The Frick Collection
Snyggt klädd tjej utanför The Metropolitan Puseum Of Art
Woman with a parrot by Gustave Courbet 1866
The young bather by Gustave Courbet 1966
Nude with flowering branch by GFustave Courbet 1863
Red sunset on the Dnieper by Arkhip Ivanovich Kuindzhi 1905-08
A young girl with daisies by Auguste Renoir 1889
Boating by Manet, 1874
Ice floes by Claude Monet 1893
Bouquet of sunflowers by Claude Monet 1881
Woman befora a mirror by Toulouse Lautrec 1897
A modern Olympia (Le Pacha) by Cézanne
Bathers by Paul Cézanne
L'Arlesienne by Vincent van Gogh 1888-89
Odalisque with gray trousert by Henri Matisse
Women picking olives by Vincent van Gogh 1889-90
La Berceuse by VIncent van Gogh1889
In the studio by Alfred Stevens 1888
Pygmalion and Galatea by Auguste Rodin 1889/ 1908-09
Pygmalion and >Galatea
The hand of God by Auguste Rodin 1896/1906
Springtime by Pierre-Auguste Cot 1873
Joan of Arc by Jules Bastien-Lepage 1879
The virgin adoring the host by Ingres 1852
Odalisque in Grisaille by Ingres 1824-34
The Natchez by Eugène Delacroix 1835
The massacre of the innocents by Francois-Joseph Navez
Richard Humphreys, the boxer by John Hoppner
The love song by sir Edward Burne-Jones 1868-77
I think princess Diana resembles her
The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches, 1796. This canvas, first exhibited is 1799, wa sold by the artist in 1808 to his biographers, John Knowles. it illustrates a passage from "Paradise Lost", II (622-666) in which the hellhounds surrounding Sin are compared to those who "follow the night-hag when, called, / In secret, riding through the air she comes, Lured with the smell of infant blood, to dance / With Laplan witches, while the laboring moon Eclipses at their charms." "Night-hag" is an epitet of the Greek goddess Hecate, who presided over withcraft and magical rites.
The night-hag visiting Lapland witches by Johann Heinrich Füssli. The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches, 1796. This canvas, first exhibited is 1799, wa sold by the artist in 1808 to his biographers, John Knowles. it illustrates a passage from "Paradise Lost", II (622-666) in which the hellhounds surrounding Sin are compared to those who "follow the night-hag when, called, / In secret, riding through the air she comes, Lured with the smell of infant blood, to dance / With Laplan witches, while the laboring moon Eclipses at their charms." "Night-hag" is an epitet of the Greek goddess Hecate, who presided over withcraft and magical rites.
Portia by sir JOhn Everett Millais 1886
The Almeh by Jean Léon Gérôme 1873
Sorrowful woman of Ischia by French painter (Louis-Leopold Robert?) 1822'
Flagellation of Christ by Léon Pallière 1816-1817
Male Nude, seen from behind by Hippolyte Flandrin (?)
Study of a female nude by Henri Lehmann 1840
Woman drying her foot by Edgard Degas 1885-86
The Milliner by Edgar Degas 1882
Woman with a towel by Degas 1894 or 1898
Ballet girls in blue by Edgar Degas, probably 1884
Young woman with Ibis by Edgar Degas 1860-62
Dancers practicing at the barre by Degas 1877
Wom,an with a parrot by Gustave Courbet 1866
Male nude