Busque também em nossas outras coleções:

Data da imagem:
Pauta
ver mais opções...
Agência
Fotógrafo
ver mais opções...
Pais
Estado
Cidade
Local
ver mais opções...
Editorias
Tipo de licença
Orientação
Coleção
ver mais opções...

Total de Resultados: 32

Página 1 de 1

20230222_zia_i202_010 February 22, 2023, Paris, France, France: Bruno Levesque / IP3 Paris France 22 Fevrier 2023.Esplanade des Invalides Action de la La Ligue de protection des oiseaux LPO Dauphin pour faire suspendre la peche dans le golfe de Gascogne, qui provoque la mort de milliers de dauphins. .Esplanade des Invalides Action by the LPO Dauphin Bird Protection League to suspend fishing in the Bay of Biscay, which is causing the death of thousands of dolphins on February 22 2023 in Paris France....ILLUSTRATION, ENVIRONNEMENT, MANIFESTATION, DAUPHIN NEWS ASSOCIATION PROTECTION DES ANIMAUX ..ILLUSTRATION, ENVIRONMENT, EVENT, DOLPHIN NEWS ANIMAL PROTECTION ASSOCIATION. (Credit Image: © Bruno Levesque/IP3/Zuma Press/Fotoarena)
DC
20230222_zia_i202_008 February 22, 2023, Paris, France: Allain Bougrain Dubourg, president de la LPO .Esplanade des Invalides Action by the LPO Dauphin Bird Protection League to suspend fishing in the Bay of Biscay, which is causing the death of thousands of dolphins. (Credit Image: © Bruno Levesque/IP3/Zuma Press/Fotoarena)
DC
20230222_zia_i202_007 February 22, 2023, Paris, France, France: Bruno Levesque / IP3 Paris France 22 Fevrier 2023.Esplanade des Invalides Action de la La Ligue de protection des oiseaux LPO Dauphin pour faire suspendre la peche dans le golfe de Gascogne, qui provoque la mort de milliers de dauphins..Allain Bougrain Dubourg, president de la LPO .Esplanade des Invalides Action by the LPO Dauphin Bird Protection League to suspend fishing in the Bay of Biscay, which is causing the death of thousands of dolphins on February 22 2023 in Paris France....ILLUSTRATION, ENVIRONNEMENT, MANIFESTATION, DAUPHIN NEWS ASSOCIATION PROTECTION DES ANIMAUX ..ILLUSTRATION, ENVIRONMENT, EVENT, DOLPHIN NEWS ANIMAL PROTECTION ASSOCIATION. (Credit Image: © Bruno Levesque/IP3/Zuma Press/Fotoarena)
DC
20230222_zia_i202_006 February 22, 2023, Paris, France, France: Bruno Levesque / IP3 Paris France 22 Fevrier 2023.Esplanade des Invalides Action de la La Ligue de protection des oiseaux LPO Dauphin pour faire suspendre la peche dans le golfe de Gascogne, qui provoque la mort de milliers de dauphins. .Esplanade des Invalides Action by the LPO Dauphin Bird Protection League to suspend fishing in the Bay of Biscay, which is causing the death of thousands of dolphins on February 22 2023 in Paris France....ILLUSTRATION, ENVIRONNEMENT, MANIFESTATION, DAUPHIN NEWS ASSOCIATION PROTECTION DES ANIMAUX ..ILLUSTRATION, ENVIRONMENT, EVENT, DOLPHIN NEWS ANIMAL PROTECTION ASSOCIATION. (Credit Image: © Bruno Levesque/IP3/Zuma Press/Fotoarena)
DC
20230222_zia_i202_005 February 22, 2023, Paris, France, France: Bruno Levesque / IP3 Paris France 22 Fevrier 2023.Esplanade des Invalides Action de la La Ligue de protection des oiseaux LPO Dauphin pour faire suspendre la peche dans le golfe de Gascogne, qui provoque la mort de milliers de dauphins. .Esplanade des Invalides Action by the LPO Dauphin Bird Protection League to suspend fishing in the Bay of Biscay, which is causing the death of thousands of dolphins on February 22 2023 in Paris France....ILLUSTRATION, ENVIRONNEMENT, MANIFESTATION, DAUPHIN NEWS ASSOCIATION PROTECTION DES ANIMAUX ..ILLUSTRATION, ENVIRONMENT, EVENT, DOLPHIN NEWS ANIMAL PROTECTION ASSOCIATION. (Credit Image: © Bruno Levesque/IP3/Zuma Press/Fotoarena)
DC
1035_06_710342 Death of the Dauphin, Lagrenee, Louis-Jean-Fran?ois
DC
ibxsuc10219730 Louis XVI, French Louis XVI (born 23 August 1754 in Versailles Palace as Prince Louis-August of France, Duke of Berry, French Prince Louis-Auguste de France, duc de Berry, died 21 January 1793 in Paris) from the House of Bourbon became Dauphin after the death of his father in 1765 and King of France and Navarre after that of his grandfather in 1774, Historical, digitally restored reproduction from a 19th century original, Record date not stated
RF
alb10271364 Assassination of John the Fearless (1371-1419), Duke of Burgundy (1404-1419), on the Bridge of Montereau over the Yonne river, on 10 September, 1419. John was killed by Tanguy du Châtel and Jean Louvet, counsellors of the Dauphin who would later become Charles VII of France. Engraving. Facsimile after a miniature from "Chroniques de Monstrelet", 15th-century manuscript. "Moeurs, usages et costumes au moyen-âge et à l'époque de la Renaissance", by Paul Lacroix. Paris, 1878.
DC
akg1194132 Albrecht von Brandenburg, Erzbischof, Kurfürst von Mainz. 1490-1545. Sargtafel des Kardinals Albrecht von Brandenburg, Rückseite. Bronze, gegossen, ziseliert und graviert, 1545, von Conrad Göbel (1499-1568), 22,2 × 36,3 cm. Inv. Nr. K 4277. Berlin, SMB, Kunstgewerbemuseum. Museum: Berlin, SMB, Kunstgewerbemuseum.
DC
akg1194128 Albrecht von Brandenburg, Erzbischof, Kurfürst von Mainz. 1490-1545. Sargtafel des Kardinals Albrecht von Brandenburg, Vorderansicht. Bronze, gegossen, ziseliert und graviert, 1545, von Conrad Göbel (1499-1568), 22,2 × 36,3 cm. Inv. Nr. K 4277. Berlin, SMB, Kunstgewerbemuseum. Museum: Berlin, SMB, Kunstgewerbemuseum.
DC
alb3613939 Washstand (athénienne or lavabo). Culture: French, Paris. Designer: Design attributed to Charles Percier (French, Paris 1764-1838 Paris). Dimensions: Height: 36 3/8 in. (92.4 cm); Diameter: 19 1/2 in. (49.5 cm). Maker: Gilt bronze mounts by Martin-Guillaume Biennais (French, 1764-1843, active ca. 1796-1819). Date: 1800-1814.The form of this elegant washstand ultimately derives from the ancient Greco-Roman three-legged perfume burner or brazier, of which the designer Charles Percier had made some study. The decoration reflects his familiarity with the wall decorations in the emperor Nero's Golden House and their adaptation in Raphael's Logge in the Vatican. A reappreciation during the Renaissance of the tripod as a luxury item of the utmost refinement is documented as early as 1499 by an example illustrated in Francesco Colonna's Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, published in Venice that year.[1] A further not-to-be-underestimated influence on Percier was Neoclassical paintings illustrating ancient Greek mythology, such as The Loves of Paris and Helen, commissioned from Jacques-Louis David (1748-1825) by the comte d'Artois in 1788.[2] The designer was also familiar with the richly illustrated seven-volume Recueil d'antiquités (1752-67) by the comte de Caylus (1692-1765),[3] and the Recueil et parallèle des édi fices by Jean-Nicolas-Louis Durand (1760-1834), published between 1799 and 1801 in Paris, in which plate 25 was devoted to tripod forms, among other types of Roman objects.[4]The shape of the base and of the shelf--triangular with canted sides--can be traced back to a famous antique Roman tripod named after the French antiquarian Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peirese (1580-1637).[5] Percier was probably also acquainted with the athénienne designed about 1773 by Jean-Henri Eberts (acc. no. 1993.355.1), which has the same type of base.The long-accepted attribution of the design of this athénienne to Charles Percier, the imaginative friend of Pierre-François-Léonard Fontaine (1762-1853), who in partnership with Fontaine dominated interior design in France during the Empire period, is based on its close similarity to a large colored drawing ascribed to Percier now in the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris.[6] The maker of the Museum's piece, Martin-Guillaume Biennais, was perhaps the most accomplished goldsmith and entrepreneur of his time in France (see also acc. no. 26.168.77). He owed his economic success to the dissolution of the mighty Parisian guilds, the grandes corporations, which had controlled the activity of all craftsmen and artisans during the ancien régime. Like other skillful young goldsmiths he found himself free after the Revolution to explore business opportunities without corporate obstacles and turned his back on the outdated privileges and jealousies of the habitually conservative former guild masters. One of seven children, Biennais was born into a simple laboring family in 1764. Four decades later, he headed the most important goldsmith's and jeweler's firm in continental Europe. His inventive traveling sets and ostentatious tableware found favor not only with the emperor and his entourage but also with the swarm of nouveaux riches and self-made men who flourished in prosperous post-Revolutionary France.[7] Biennais's products were smartly promoted on his business card of 1806. It shows at the left in an architectural niche a fashionable tripod, most likely a perfume burner or brazier, crowned by a swan with spread wings.[8]There is an iron plate on the underside of the triangular shelf between the legs of the Museum's example. This served as an attachment for a lost, hanging bell-shaped ornament decorated with a stylized acanthus-and-acorn motif. How the bell hung down over the stand can be seen in another version of this model in Fontainebleau.[9] The unusually formed, bold ormolu mount would have shifted the eye slightly toward the gilt-metal parts below, creating a better balance between the warm-colored wood and gilded bronze mounts and the sparkling, moonlight-cold look of the silver basin and ewer (both missing from the Museum's piece). Several simpler washstands are recorded in inventories of Napoleon's palaces.[10]Percier's athénienne is known in three versions: the above-mentioned example at Fontainebleau, which has a probably not original dark, patinated metal basin (the ewer is lost); the present piece; and the famous personal washstand of Napoleon, today at the Musée du Louvre, Paris.[11] Napoleon kept it in his bedroom at the Palais des Tuileries, where he settled early in 1800, the year in which he commissioned the stand. It was one of the few personal luxury items that accompanied the emperor into exile at Saint Helena.Like Napoleon's washstand, this example is decorated with masterfully executed dolphins and swans, both graceful allusions to Napoleon as the rightful successor of the Sun King, Louis XIV. The firstborn son of each French ruler was called the "Dauphin," a word that also means dolphin. That jolly sea-dweller and also the winged sea creatures on the frieze around the triangular shelf suggest the Mediterranean, which forms the southern border of France and surrounds the island of Corsica, the birthplace of Napoleon.[12] The swan, which was believed to utter a beautiful song at the time of its death, was associated with Apollo, god of music, with whom Louis XIV identified himself. The swan is also a symbol of beauty and of parental solicitude. At the approach of danger, with feathers puffed up and anxiously hissing, these birds protect their young within the wall of their white wings. Napoleon's consort, Josephine, and her children were frequently compared to a swan and its cygnets.[13] The swan was chosen as her symbol by Claude, wife of Francis I, the French Renaissance king whom Napoleon greatly admired.The Museum's athénienne was certainly made for a close friend or relative of the emperor. It is a superior example of the new Empire style, through which Napoleon, with the aid of leading artisans, tried to emulate the lavish decors of the ancien régime, modified by the classical restraint and formality of the art of the caesars of ancient Rome. Empire furniture of such superbly calculated plan and proportions may express better than anything else the confidence, fresh ideas, and energy of the age.[Wolfram Koeppe 2006]Footnotes:[1] Peter Thornton. The Italian Renaissance Interior, 1400-1600. New York, 1991, p. 212, pl. 240.[2] Jacques-Louis David, 1748-1825. Exh. cat., Musée du Louvre, Paris, and Musée National du Château, Versailles. Paris, 1989, pp. 184-88, no. 79; and Anne Dion-Tenenbaum. L'orfèvre de Napoléon: Martin-Guillaume Biennais. Exh. cat., Musée du Louvre. Les dossiers due Musée du Louvre. Paris, 2003, p. 20, fig. 9.[3] Claudio Paolini, Alessandra Ponte, and Ornella Selvafolta. Il bello "ritrovato": Gusto, ambienti, mobili dell'Ottocento. Novara, 1990, p. 30.[4] John Morley. The History of Furniture: Twenty-five Centuries of Style and Design in the Western Tradition. Boston, 1999, p. 17, fig. 10 (dated 1802); and D'après l'antique. Exh. cat., Musée du Louvre. Paris, 2000, p. 345, no. 159 (entry by Anne Dion-Tenenbaum).[5] For the Peirese tripod, see John Morley. The History of Furniture: Twenty-five Centuries of Style and Design in the Western Tradition. Boston, 1999, p. 25, fig. 27.[6] Anne Dion-Tenenbaum. L'orfèvre de Napoléon: Martin-Guillaume Biennais. Exh. cat., Musée du Louvre. Les dossiers due Musée du Louvre. Paris, 2003, pp. 19-20, no. 2; in this excellent study Dion-Tenenbaum discusses the evolution of the tripod form in great detail.[7] Ibid., pp. 11-17.[8] Ibid., p. 14, fig. 3.[9] The third known version of this model, in the Musée du Louvre, Paris, has an identical iron plate, but the pendent bell ornament has been lost. On this washstand, see below at n. 11. For the second version, at Fontainebleau, see Anne Dion-Tenenbaum. L'orfèvre de Napoléon: Martin-Guillaume Biennais. Exh. cat., Musée du Louvre. Les dossiers due Musée du Louvre. Paris, 2003, pp. 23-24, no. 4.[10] For example, "une athénienne dorée beau bois d'acajou, pot et jatte dorés" (a gilded athénienne of mahogany, the ewer and bowl gilded) and another with gilded ewer and bowl decorated with palmettes; Archives Nationales, Paris, O2 55.[11] For Napoleon's washstand, see R., G., and C. Ledoux-Lebard. "L'inventaire des appartements de l'empereur Napoléon Ier aux Tuileries." Bulletin de la Société de l'Histoire de l'Art Français, 1952 (pub. 1953), p. 200, no. 872; D'après l'antique. Exh. cat., Musée du Louvre. Paris, 2000, pp. 346-47, no. 160 (entry by Anne Dion-Tenenbaum); Anne Dion-Tenenbaum. L'orfèvre de Napoléon: Martin-Guillaume Biennais. Exh. cat., Musée du Louvre. Les dossiers due Musée du Louvre. Paris, 2003, pp. 21-22, no. 3; Gail Feigenbaum. Jefferson's America and Napoleon's France: An Exhibition for the Louisiana Purchase Bicentennial. Exh. cat., New Orleans Museum of Art. New Orleans, 2003, p. 71, no. 47 (entry by David O'Brien); and Elke Pastré. "Der Goldschmied Napoleons." Weltkunst 73 (December 2003), p. 2109, fig. 4.[12] A Greek mosaic found on the island of Delos is decorated with dolphins and the same wavelike Vitruvian scroll ornament that encircles the upper ring of the basin holder of the Museum's washstand. For the mosaic, see Pierre Arizzoli-Clémental. "Néoclassicisme." In L'art décoratif en Europe, ed. Alain Gruber, vol. 3, Du Néoclassicisme à l'Art Déco, pp. 21-127. Paris, 1994, p. 62.[13] James David Draper, with Clare Le Corbeiller. The Arts under Napoleon: An Exhibition of the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, with Loans from the Audrey B. Love Foundation and Other New York Collections. Exh. cat., The Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 1978, p. [4]. On the symbolism of swans, see James Hall. Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art. Rev. ed. New York, 1979, p. 294. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
akg015533 Louis XIV, King of France (1643-1715); 1638-1715. - "The King takes leave of the Dauphin on 26 August 1715" (Versailles, before his death on 1 September, Louis XIV with his great-grandson, afterwards Louis XV). Color lithograph by Maurice Leloir (1853-1940). From: G. Toudouze, Le Roi Soleil, Paris (publisher Combet & Cie) 1904.
DC
akg016754 Louis XIII, King of France (1610-43); 1601-1643. The death of Louis XIII. (Saint-Germainen-Laye, May 14, 1643, on Queen Anne's deathbed and the heir to the throne, Louis XIV). Etching by Jan Luyken, 1649-1712. From: H. Ludolff, Historische Schaubühne, Frankfurt am Main, 1718. Berlin, Sammlung Archiv für Kunst und Geschichte.
DC
alb9874415 Portrait of King Henry VI of England, Henry of Windsor. Seated on a throne under a canopy, with crown, ermine mantle, sceptre and orb. Emblems indicate Joan of Arc introduced to the Dauphin, death of Joan of Arc, English expelled from France, crowning of King Edward IV. Handcoloured steel engraving after an illustration by Mary Ann Rundall from A Symbolical History of England, from Early Times to the Reign of William IV, J.H. Truchy, Paris, 1839. Mary Ann Rundall was a teacher of young ladies in Bath, and published her book of mnemonic emblems in 1815.
DC
alb9876484 Charles, dauphin of France, Duke of Touraine (later King Charles VII) receiving news of the death of his father, King Charles VI, 1422. Officers in doublet and hose with fleurs-de-lys banners. Le duc de Touraine, dauphin de France, recevant les officiers d'armes. France, fin de XVe siecle. From a miniature in MS 8299 Latin, Bibliotheque Imperiale de Paris. Chromolithograph by Ferdinand Sere after Auguste Racinet from Charles Louandres Les Arts Somptuaires, The Sumptuary Arts, Hangard-Mauge, Paris, 1858.
DC
akg7078673 Facade stone with the personification of Hope between two dolphins and OP GODT HOOP ICK, facing stone sculpture sculpture building component sandstone stone, Two dolphins forming gate in the middle and woman with pigeon in the right hand resting on an anchor. Dolphin is seen as the symbol of Christ's death and its resurrection In both corners at the top two blank shields At the bottom ribbon with text On ribbon: ON GODT HOOP ICK Rotterdam Hillegersberg-Schiebroek Hillegersberg Zuid Clay road Bellevue Originating from house Bellevue Kleiweg 427 Rotterdam.
DC
alb5164618 Memorial Panel Depicting Painting and Music, Pen and black ink, brush and brown wash and white gouache, black chalk, A tablet contains an imaginative picture frame in the central park. It is flanked by pilasters, in front of which the statues of 'Painting' and 'Music' stand. Below, in the center, is an escutcheon, showing a representation of 'Cybele'; it is supported by 'Saturnus' and 'Death,' Above the entablature is an escutcheon with Cupid, flanked by a boar and dogs, at left, and a putto upon a dolphin, and other animals, at right. Colored background, framing line., France, 1732, Drawing, Drawing.
DC
akg2062012 Jeanne d'Arc (Jungfrau von Orléans). franz. Nationalheldin; Domremy um 1410/12. - (hingerichtet) Rouen 30.5.1431. Geschichte der Jeanne d'Arc. Glasmalerei, 1899, von A. Vermonet. Joigny (Dép. Yonne, Frankreich), Église Saint-André. Author: ALBERT-LOUIS VERMONET.
DC
alb9427524 L'urne mystérieuse' plate with initials 'S.D.M.' for the French market, c. 1800, 1 x 9 1/2 x 9 1/2 in. (2.54 x 24.13 x 24.13 cm), Porcelain, China, 18th-19th century, The central design on this plate is known as L'urne mystérieuse, after an unsigned engraving of the same title published in 1793. The urn's support column forms the outline of the faces of King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette of France. The face of their son, the Dauphin, is silhouetted by the branch of the willow tree on the left and the profile of the Madame Royale, the king's mother, is formed by the willow branches on the upper right. All four members of the French royal family were executed during the French Revolution; the willow tree, urn, and hidden portraits symbolize death, mourning, and continued allegiance to the monarchy.
DC
alb3683733 Louis XV (1710-1774) as a Child. Artist: After Hyacinthe Rigaud (French, Perpignan 1659-1743 Paris). Dimensions: 77 x 55 1/2 in. (195.6 x 141 cm). Date: ca. 1716-24.Louis XV succeeded to the throne of France in 1715 upon the death of his great-grandfather, Louis XIV, who had reigned for more than seventy years. The five-year-old boy was the only surviving son of Louis, duc de Bourgogne, and Marie Adélaïde de Savoie, both of whom had died of smallpox in 1712. The canvas is one of many versions of Rigaud's first official portrait of Louis XV, which was commissioned by the regent, the duc d'Orléans, for the palace of Versailles. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA. Author: after Hyacinthe Rigaud.
DC
les03080147 Murder of the Marshals of Normandy and Champagne by Etienne Marcel's soldiers before the eyes of the Dauphin (later King Charles V the Wise 1337-1378) on Frebruary 22, 1358. From Les Grandes Chroniques de France, France; 1375-79. BNF 2813 , Fol. 409v. Location: Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, France.
DC
akg5836278 Louis XVII, born Louis Charles de Bourbon; Dauphin (son of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, proclaimed king of France by his uncle after the execution of his father in 1793); Versailles 27. 3. 1785 - Paris 8.6.1795. - "LOUIS XVII" - (Allegory of the Dauphin's death at the Temple in Paris on June 8, 1795: An angel carries the Dauphin to heaven, leaving the mourning Francia behind, and the broken French lily on the ground). Stipple engraving by Ambroise Tardieu (1788-1841). From: (Louis-Samuel) Colart, Histoire de France représentée par tableaux synoptiques et par 70 gravures, employée pour l'éducation des enfans de France, Paris (Ch. Gosselin, Bossange père, Jules Renouard) (1825), Plate 68. Private collection.
DC
ado00049752 Reign of Louis XIV of France. The King Louis XIV confined in his bed and in the presence of Madame de Maintenon, sees the Dauphin, future Louis XV (France). On August 26, 1715. Author: MAURICE LELOIR.
DC
ado00100166 The dauphin proclaims himself King of France under the name of Charles VII on the death of his father Charles VI (France). October 21, 1422. Author: UNKNOWN ARTIST.
DC
akg242552 Louis, Duke of Burgundy (grandson of Louis XIV of France, son of Louis, Dauphin de France, and Maria Anna Christine of Bavaria); 1682-1712. Death of the Duke of Burgundy (18.2.1712) and his wife Marie Adelaide of Savoy (12.2.1712): Funeral in St. Denis on 18 April 1712. Copper engraving, unmarked. Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale. Museum: Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale.
DC
akg242554 Louis, Duke of Burgundy (grandson of Louis XIV of France, son of Louis, Dauphin de France, and Maria Anna Christine of Bavaria); 1682-1712. Death of the Duke of Burgundy (18.2.1712) and his wife Marie Adelaide of Savoy (12.2.1712): Funeral in St. Denis on 18 April 1712. Copper engraving, unmarked. Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale. Museum: Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale.
DC
alb2057531 The death of Louis Joseph, Dauphin of France at the age of 8 years in the castle of Meudon June 4, 1789, engraving. France, 18th century. Location: Paris, Hôtel Carnavalet (Art Museum).
DC
alb3727049 Allegory on the Death of the Dauphin. Dated: 1767. Dimensions: plate: 35.5 x 22.5 cm (14 x 8 7/8 in.) sheet: 46.3 x 32.3 cm (18 1/4 x 12 11/16 in.). Medium: crayon-manner engraving in red-brown on laid paper. Museum: National Gallery of Art, Washington DC. Author: the Elder after Charles-Nicolas Cochin Gilles Demarteau II.
DC
akg4975479 Canned Barbier Dolphin. Advertiser: Barbier Dauphin. 1948. Cappiello Advertisement. editor. Foundation: Paris. Cappiello, Leonetto. according to. Birth: Livorno, 1875. Death: Cannes, 1942. the end of the end! ... Vegetable. tin can (en). graphic poster. paper. color lithography. cm (height): 159 cm (width): 118.5. Don Robert Bugeaud, 1978. inventory n °: 18076. Museum: Paris, Les Arts Décoratifs.
DC
alb1948718 Common porpoise, Phocoena phocoena. Illustration drawn and engraved by Richard Polydore Nodder. Handcolored copperplate engraving from George Shaw and Frederick Nodder's "The Naturalist's Miscellany" 1812. Most of the 1,064 illustrations of animals, birds, insects, crustaceans, fishes, marine life and microscopic creatures for the Naturalist's Miscellany were drawn by George Shaw, Frederick Nodder and Richard Nodder, and engraved and published by the Nodder family. Frederick drew and engraved many of the copperplates until his death around 1800, and son Richard (1774~1823) was responsible for the plates signed RN or RPN. Richard exhibited at the Royal Academy and became botanic painter to King George III.
DC
akg5014302 CHARLES VII (1403-1461), son of Charles VI. Disowned by his father with the consent of the mother Isabella of Bavaria in the Treaty of Troyes in 1420 (for reasons of dynastic intrigues that were supposed to bring the throne of France to Lancaster and ending the war with the British), did not accept the terms of the Treaty, he believed he had been extorted from the sovereign advantage of his insanity, and at his death he laid claim to the throne, determined to drive the English; He was aided in the enterprise by Joan of Arc, the Maid of Orleans. Under his reign he had finally end the Hundred Years War. Portrait with particular hat he wears in the painting by Jean fouquet. Colored lithograph, nineteenth century France.
DC
0126903 MARIA TERESA OF SPAIN /n(1726-1746). Infanta Maria Teresa Rafaela of Spain, wife of Louis, Dauphin of France. Program of the funeral led by Jean-George LeFranc, 1747.
DC

Total de Resultados: 32

Página 1 de 1