vs 888 Those beautiful pictures
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After looking at that little Mona Lisa and then seeing this painting, you will definitely be amazed. Pen | fun | pavilion www. biquge。 info it's so big! The Mona Lisa is only 7o centimeters tall, and the painting is so large that it is said to have had to be cut in two when it was shipped to France.
The colors of the picture are super beautiful and beautiful. If you still have time, you can enjoy Italian paintings from the 13th to 18th centuries directly along this floor directly along the large gallery with natural light.
There are so many famous paintings in this corridor that if you stop for a while for the particularly beautiful ones, your time will fly by. If you want to go to the toilet, it's best to go to the very end of the gallery, which is near the lion entrance and is less crowded.
4. At this point, it is estimated that your 2 hours are almost up. You've got to leave. Before leaving, An Chuyu strongly recommends that you walk back to the underground hall of the pyramid by the same path, and then follow the escalator to the surface, walk out of the pyramid's body, and experience what it feels like to stand in the center of the Louvre Square.
If you can spend a whole day or more at the Louvre, it's worth doing your homework. It is recommended to read in advance. map, take a serious look at it and don't get lost; Bring a copy of "Jiang Xun's Louvre", combine it with the map, and take a trip through time and space in the Louvre.
According to Jiang Xun, you can appreciate these works of art in chronological order. Here they are.
Ancient Egyptian art. On the first and second floors of the Sully Pavilion. You can enter from the entrance of the Sully Pavilion on the ground floor and go around the monuments of the Louvre to the first floor. Start at the southernmost Hall, Hall 1, and visit them one by one. All the exhibits mentioned in the book "Jiang Xun" will not be missed.
Civilization of the two river basins in Western Asia. From the entrance of the Sully Pavilion to the first floor, you can enter the door on the left hand side and you can visit, a total of more than a dozen exhibition halls. Here you can see the original copy of Hammurabi's Code.
Greek art and Roman art. This distribution is relatively wide, and it is entered from the Denong Pavilion in the south. To the basement level, then the first floor, and then the second floor. In addition to the Venus of Miró, there is also the goddess of victory, and those exquisite stone carvings of ancient Greece and Rome are really fine.
If you don't see these sculptures, you can also go to the basement level and the first floor on the west side of the Denong Pavilion. There are also many sculptures in the area, and don't miss the original works of two Renaissance greats, Michelangelo. "The Dying Slave" and "The Bound Slave".
Renaissance art. This is the main event, located on the second floor of the Denong Pavilion. Including that section of Skylight Gallery. The exhibits are all works of art from the Italian Renaissance. And, of course, the famous Mona Lisa. Because of the Mona Lisa, there are so many people here.
Everyone got together to watch Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa. In fact, there are still a few works by Leonardo da Vinci in the Louvre - very few of Leonardo da Vinci's works have survived. Madonna, Son and Santa Anna, Madonna of the Rocks, St. John the Baptist, Portrait of a Lady in the Court of Milan. "Bacchus", the god of wine.
Which of the other paintings are pretty? First of all, the paintings of the early Renaissance are not good-looking, but they still have to be seen. For example, Giotto's, Angelico's, and Berticelli's.
At this time, most of the paintings were religious themes, mostly frescoes or tempera paintings, and the form was mainly altarpieces. The main reason for the characteristics of the Renaissance is the "human" depiction of the gods and the three-dimensional composition that appears in the picture.
It's good-looking, just like Jiang Xun's book. Raphael's portrait – very delicate, Titian's "Pastoral Concert". Let's take a look at Manet's "Lunch on the Grass"? Veronese's "The Wedding of Cana", which is a must-see (not to mention the picture earlier). Caravaggio's "The Death of the Virgin" - the focus is on the pain of the Virgin's death.
There are a lot of famous people here. Everyone's next Renaissance artist's app, you can compare and appreciate. An Chuyu likes to look at a still life named Lendez (I don't know how to call it) in Naples, Italy. The painting is really vivid.
Paintings of the Flemish School. On the third floor of the Richelieu Pavilion, the part of the Flemish paintings. In fact, An Chuyu thinks that the paintings here are better-looking. Italian paintings are mainly religious and portraits, but here there are many paintings depicting people's lives.
Of course, first of all, it is necessary to Tivan. Ike's "Picture of the Virgin of the Governor of Lorraine", you see, driven by money, the duke can see the Virgin; Every. The famous altarpiece of the Ike brothers has also been seen in Ghent. Ann's first favorite thing to watch is Quentin. Mathis, The Money Merchant and His Wife. It vividly depicts the social life of people who are rich and religiously devotional.
This painting is really good-looking, An Chuyu and An Qingju are looking at it again and again. Looked and looked.
Of course, Rubens is probably the most famous of the Flemish faction. An Chuyu likes to call him "Rubens of Meat Dundun" because all the women in his pen are Roudundun.
There's a whole big room with Rubens' Mary. De. The Life of the Medici Empress". As mentioned in the previous travelogue, the regent refused to abdicate after the death of her husband Henry IV, and finally forced her son Louis XIII to step down.
Then people found Rubens to fabricate his great and glorious life, and the painting even depicted how her husband trusted and trusted. It's worth a look.
Spanish School. This is at the end of the Skylight Gallery on the second floor of the Denong Pavilion, and this is Ann's first favorite. There is a great god of Cervantes in Spain, and there are also realistic painters such as Murillo and Ribera.
In the seventeenth century, religious themes were not only the focus of education and life, but also the main source of income for painters, and in Spain, such a group of painters appeared, and the paintings here did not exaggerate the religious atmosphere, but were full of life and had a strong secularization tendency.
If you look at Murillo's "Little Beggar", he is not depicting the misery of the beggar, but portraying the beggar as a person, from his point of view, his afternoon rest in the sun; Looking at Ribera's "The Crippled" again, it is not telling about God's injustice, but letting the crippled man look at everyone from above. It was as if I was satisfied with my hard work.
It is said that the paintings of the Spanish School on display at the Louvre are not particularly representative. It seems that Spain is worth a good visit; An Chuyu is already looking forward to going to Madrid to see the famous "Gong'e Tu".
Dutch School. The paintings are on the third floor of the Richelieu Pavilion. The most thunderous ones were Vermeer and Rembrandt. However, to appreciate the works of these two, it is said that you still have to go to the Netherlands. For example, Vermeer's "The Maid Who Poured the Milk" and "The Girl with a Pearl Earring" or something. It's a Dutch national treasure. Not to mention Rembrandt.
There are also several Rembrandt's self-portraits in the Louvre, which you can see. Sotheby's auction, Hollywood blockbusters say that the snitch always steals Rembrandt's self-portrait. How many self-portraits of Rembrandt are enough to be so gossipy, the answer is many. Almost more than ninety. Enough gossip.
The Louvre has Vermeer's "The Lace Worker" and "Heavenly Home", as well as Rembrandt's "Sheba Bathing", which is worth watching. However, everyone must faint to death when they see "Lace Girl", so the famous painting is actually not as big as a handkerchief. The frame is much bigger than the painting.
"Heavenly Home" is not big, but it is a little better. Admire such small paintings. It probably takes some appreciation. With the level of An's first encounter, it can only be evaluated like a bean.
German School. It seems that there are not many German paintings, all in small rooms, sandwiched between Dutch and French paintings. The more famous one is Dürer. Not much is known about what Dürer painted. Watercolor painting everyone. But Dürer's face was so famous that he was one of the first to start painting self-portraits. There are quite a few self-portraits, and this one is on display in the Louvre.
French painting. The Louvre Museum is in France, and it is probably the best collection of French paintings. Don't miss the third floor of the Sully Pavilion and part of the third floor of Richelieu, which is connected to the paintings of the Dutch School and the Flemish School.
An Chuyu and An Qingju specially picked a day to come here to see later. There are few people here, it is clean, and there are many excellent works. Really nice place! As long as you talk about the Louvre's collection of films, you have to say Poussin, David. Ingres, Ricke...... It's too famous. As long as you have time, you can savor it.
About the portrait of the King of France. An Chuyu and An Qingju did not see Luqueet's famous portrait of François I (it is estimated that the tour exhibition went), but they saw Charles VII painted by Fouquet, which was very realistic.
The nameless Fontainebleau pie's "Sister Gabriel" has probably been gossiped about many times in many documentaries, and it doesn't look like a good painting for a bunch of people in front of it. It can be seen that the masses just like gossip.
The paintings of the three Renan brothers were very fond of and liked to depict the lives of ordinary people, which was also deeply influenced by the Flanders School. It is different from the Italian aesthetic that France admired in the 17th century. Below are the Louvre's "Blacksmith's Shop", "The Peasant's Family" and "At the Table".
George. Morality. Latour's paintings have six in the Louvre. I am not very interested in religious stories, but I like this "The Cheater", which depicts the dramatic scene very realistically.
There are many of the famous Poussin's works here. He is good at painting some fragments of ancient stories, the pictures are very exquisite, and the characters are all ancient Roman shapes; Even if I paint a landscape, I like to quote Bible stories, such as the four paintings in spring, summer, autumn and winter.
During the development of the transition from the Baroque to the Rococo, several of Watteau's paintings were seen. One is "The Ship of the Île de la Cité", and a clown called "Pierrot". You can see that the expressions of the characters depicted here are very special.
In the eighteenth century, under the influence of the Enlightenment, the paintings of painters began to move from ornate and depicting court life to rustic, and many painters were keen to depict the subtle details of life.
For example, Chardin's paintings, which were greatly praised by Voltaire and Diderot, depict the small things of life and everyday still lifes. I saw a thunderous "Ray", but I couldn't see where it was good - it was still not enough.
Calling David "the darling of the Louvre" Ann first met a little. Out of the Louvre, I really can't remember where I saw David's work. This influential figure of the Great Revolution painted a lot of works on revolutionary themes, and many of his works have entered our textbooks. The following six paintings are certainly familiar to everyone, and the big two are "Sabine Women" and "Coronation Picture".
"The Sabine Women" and Poussin's "The Robbery of the Sabine Women" are about the same event, but they choose different topics, Poussin depicts hatred, and David depicts reconciliation. "Coronation Picture" and the portrait of Napoleon in the upper right corner are very famous, and I guess everyone has seen them.
In addition, "The Oath of the Horace Brothers" and "The Death of Marat" are both themes that express revolution, and David's revolutionary blood can be expressed in the paintings.
Ingres, who likes to draw naked women with big butts, also has a lot of works in the Louvre, so you can see it to your heart's content. In addition to his "Spring", it is estimated that the bathing girls are all in the Louvre. This is really worry-free, how many pictures does a back have to appear in?
An Chuyu and An Qingju probably spent a lot of time reading Rico's "The Raft of the Medusa", as well as Eugène. Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People.
The former is a representative of French Romanticism, depicting the struggle between man and nature and the struggle between man and himself; An Chuyu and An Qingju were fortunate enough to see several versions of "The Raft of the Medusa" in the Louvre, with many drafts and unfinished ones. The latter depicts the French month of July in a romantic symbolic way.
Of course, the Louvre also has a lot of French royal ornaments, an Apollo corridor, several atriums dedicated to French sculptures (such as the Marley horse), and a hall dedicated to Middle Eastern art...... Too much! If you want to see these for one day, it's definitely not enough, three days is just enough to take a casual look.
If there is more time, An Chuyu would also be willing to be like those who study art. When I think of a painting, I turn into the Louvre and sit down to admire it. But time is limited. For laymen like An Chuyu and An Qingju, being able to catch a glimpse of the real work, sit in the right seat, and be amazed by the beauty of a fragment, I already feel that this trip is worthwhile.
People who like the Louvre, you can download a USAW app - LouvreHD, it should be downloaded from RE (support iPad), I don't know if there is an Android version - here are almost all the photos of the works on display in the Louvre, size, writer, age, and techniques, all of which are very complete.
Didn't expect that, right? After so many days in Paris, I didn't go to Versailles with a six-day ticket to the museum in my hand. It's not that I didn't go, it's that I didn't get in. Why? Plesea!
It was really early in the morning, An Chuyu and An Qingju took the train to the Palace of Versailles. The day before leaving, I went to the subway station to ask how to get there, because there were several repairs in the subway this summer, so An Chuyu and An Qingju had to detour and change to other lines, and they went around a big circle to go around the Versailles light rail line C. (To be continued)
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