforza and Riario returned to Forlì, where she took over the governing of the city.

In 1488 a noble family in Forlì successfully arranged Riario’s assassination. They took Sforza and her children hostage. Her captors ordered her to persuade the soldiers at Forlì’s main fortress to surrender. They took her there to talk to the soldier in charge, but he refused to obey. Before she was captured, Sforza had gotten word to him that he should resist all pleadings for surrender. When the captors took her to the fortress a subsequent time to negotiate, she tricked them into letting her enter the castle to negotiate alone. Once inside, she refused to surrender the fortress.

The captors were angry with Sforza’s trickery. When they threatened her children, Sforza replied that her relatives would avenge her children’s deaths. Machiavelli, who had not been an eyewitness to the confrontation, claimed that Sforza had shocked her captors with a lewd gesture: “to show that she did not care for her children, she showed her genital member, saying that she had the means of making more.” Intimidated by Sforza’s defiance, the captors fled without harming her children.

Painting : Portrait of a Lady as Saint Catherine (possibly Caterina Sforza), by Botticelli

#caterinasforza #history #art #arthistory #painitng #womenshistory #womenfromhistory
~ The life of Caterina Sforza, part I ~

Caterina Sforza (1462—1509) was an Italian noblewoman who ruled the cities of Forlì and Imola during the late 15th century. During her lifetime she became famous for her cunning, audacity, and extreme brutality as a warrior and a ruler. Her actions dramatically defied conventional notions regarding the capabilities and proper behavior of noblewomen. She was a member of the powerful Sforza family, which ruled Milan continuously in the second half of the 15th century.

Caterina Sforza was the granddaughter of Francesco Sforza, a condottiere (mercenary leader) who assumed the title of duke of Milan in 1450 through his marriage to the daughter of the duke Filippo Maria Visconti. Caterina’s father was Galeazzo Maria Sforza, Francesco’s eldest son, who succeeded his father as ruler of Milan in 1466. Her mother was Lucrezia Landriani, Galeazzo’s mistress.

Caterina Sforza was well educated. She was also trained in fighting, horseback riding, and hunting, which was unusual for a noblewoman of her time. In 1477 she wed Girolamo Riario (1443–88), the nephew of Pope Sixtus IV (1414–84), in an arranged marriage. The couple had eight children, six of whom lived beyond infancy. In Rome, Riario served as leader of the papal armies. In order to solidify his control of the Papal States, Sixtus made Riario the ruler of Imola in 1473 and of Forlì in 1480.

Painting : Portrait of Caterina Sforza, by Lorenzo di Credi

#caterinasforza #history #art #arthistory #painitng #womenshistory #womenfromhistory
Th3Geo (@[email protected])

Attached: 1 image ✦Commission Info, Examples & Prices✦ [ https://th3geo.carrd.co/#commission ] Please send me a DM/Note/Email using the Ordering Form if you want to commission me! ✦Terms of Service✦ [ https://th3geo.carrd.co/#tos ] Please read all this info before you commission me! ✧Email✧ [email protected] Thanks for checking my commission info! Any commission request is super helpfull <3 #commission #drawing #digitalart #illustration #furry #oc #human #fanart

meow.social - the mastodon instance for creatures fluffy, scaly and otherwise