Judith and Holofernes (1831) by the French painter Emile Jean Horace Vernet (1789-1863).
This today nearly unknown painting was a great event in its own time. The German poet Heinrich Heine wrote deeply impressed: "above her hips she wears an undergarment of pale yellow whose sleeve falls off her right shoulder and which she pushes up over her left hand in the manner of a butcher…
In her eyes above sparkles a sweet cruelty and the desire for vengeance; for she has her own violated body to avenge on the odious pagan...
Death sends him by the hand of a most beautiful angel into the white night of eternal oblivion. What an enviable end! If I should die one day, ye Gods, let me die like Holofernes!"
Men’s dreams!
Herbal Tea on the River
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Herbal Tea on the River
12"x24"x1.5" acrylic on wood
This piece is an omage to the work of Emile Gallé (1846-1904) French glass
artist and designer.
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