View cart ““The Love Token” by George Goodwin Kilburne” has been added to your cart.
-
Louis-Jean-François Lagrenée (French, 1724-1805)
“Ermina and the Shepherds”
Oil on canvas
18 x 21 ½ inches
@NB-1040
#45
-
Lorenzo de Curo
“The Immaculate Conception”
Oil on canvas, Oval
32 ¼ x 24 1/8 inches
(82 x 61.2 cm)
CL 102794-56
322101-2
@NB-1040 260
(not online)
-
Follower of John Crome
Landscape
@AC-NB
-
Camille Bombois
(French, 1883-1970)
“Le pecheur aux
grands arbres”
Oil on canvas
25 ½”x 36 ¼”
Signed bottom right
COA by D. Vierny
PROVENANCE:
Dr.Franz Meyer-Mahler, Zurich
Perls Galleries, NY
EXHIBITED:
Basel, Kunsthalle, June-Aug. 1995 #62
-
Follower of Jean Marc Nattier
(French, 1685-1766)
‘Portrait of a Woman, said to be Madame Le Normant D’Etoiles’
Oil on canvas
32 x 25 ½ in. (81.3 x 64.8 cm)
-
Unknown Artist
19th Century
“Girl with Yarn”
10 x 8 ½ in.
-
Saint John the Baptist in the Wilderness
Oil on Canvas
-
David Teniers
‘The Palm Reader’
oil on panel
6 7/8 x 4 5/8 in.
(17.5 x 11.7 cm)
CL102794-253
39520-2
@AC-NB
-
Charles François Jalabert
Women in the Forest
Oil on canvas
Within a painted arch
39.4 x 31.8 cm
S71791-209
899001-3
-
Hippolyte Petitjean
(French, 1854-1929)
“Le bois de
bruxellex”
Oil on canvas
15” x 21 5/8”
Signed lower left
PROVENANCE:
Hammer Galleries New
York
-
Bernard Buffet
(French, 1928-1999)
“World Trade Center”
Oil on canvas
38” x 57”
Signed and dated 1989 upper right and left
-
Duccio di Buoninsegna (Italian, 1255-1318)
“The Madonna and Child”
Oil on panel
18 ½ x 13 inches
Duccio di Buoninsegna (Italian; c. 1255–1260 – c. 1318–1319) was an Italian painter active in Siena, Tuscany in the late 13th and early 14th centuries.
He is considered to be the father of Sienese painting and, along with a few others, the founder of Western art. He was hired throughout his life to complete many important works in government and religious buildings around Italy. Duccio is credited with creating the painting styles of Trecento and the Sienese school, and also contributed significantly to the Sienese Gothic style.
Although much is still unconfirmed about Duccio and his life, there is more documentation of him and his life than of other Italian painters of his time. It is known that he was born and died in the city of Siena, and was also mostly active in the surrounding region of Tuscany. Other details of his early life and family are as uncertain, as much else in his history. Nevertheless, his artistic talents were enough to overshadow his lack of organization as a citizen, and he became famous in his own lifetime. In the 14th century Duccio became one of the most favored and radical painters in Siena.
CL102794-10
561202-2
@NB-1040
#7