EditorialAcis and Galatea. Dated: c. 1590. Dimensions: overall: 31.2 x 30.1 cm (12 5/16 x 11 7/8 in.). Medium: pen and brown ink with brown wash and traces of white heightening over black chalk on laid paper.
EditorialFrancesco Bartolozzi, Acis and Galatea, Francesco Bartolozzi (Italian, Florence 17281815 Lisbon), After Giovanni Battista Cipriani (Italian, Florence 17271785 Hammersmith (active London)), 1787, Engraving and etching; third state of three, Sheet: 8 3/4...
EditorialRoman fresco depicting a panel with doors with a mask of Silenus. To the left, the encounter of Acis and Galatea in a rural landscape, near a cave. 1st century BC. National Archaeological Museum. Naples. Italy.
EditorialRoman fresco depicting a panel with doors with a mask of Silenus. To the left, the encounter of Acis and Galatea in a rural landscape, near a cave. 1st century BC. National Archaeological Museum. Naples. Italy.
EditorialPaysage c?tier avec Acis et Galat?e / Coastal landscape with Acis and Galatea. Date/Period: 1657. Painting. Oil on canvas. Height: 102.3 cm (40.2 in); Width: 136 cm (53.5 in).
EditorialAcis and Galatea, n.d., Attributed to Crispin van den Broeck, Netherlandish, c. 1524-1590, Netherlands, Pen and black ink, with brush and brown wash, on ivory laid paper, laid down on ivory laid paper, 243 x 408 mm.
EditorialPolyphemus Throwing Boulder at Acis, with Galatea (recto), and Pholyphemus Lifting Boulder (verso), n.d., John William Taverner, English, 1703-1772, England, Black chalk, and brush and gray wash (recto), and black chalk, and brush and brown wash (verso...
EditorialThe small island in front of the harbour of Aci Reale,Sicily, where enamoured Polyphem threw rocks at Galathea and her lover Acis. Acis was changed into a river;Galathea was buried under the rock.
EditorialThe small island in front of the harbour of Aci Reale,Sicily, where enamoured Polyphem threw rocks at Galathea and her lover Acis. Acis was changed into a river;Galathea was buried under the rock.
EditorialRose-coloured acis, Acis rosea. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Weddell after Edwin Dalton Smith from John Lindley and Robert Sweet's Ornamental Flower Garden and Shrubbery, G. Willis, London, 1854.
EditorialAcis and Galatea. Dated: c. 1590. Dimensions: overall: 31.2 x 30.1 cm (12 5/16 x 11 7/8 in.). Medium: pen and brown ink with brown wash and traces of white heightening over black chalk on laid paper.
EditorialRoman fresco depicting a panel with doors with a mask of Silenus. To the left, the encounter of Acis and Galatea in a rural landscape, near a cave. 1st century BC. National Archaeological Museum. Naples. Italy.
EditorialGalatea and Polyphem. The nereid Galathea loves the shepherd Acis, son of Pan. The cyclops Polyphemus desires her and, when she refuses him, throws a rock at the couple, killing Acis. Galathea changes Acis into a rivulet. 1621 / 22. Poplar wood, 41 x 9...
EditorialAcis and Galatea. Dated: c. 1590. Dimensions: overall: 31.2 x 30.1 cm (12 5/16 x 11 7/8 in.). Medium: pen and brown ink with brown wash and traces of white heightening over black chalk on laid paper.
EditorialPaysage c?tier avec Acis et Galat?e / Coastal landscape with Acis and Galatea. Date/Period: 1657. Painting. Oil on canvas. Height: 102.3 cm (40.2 in); Width: 136 cm (53.5 in).
EditorialAcis and Galatea. Dated: c. 1590. Dimensions: overall: 31.2 x 30.1 cm (12 5/16 x 11 7/8 in.). Medium: pen and brown ink with brown wash and traces of white heightening over black chalk on laid paper.
EditorialRose-coloured acis, Acis rosea. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Weddell after Edwin Dalton Smith from John Lindley and Robert Sweet's Ornamental Flower Garden and Shrubbery, G. Willis, London, 1854.
EditorialRoman fresco depicting a panel with doors with a mask of Silenus. To the left, the encounter of Acis and Galatea in a rural landscape, near a cave. 1st century BC. National Archaeological Museum. Naples. Italy.
EditorialTwo-tailed pasha butterfly, Charaxes jasius 1, Drury's hairstreak, Strymon acis 2, and silver-banded hairstreak, Chlorostrymon simaethis. Handcoloured lithograph from John O. Westwood's new edition of Dru Drury's "Illustrations of Exotic Entomology," B...
Editorial"CICLOPE POLIFEMO JUNTO A GALATEA". Galatea, una de las nereidas, fue amada por Polifemo, h?roe arcadio hijo de Poseid?n y uno de los Argonautas. Galatea lo rechaz? para ofrecerse al Pastor Acis, que muri? a manos de Polifemo. Mosaico romano existente ...
Editorial"CICLOPE POLIFEMO JUNTO A GALATEA". Galatea, una de las nereidas, fue amada por Polifemo, h?roe arcadio hijo de Poseid?n y uno de los Argonautas. Galatea lo rechaz? para ofrecerse al Pastor Acis, que muri? a manos de Polifemo. Mosaico romano existente ...
EditorialThe small island in front of the harbour of Aci Reale,Sicily, where enamoured Polyphem threw rocks at Galathea and her lover Acis. Acis was changed into a river;Galathea was buried under the rock.
EditorialGalatea and Polyphem. The nereid Galathea loves the shepherd Acis, son of Pan. The cyclops Polyphemus desires her and, when she refuses him, throws a rock at the couple, killing Acis. Galathea changes Acis into a rivulet. 1621 / 22. Poplar wood, 41 x 9...
EditorialThe small island in front of the harbour of Aci Reale,Sicily, where enamoured Polyphem threw rocks at Galathea and her lover Acis. Acis was changed into a river;Galathea was buried under the rock.